Of course, but I don't think the quotes you've given show what you think they do. For instance, you quoted Gould saying:
"macroevolution is not simply microevolution extrapolated, and that major structural transitions can occur rapidly without a smooth series of intermediate stages."
Which seems to support your point very well.
But you miss the few words before that: "I wish to defend Goldschmidt's postulate that macroevolution..."
I know you don't think the first words make any difference. But I do. Reading it, I see his defense of Goldshmidt as defending the possibility that he's right. He's saying, don't degrade Goldschmidt, don't dismiss him out of hand. That's my reading of it, anyway. I may be wrong, I'd need to read more Gould to know for sure.
He said, "Goldschmidt said this, and I wish to defend his statement". That's very different from him saying it himself.
Basically, I'm saying that there is a big difference between saying that we should look into the possibilities of other mechanisms of macroevolution, and suggesting that we know that those mechanisms actually do exist.