You're missing a few things and making the situation more dangerous than it has to be. You can still fly the higher speed if you desire with full flaps in by just adding some throttle, and when you do that, you'll find that the increased prop wash across the tail Not always, a T tail for example negates this.will give you even greater control authority increase (and more stability as well) at a lower speed than you were landing at with O-10 flaps in. Next is slowing down. With flaps 10 and the extra speed you've got way more lift going on with little increase in drag which means you you are light on your wheels longer which reduces your braking effectiveness and increases your susceptibility to being blown off the runway and at a greater speed. I disagree, having velocity means you have the means to counter being 'blown off the runway'. The wings always stop flying first. With flaps up that is even more true. Having the excess speed of a partial flap landing means the ailerons, elevator and rudder are in play that much loner.You are also risking floating, ballooning, porpoising and all those other fun bouncy things that in a strong crosswind puts planes on their backs in the grass. Since kinetic energy (the stuff that causes damage and death) increases with the square of speed, any thing that goes wrong will have a much larger portion of damage that comes with it.Nothing wrong here. I say, "don't do ANY of that.
With full flaps you can add throttle using mechanical energy is that a term?to maintain your control and then pull it as soon as your mains touch and you will stop flying and with full flaps, the drag added is greater than the lift added so it's helping you slow down from high speed rather than hindering you like 10* flaps does.
You use flaps to regulate lift, you use flaps to regulate drag, you DO NOT use flaps to regulate speed, you use pitch and power for that.