It seems that what you have argued here is not much related to Holden’s objection 1 - his objection is that we cannot reasonably expect a safe and secure implementation of a “Friendly” utility function (even if we had one), because humans have consistently been unable to construct bug-free working-correctly (computer) systems on the first try, proofs have been wrong, etc. You, on the other hand, are arguing against the Friendliness concept on object-level / meta-level ethical grounds.
It seems that what you have argued here is not much related to Holden’s objection 1 - his objection is that we cannot reasonably expect a safe and secure implementation of a “Friendly” utility function (even if we had one), because humans have consistently been unable to construct bug-free working-correctly (computer) systems on the first try, proofs have been wrong, etc. You, on the other hand, are arguing against the Friendliness concept on object-level / meta-level ethical grounds.