While I agree with some of what you've been saying, Guy, I don't understand why you're taking this so personally
From what I've seen while I've been a member of this site, you're rigorous in your research, don't accept wishy-washy excuses from those who aren't as rigorous, and campaign for greater access to records.
As I understand it, your next/current big project is for GRO certificates to be more easily available / cheaper. Is the success of that in some way linked to the successful commercial release of the '39 register?
Or what?
Why on earth should you think it has anything to do with the release of the 1939 National Register?
I resent you implication that I have received some kind of financial incentive, the only benefit I get from these campaigns is access to otherwise withheld records.
The only connection between the 1939 National Register and the Historic registers is that after I had won the decision on the 1939 back in November 2009 I was able to put more of my own time and money into campaigning for the Historic registers being “released”
If you look at my record of campaigning for the release of records you will see that some of my campaigns are ones which I can push through myself by taking legal action against the archive that is withholding the records such as the 1911 census and the 1939 National Register, other campaigns such as the 1921 census and the Historic Registers are campaigns that need the support of others.
The 1921 census I dropped as there were only about 6000 genealogists willing to support the petition to parliament and the only way to get that changed is by weight of numbers of constituents.
The campaign to enable the release of non certified copies of Births, Marriages and Deaths is something that has been running since at least 1993.
Family Tree Magazine featured it (Easier & Cheaper Access to Registers, FTM vol 14 No 6, April 1998 page

for a number of months back in 1998 but it died down for a while and I have been pushing it hard since around 2009 trying to get people to contact their MPs and Members of the House of Lords.
There was a bit of movement in February of this year with Lady Scott’s amendment to the Deregulation Bill which became law in at the end of that Parliament.
Cheers
Guy