The problem with this logic is that as the price of BTC continues to increase, so does the value of a block with transaction fees. And since the issue is mining pools being unwilling to change settings due to fear of losses, the economics of risk might not change until OP's transaction fee (+ the reward) surpasses the value of a block reward with transaction fees. We're more than one halving away from that.
All right, but what if you look at the problem from a marketing point of view?
Alternatively, OP must enlist the support of one of the well-known members of the crypto community, so that he, in turn, on
Twitter challenges one of the mining pools. Let's say that such a person can become Charlie Lee, aka
@satoshilite / Forum username
Coblee. He has almost a million Twitter followers and I would characterize Charlie as a very responsive person
(I'm sure he will answer you).
I do not think that the binance/pool or anyone else will ignore the public appeal. If you present information from the right angle, then this can be a good news lead for them "we are the ones who solved a non-standard problem"
(It's about mining pools or companies that represent them).