That's a good thing. Cryptocurrencies are supposed to operate by consent, and that includes the ability to separate when consent for a ruleset can no longer be maintained. One of the main problems with PoW is that those who support the stronger fork can attack those who support the weaker fork if they are willing to expend the resources. Ethereum's PoS solves that and ensures that every user has an equal technical ability to withdraw their consent and take their money to a chain with rules they support.
The key is in the fact that violating the rules on Ethereum's PoS causes you to lose Ether, which means you eventually lose all your Ether and can no longer sabotage the chain. This is in contrast with PoW systems, where your mining hardware doesn't deteriorate any faster just because you are mining empty or invalid blocks, so you can do that forever and effectively shut down a chain that is small enough relative to your computer power. The only defence a PoW fork has against such an attack is to switch to a different algorithm that is less compatible to the attacker's hardware, but that harms non-attacking miners just as much. PoW has an element of "might make right" while PoS is completely consensual.
The key is in the fact that violating the rules on Ethereum's PoS causes you to lose Ether, which means you eventually lose all your Ether and can no longer sabotage the chain. This is in contrast with PoW systems, where your mining hardware doesn't deteriorate any faster just because you are mining empty or invalid blocks, so you can do that forever and effectively shut down a chain that is small enough relative to your computer power. The only defence a PoW fork has against such an attack is to switch to a different algorithm that is less compatible to the attacker's hardware, but that harms non-attacking miners just as much. PoW has an element of "might make right" while PoS is completely consensual.