Wider visibility is what is most needed to apply the pressure required for an appropriate response. The volume of squeaky wheels making noise in comparison to the size of their customer base overall crossed with CGC's small percentage of revenue contribution to their parent company means that regardless of importance to us as a subset of customers, they really don't have the hard driving force to act quickly and explicitly, as evidenced by the length of time this has been happening and the substandard (to put it nicely) responses to-date. Simply, more public visibility to the issue is what is needed to drive some sort of more concrete statement and/or action like correcting process and repressing+reholdering and even compensating customers with egregious damage to their books. They would want to be publicly seen as remediating the problem for their customers.
An interesting scenario would be for someone(s) to put up a significant slabbed key of some sort they want to get out from under on Ebay for a 5-day auction and title it prominently as a Bendgate or Bananagate book - "please see photos...." and include some detail of the scenario in the description. If it doesn't sell, keep relisting. Consistently having impacted higher-caliber books there could potentially generate a snowball effect of listings and/or visibility.
Then it's not just some spread of Youtube channels and forums with less reach due to their very focused audiences, since the majority of collectors likely aren't on these platforms. It instead becomes a prominent posting of an obviously compromised item for sale on a primary distribution platform for their product. That's the kind of thing that gains more eyes. Imagine if something like that goes viral within the collector community - and that kind of posting has that potential, especially if there are multiples.
I want CGC to be better. I want them to be successful. I want to be able to trust them in terms of company, services, and product. I want their entire staff to be as helpful and concerned about their customers as CGC Mike tries to be. The right pressure in the right volume, as opposed to just complaints, is what is needed to push a response in today's corporate world where companies look at customers as commodities and necessary evils rather than taking pride in how they serve the people who actually provide the money that pays their salaries.
Unfortunately I do not have any slabs with enough moxie for the task.
I apologize for the length of post - but wanted to get it out of my head and into words before it was gone!