Snooker is harder than pool. No top pro pool player has ever been able to switch to pro snooker and compete successfully with the best snooker players. No, not even Rempe.
On the other hand, on the women's side, snooker converts (Allison Fisher, Kelly Fisher, Karen Corr) now own three BCA Hall of Fame spots. At the 1995 Mosconi, Europe, featuring a team that included snooker pros Alex Higgins, Jimmy White, and Steve Davis, beat Team USA. Several years later, snooker pro Mark Gray played on Team Europe at the Mosconi. Similarly, snooker pro Marlon Manalo came within a rack of winning the IPT 2006 Las Vegas Open that carried a $350,000 first prize. Mark Selby has a world championship in both snooker and pool (Chinese 8-ball).
The snooker guys have had more than their share of success at pool and, in many cases, haven't had a very hard time transitioning. Not true for the pool guys who've tried snooker.
Yes, they are two different games and both the snooker guys and the pool guys both deserve maximum respect, but the top snooker pros have better cueing skills than the top pool pros and there's no getting away from it.
I'd agree 100% with those who say that the chatroom "snooker snobbery" described in this post is uncalled for.