That comment reminds me of the "Clio aerodynamics" thread where a sizeable amount of members with not the slightest formal background in mechanical engineering, let alone aerodynamics, were guessing at the effect of the modifications someone had done to a track car, when it was modifications so complex you wouldn't even bother trying to guess whether they would have a positive or negative impact you'd just go straight to CFD or wind tunnel testing.
It really does not take any leap of the imagination to find yourself in the plausible situation where you add front roll stiffness to a point that, all other things being equal, you are reacting too much weight at the front too not cause understeer but by restricting the roll angle you are actually gaining more from controlling your contact patch.
In my eyes relative roll stiffness vs controlling the roll angle could be seen as the exact same type of not-immediately-obvious-trade-off as springs. How many of the general public would say "as soft as possible" to the question "how stiff should springs on a racing car be?"
/blabbering & ranting at general ignorance
EDIT: Infact whilst I'm on a rant, the phrases:
* body roll causes weight transfer
* weight transfer/body roll depends on springs
* fit stiff springs for less weight transfer
* low profile tyres are better
* small wheels are better
are the top 5 fastest ways to make my brain explode and bring out the inner keyboard warrior!