persistent 24/7 connection/transmission of the data to more then 8 peers is very costly.
Very costly? You must be quite impoverished. Sorry for your state. Quite surprised by this, actually, given your status as a long-term bitcoiner.
Most of the worlds population is restricted to 1MB download and 1/5 of that in upload speeds.
That is categorically, unmitigatedly
false.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_Internet_connection_speedsLast year's figures show not a single country that has an average internet bandwidth limit as low as you claim.
Not one. Even the absolute lowest listed average bandwidth is 50% greater than your claimed figure. There may be some unlisted country that has an average rate as low as you claim, but they will of necessity be inconsequential to decentralization anyway.
Further, 1MB/s is well in excess of the rate needed to operate a meaningfully-connected full node. As is 200KB/s (your 1/5 figure).
Until the World Wide Internet's infrastructure is more universally robust and low cost we must micro manage block size to the best of our ability to minimize spam and incentivize a robust mining community.
Seems the world's internet infrastructure already got a whole lot more robust while you weren't paying attention.
I beg all readers of this post to run a full node from your home for one month 24/7 too fully understand my point of view.
Have been. Several on one physical machine, actually. No, I don't understand your point of view.
Watch in horror as your ISP disconnects you from the internet without any warning for violating some obscure clause in your contract
In your statement that you do run a full node, you implicitly admit that this has not happened to you. Why are you fearmongering?
See how hard it is to download files, play online games, use VOIP or watch Netflix with a full node running on your home network.
If your commitment to your games is greater than your commitment to Bitcoin, then Bitcoin does not need your help.
Then and only then will you fully understand my point of view.
Nope. Don't understand your point of view at all. Maybe if you restate your concerns in some manner that makes sense?
And then call your government representatives and demand better internet.
Calling on government to fix some issue peripheral to Bitcoin seems like a very odd thing to do. Would it not make more sense to figure out some way to create a higher bandwidth connection for all within your geographic community? That is, if bandwidth is an actual barrier to your running a full node - a case which you have not yet made convincingly.
Now, there are valid reasons to resist the adoption of The SegWit Omnibus Changeset (i.e., Core 0.13.1 et. seq.). However, bandwidth concerns may be the weakest argument you could possibly make. We have sufficient bandwidth to maintain decentralization - be it bigger blocks though The SegWit Omnibus Changeset, or bigger blocks through a simple bump of maxblocksize.