That is where you are wrong on two points. One, this is not cheap plastic crap, they are pushing for reasonable quality hardware. The other point your wrong on, there is much more then double digit number of C=USA haters online vs the world who remembers C='s name. One of the biggest problems for the online C=USA hater's have is getting their head around, AO/AWN isn't the whole world nor a significant portion of the whole world.
Probably the number of Commodore and Amiga names positive heritages outnumber their own faults. 30 000 likes on Facebook is result more of that, then of CommodoreUSA`s innovation. Quality of hardware as x86 has improved, even the pricing is high. Is such model sustainable, CUSA`s longlivity will prove. Surely, COS is improvement over self-install Ubuntu, but is still beta and support and updates are yet to be established.
I would be worried if most of people that lived as Amiga Community over last decade disliked not merely the products as much as lack of innovation and bad PR. Maybe some conclusions could be drawn from that. Surely, the world market is xyz times wider then Amiga community, but if strategy was better Amiga community would be first to count on as customers and loyal promoters. In community terms its also handful (two digits) that have accepted CUSA agenda as way forward. If this was the idea, it failed so far.
Of promises really made A1200 (or A500) case, AROS support and some form o of innovative OS (and most expensive "Amiga workstations") remain vapor as much as Elite 4. Leo has done some good PR and hope will get more independence and funds to live such projects. Paradoxically, with best wishes for that to happen, that depends on the sales of current VIC, C64x and Amiga Mini offer.
To deserve support at least as PC of our next choice, CUSA should come forward with some next gen idea, like Community project was supposed to.
Legally, and even in market behaviour, CUSA is a small bussiness we expected way too much from, but is continuation, licencee and financer (via double licence - licence sum and per machine fee all CUSA users repay) of Amiga Inc, an offshoot of Amiga Inc side of the court agreement. Small Amiga scene seems to be small but resiliant, and sometimes CUSA shortcomings make an Amiga promotion.

Hope to hear we all learned some lessons and some improvements are possible. Then surely, even you can`t satisfy all the people all the time, your support from this kind of community would strengthen.