First, instead of spewing your unfounded comments, actually try looking at the measured factors and data for each airstrip, as even a new private pilot is capable of doing:
Mile High: Lukla:
540 feet useable 1500 ft useable
22% incline 12% incline
Grass surface, mediocre braking Paved surface, excellent braking
The above factors alone show a significant higher degree of difficulty for MHI.
Then, consider the DA overlay for both which will show they essentially cancel each other out with the obvious exception of given operations on particularly unusual circumstances for each. Lukla's higher elevation but usually a good deal colder, Mile High is lower but generally warm or HOT so on average, it's a wash regarding DA between the two airstrips.
Then, seriously consider the folly of your idea of "great potential for a go around" at MHI. To an armchair runway "analyst" such as yourself, it could appear to offer one but, the reality is that at its typical DAs of 9000 feet, only the most capable of SuperCub Class aircraft would have a chance of clearing the treetops visible when standing on the ground of the saddle and just on the other side of the saddle. So it's essentially a one way strip, just as much as Lukla is.
FWIW, Dewey Moore has a RHI a few points lower than Mile High but, many pilots who have actually frequented both airstrips consider Dewey More to be the more difficult of the two. A few RHI points either way is of little consequence when comparing airstrips.