Tom --
That's a wonderful quotation -- but I doubt that it applies to the manufacturers of balls and clubs in quite the way you're thinking.
Lest I sound like a wishy-washy liberal -- and believe me, I am not (I am, I think, a realist):
American corporations worship one thing, and one thing only: growth. Growth in sales; growth in profits. (No criticism intended, by the way.)
They don't worship Merion. They don't worship Riviera. They don't worship Augusta National.
They don't worship golf -- period.
These companies worship selling golf clubs and golf balls. They will not let anything stand in the way of that. You wouldn't, either, if you were in their shoes.
It's unthinkable, to me, that these modern corporations -- the Nikes and the Titleists and the Callaways -- would stand idly by, saying "Yes sir, yes sir, whatever you say sir" while the USGA and the R&A legislate limits on the potential growth of their sales. THAT -- i.e., standing idly by -- would be, to their way of thinking, destroying the thing they worshipped.
I hope you've looked at the "Rollin' back the ODS -- then what?" thread, wherein I (and others) make the case for a Competition Ball, which would (1) keep the game interesting, at the highest levels; (2) put the classic courses back in play for top-level competition; and (3 -- and most vital of all) allow the manufacturers of balls and clubs to continue their technological advances -- and their sales increases -- unchecked.