The movements in the clean and snatch translate better to athletics as well overall individual performance than static lifts IMO.I have a bit of a background competing in the olympic lifts myself and I'd say, unless a general trainee, particularly one over 35 just has a real desire to perform the snatch and clean, there's very little benefit to them when compared to the squat, bench press, press and deadlift. They are complex lifts that require a lot of practice and a lot of training time. A person looking to spend 3 hours a week in the gym has no room in their schedule for those movement.
We have men and women in the gym and in the area in their 40 s and 50s that train and compete in the Olympic lifts for fun regularly. Look at the middle-aged crossfitters that are doing cleans and snatches. Setting a 35 years of age limit for these lifts is unnecessary.
At the end of the day, form/technique is key to safety and avoiding injury no matter the movement. Benching is probably the most abused lift in this regard and often leads to shoulder and chest tightness when opposing muscle groups aren’t also trained.
There is more than one way to skin a cat. I just don’t like the idea of novice lifters squatting with a low bar and looking down. Keeping the bar high and keeping a neutral head or even looking up encourages better spinal alignment and reduces risk of injury for newer lifters.