I think in the end either I disagree radically or I can't parse this the way you intended. Can you maybe clarify? One thing in particular, "standards bodies" is a very broad term, which encompasses everything from industry consortia like W3C through government agencies like NIST and whatever the IETF is. Are these all "intrinsically corrupt"? How so?
And the IEEE actually have done better in some cases, including when they decided to adopt AEAD for WPA2/802.11i which led to WPA2-CCMP still being used today. This Dragonfly SAE algorithm came from 802.11s from 2011, BTW.
I think in the end either I disagree radically or I can't parse this the way you intended. Can you maybe clarify? One thing in particular, "standards bodies" is a very broad term, which encompasses everything from industry consortia like W3C through government agencies like NIST and whatever the IETF is. Are these all "intrinsically corrupt"? How so?