And yet, salt gets the blame.
I think since it's the newest (not really) guy on the block, it gets the brunt of the blame. The problem is that for many years, limestone and decks have gone through the same damage problems, but what did they blame back then?
Bad batch of cement, calcium, aggregate, sand, water quality, etc. Believe me, after 20 years in the pool industry, I've heard all these. So now that salt systems are becoming more popular, let's blame them!

What's important to note is that these same issues occur on pools without salt systems.

Salt damage? How long do seawalls last before the sea water, which by the way is on average, 10 time greater than a salt water pool, starts to show damage it? Hmm, me thinks a good number of years! I can't recall when the City of Ft Lauderdale had to rebuild the "Wave Wall" along the beach boardwalk. I grew up in South Florida, 15 minutes from the beach, and the same seawall that I fished off of 35 years ago, is the same one that I fish on today. Awesome snook fishing by the Haulover Beach area!
So how does a pool deck delaminating after a few years mean that the salt system is the cause?

Richard, by the way, it is typically a bleach pool that shows a higher level of salinity when maintained this way for 3 or more years without any significant water exchanges. Tab and cal hypo pools are usually minimal in salinity, less than 500 ppm.

I may be defensive on this issue because there are so many "old school" pool service guys and builders that refuse to come into the 21 century. Salt systems for them is just something new to learn about and takes them away from what they've known and done for years. Not knowing about salt systems mean loosing accounts, so it's in their best interest in speak badly about salt systems.
In the 20 years of dealing with salt systems, guess how many deck damage issues I've had to deal with in South Florida? ZERO.
While I've heard of such conditions, I have not seen such conditions that were directly accountable to a salt system.
Staining from salt, sure I would admit to that occuring with certain salts.
Corrosion from salt, sure I would admit to high chlorine or over salting a pool causing a certain level of corrosion damage.
Electrolysis? yeah, if the pool isn't bonded properly, installed correctly, or there's an electrical grid issue, there may be stray voltage introduced into the pool due to a salt system.

Sorry for being long in my response. I think I'll take this up in the China Shop.