I don't think you're in the minority; that's what bothers me. All I read lately is people bashing him. And while I don't hold that personally against you, I think it's unfair to Moffat. So he had one story arc that didn't turn out very well, and suddenly all of the brilliant stories that he did beforehand don't mean anything to fans. Suddenly the man who wrote "Blink" and "Silence in the Library" and the amazing story arc of Season 5 is a lazy hack?
Alex Kingston is on Arrow this season. I've never heard any official confirmation of this, but I have a strong hunch that Moffat had a much longer plan for the River Song character that he found himself suddenly having to quickly truncate into one season. The abruptness of that story just doesn't fit with the rest of his writing. And now, in Season 7, he's back to writing good stuff.
Even at that, the worst Moffat script IMO is "The Day of the Moon," and it's still tons better than, say, "Love and Monsters," which is pretty much par for the course for Russell T. Davies' run in terms of its cheesiness.
Season Six left me scratching my head at the bizarreness of it, but at no point was I yelling instructions to the stupid characters onscreen, which I usually do for almost any Doctor Who from 1963 to 2009. (That doesn't mean I don't like things from those eras, but there was an awful lot of cheesiness in those days that people seem to have conveniently forgotten about.)
It's the Christopher Nolan phenomenon. He made a great movie in The Dark Knight, which made Internet fans worship him. Then he made The Dark Knight Rises, which is a very good film that has a few flaws. But because of those flaws, the whole Internet has turned on him. Now suddenly he's the worst director since Joel Schumaker. Really, people? REALLY? Must we go from one extreme to the other?
Neither Nolan nor Moffat are perfect writers because no one is perfect. And for that matter, many of the people throwing stones have never actually attempted to write a script themselves or put it out there for everyone to make fun of. It's impossible to please everybody all the time, and it's difficult to even please most of the people most of the time. I think both Moffat and Nolan deserve credit for getting it right a lot more often than most writers.
Of course, this isn't personally directed at you, LastSurvivor. You certainly are entitled to think otherwise, and you expressed your opinion politely. But I'm just frustrated with fandom in general. At first, the Internet brought fans together who would otherwise have never known each other. Now, it seems, the Internet is only for complaining and tearing others down.
Thus endeth my rant for the day.