Penguin, Richter, I like your enthusiasm. However, there are two primary problems:
1. Too Little, Too Late
The numbers aren't there. I'd love to see the full calculation of how many troops and total assets the offending groups have right now so I could calculate how many man-hours it would take to equal that, discrediting the reality that their production won't be reduced but everyone else's will as they continue to steamroll over territory.
2. Addressing Symptoms, Not Diseases
That disease is carebear-ism and game mechanics that empower it. Instead of engaging in fun and competitive play, some of our community has opted for uncompetitive and mediocre (at best) play in order to win. Why? I don't know. But they get real defensive about it, and have the audacity to openly gloat when the myriad of lightweight boxers don't seem interested in stepping into the ring with the heavyweights anymore. If'n you follow the parallelism.
I'd argue that #2 is the more atrocious of the two. If any fun is to be salvaged from the ordeal, it would be at the enormous expense of those willing to attempt to organize the conglomerate resistance. But hell, at some point you just have to ask, "Why bother?"
Until the positive feedback mechanisms are changed, such as this insane trade system that grossly enriches only the largest organizations, then Strategus will continue to make the strong stronger and the weak weaker. Instead of battles depending on skill and tactics, battles are won by simply being bigger (and you don't even have to DO anything but be BIG). That this already clear problem is exacerbated by, at the very least, tacit complicity in movements between the largest organizations boggles my mind.
So to those who see the problem for what it is- fuck it. Enjoy the small victories, the small battles. The only joy to be had in Strategus is in utter spite of these people, certainly not because of them. Although their poor decisions affect us all, they're out of our control beyond our necessarily becoming the very same monster and making those very same poor decisions: wielding mass collaboration instead of the sword.