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Just so we are even more clear....
Name a given skill in basketball....it'll be easier to improve than shooting.
Since you hate examples, we'll try to be more clear by being more vague.
You can make a player into a better defender, you can make him a more proficient passer, you can make him a better ball-handler or rebounder. You can teach him spacing that makes it easier for him to deliver the ball to teammates. You can teach him how to recognize what a defense will do and what he can do in response to avoid picking up his dribble, getting trapped whatever.
But if he's a lousy jump shooter, you're never going to be able to give him the physical coordination to become a proficient jump shooter. You can pull his shot apart, rebuild it, whatever - he still needs the coordination and ability to reliably send a ball through space and into a bucket under any number of variable distances and angles.
You are one sensitive flower, son.
I'm not so sure any of this can be applied universally.
Shooting requires a considerable deal of physical coordination, yes, and for some, regardless of how much they practice, there is a glass ceiling on their potential.
But we're not discussing whether you can make somebody a great or even good shooter, we're talking about whether you can make somebody an improved shooter. To the extent that you can make somebody a better ball-handler or passer is probably a negligible difference in comparison - some guys are simply never going to be good ball-handlers or passers, just as some are never going to be good shooters. There is a certain instinctual gift to being able to weave through traffic and process the shifting chess pieces on the floor that can't really be taught.
