This is what makes your ears so suspect. Are we to believe your ears over all those touring musicians using Kemper? Or for that matter, are we to believe your ears over all those who have had Kemper AND NAM AND QC AND AxeIIFx?
With respect to Aliasing, I happen to be a senior EE. Your explanation leaves quite a bit to be desired as well.
Without going into the mathematical theory behind how it is possible, I will state simply that if you sample at a rate twice that of the highest frequency you wish to PERFECTLY reproduce, you have no issues.
While different processing techniques can cause unwanted artifacts, those are not called Aliasing. FWIW, most internal processing these days is done with methods that provide insane dynamic range to prevent the algorithms from overcoming the mathematically limited storage of each sample. Again, I am not going to try to explain the math or the algorithms but will say that it is a fairly safe bet that the kinds of gear we are talking about here would employ these methods and make nearly all your assumptions incorrect.
In my previous post, I referred to something I hear as "Aliasing" as well, so I am also guilty. Having artifacts in the reproduced tone is not likely due to aliasing in any high end device today. It is much more likely an issue with the rest of the capture chain (microphone, placement, speaker, etc, etc).
I get you don't like Kemper and your reasons are your own. Mis-representing the quality of the sound is just way out over the line though. If you actually want a good point to be making about Kemper MK2, I would recommend the fact that the DSP and SRAM chips have not changed (the hardware parts responsible for actually manipulating and creating the sound). Only the the interface board has changed (the one responsible for the house keeping chores like GUI, loading of the DSP with a profile, running the foot controller, networking, etc). Why would there be ANY difference in sound quality between MK1 and MK2? Also, it seems pretty hypocritical now for Kemper to be selling an MK2 on the promise of more accurate profiling when they have spent over a decade claiming it isn't needed (a statement I agree with although on a different basis than Kemper has been making).
Finally, if you were in fact gigging, it is inconceivable (to me at least) that my list of concerns that rank above capture "accuracy" would not be your concerns as well. The ergonomics, reliability, and repeatability of a gig are much more often the cause of big issues in a band beyond capture accuracy where the differences are so minute that a host of touring musicians in A list bands find negligible.