Raito being the type of owner to physically abuse his partner works well because we know from previous episodes that digimon are meant to represent the flaws of their human partners, and Raito has been trained through Naito's beatings to believe that physical violence is the most effective way to ensure a previous mistake isn't made again. Raito is essentially trying to beat his own mistakes and lack of control out of himself; he's trying to brute force his way to perfection. Explicit child abuse perpetuating a cycle of harm is a fascinating theme for Beatbreak to focus on -- and it's not the first we've seen of it, thinking back on Haruko. But Glowing Dawn was able to break the cycle for Haruko relatively quickly, while Raito's arc seems to be setting up as a much longer one. The other Tactics members have similar holdups to Raito in how they view the existence of individual weaknesses (recall Hotaruko's hatred toward Makoto during the Burgermon crisis, when she called him out for waiting for aid rather than simply being strong enough to take care of the situation himself), but his is the most extreme position by far, so I suspect that if the endgame is a Tactics-Breaking Dawn union that he'll be the last to move toward them -- or the only one to not join them.