Kalen, I don't know what to tell you. "Tramping" is something you might see on TV; it isn't the way AimPoint is taught, nor practiced by the vast, vast majority of players that use it. The way AimPoint is typically used, it nets out to far less steps than guys who read a putt from all four sides, or even just two sides. I've NEVER had a AimPoint golfer step in my line to read a putt; when that happens, it's never about reading the green anyway; it's about marking a putt or retrieving a holed putt or a gimme.
And the slow play thing is just a complete red herring; slow players cause slow play, forever and always. Preshot routines don't, lasers or gps devices or pacing yardage doesn't, golf carts don't, and green reading methods don't. Guys who don't start whatever they are doing until it's their turn to play are SLOW; what they actually DO is pretty much irrelevant.
I read greens with my eyes for half a century and thousands of rounds. I started using AimPoint when my eyes, especially my depth perception, went bad after 8 procedures on my right eye, just like I had to learn to chip with a hybrid because I just couldn't use a lofted wedge anymore. I've used it for 4 years and hundreds of rounds, and I can tell you to an absolute certainty that I putt FASTER using AimPoint than I did before. I never, EVER go to the other side of the hole to look at a putt anymore, much less circle the hole looking from all sides, I almost never squat down and take the time to read a putt that way. Typically, unless I putting first or someone else's line is too close, I'm done with all of that BEFORE it's my turn to putt, and that's they way most AimPoint users go about it. The ones that don't are SLOW, but they're not slow because of that, just like the guy who sits in the cart until the guy he's riding with hits, then rides 20 yards, then gets out his rangefinder, and so on, isn't slow because of golf carts or measuring or preshot routines.
Painting yourself as a victim of golfers who use AimPoint is just not accurate. You might be a victim of slow play, and you might be a victim of people stepping in your line, but that's bad manners, not any particular method of play.