Paul Thomas' initial questions and suggestions -- it's not an argument, yet -- are interesting. I first think it's based on an interpretation of "power" that suggests that RTJ and Joe Dey/USGA thought they were powerful or influential forces in the game and the industry, whereas my intent in using that term -- I could have been clearer, in retrospect -- was about aerial, power golf and the culture of the big, long drive.
Secondly, do not underestimate the circumstances of Jones' own career arc. He was one of the very few pre-war aspiring architects to survive WWII in tact and to have a chance at a career, and for all his training and gifts he was just about broke for a decade, even when the ASGCA was formed. having done Peachtree and the renovations at ANGC he was still very much angling for a market and a brand, and there's no question in my mind that he seized the moment of the Oakland Hills renovation to draw attention to himself. Thus was born the Open Doctor. Coincidentally, he was helped in this matter by the appearance in 1951 of what i am pretty sure was Herbert Warren Wind's first full-length golf article in "The New Yorker," the famous profile of RTJ. Until then, Wind was a staff writer on the upfront sections of the magazine and had been angling for his breakthrough, and that article did as much to focus attention on RTJ as it did on Wind.
I'm not one to run off and start blaming HWW for having destroyed classic courses -- though HWW can be faulted throughout his writing career for never having said a critical word about anyone or anything. His own private thoughts and feelings aside (I know he hated the renovation of Inverness for the 1979 U.S. Open and yet left that out of his account of that tournament), he did do his best to make the subjects of his profiles into interesting, compelling characters. And in this case, he achieved that with RTJ.
It's my understanding that at Oaklnd Hills, RTJ was encouraged to proceed by the club officers themselves. In those days there was very little USGA staff set up -- RTJ did the work on Oakland Hills in 1950, hardly well in advance. But it was the beginning and the first example of hs Open Doctoring, and there followed much subsequent and well-publicized work -- Baltusrol (1954), Olympic Club (1955), Oak Hill (1956), Southern Hills (1958), Congressional (1964), Bellerive (1965) where Joe Dey's explicit philosophy of Open course set-ups that he articulated in the mid-1950s (not 1951) was actively being implemented.
So, while i think Paul Thomas raises the specter of conspiracy and exaggeration, there's something to his claim, but I would place the emphasis more on the business side of RTJ and his desperate psychological ego-deficit to be recognized and to be successful. And to make sure -- he was driven by this, too -- he distinguished himself in the the public eye as being different from Dick Wilson.