Actually, I pretty much agree with what you are saying, especially as I read and learn and talk and learn about this subject. Of course I could see almost immediately from generalized specs that the two kinds of vehicles weren't going to be the same -- 60 miles at a max of 60 mph isn't going to compete well with a gas bike.
But lately I have gone over to the "V is for Voltage" forum, which has a very lively Vectrix community, and started reading about the Vectrix problems. It finally started to dawn on me, as I saw those guys counting every amp and carefully laying out the best way to preserve their battery life: it really isn't as simple as 60 miles at 60mph. I mean we are talking weight of driver, wind resistance of bike/driver, incline percentage, stops-and-go's, and battery management systems that need to make sure your batteries don't get discharged too much or get charged too much, temperature can't be too hot, temperature can't be too cold, etc. etc. If one cell in your battery array is damaged (either by your negligence or it was just a bad cell), then your bike can easily make your life a living hell.
There doesn't appear to be any company out there that has some magic bullet technology way ahead of all the others. In fact, they all seem to pick and choose from the same somewhat limited array of batteries, controllers, BMS's, etc. And a buyer really has to figure out a max speed and a range and a price that can be lived with and then try to find a model that fits best his needs.
With some of those ideas in mind I seem to be homing in on 2 companies (besides my fallback Suzuki): Zero and Electric Motorsport. My preference for Zero has to do with perceiving a good motorcycle, as being, at it's core, a dirt bike that gets tweaked a little bit so that it is street-legal. The great thing about Electric Motor Sport, to me, is that they haven't gotten so big yet that they are making decisions about quickness off the line, speed and range that the user gets no control over -- they appear to be a lot more flexible about building bikes to suit customers' needs.