If quantum computing never becomes commercially useful, Kalai will still have been wrong, because his claim is that things that have already happened are impossible. Perhaps in that case he might find it useful in public discourse to have "quantum skeptic" cred, since there'll be a general sense that the "quantum skeptics" were right, but that wouldn't change the fact that he specifically was wrong.
I think the point of disagreement is even whether "things have already happened" have really happened or not. From reading his posts, my understanding is that he thinks the claims so far can be explained by statistical errors and fudging the data. I'm not speculating whether he is right or wrong, just that the disputed facts are at a lower level.