I wish people would do some math and realize that a block size increase is a temporary solution. Bigger blocks don't come without an expense to the system. If blocks were a gigabyte, they wouldn't propagate efficiently through the network and the blockchain would be enormous and grow at a ridiculous rate.
As the block subsidy shrinks over time, miners are going to drive the fee market anyway to recover income even if the block size does increase. High fees calculated in USD are inevitable.
Bitcoin can't be all things to all people. It can't cover all use cases. There will be alts for most use cases. Bitcoin is more likely to be the tool for big transfers and high value smart contracts, even a $1000 fee for a billion dollar asset/transfer is a bargain.
I've said it before, you don't use the world's most secure network to buy coffee.