Mottzilla, I hear what you're saying and it's good to be cautious, but your fears are a bit extreme.
As a sound engineer, avid video gamer, and a bit of computer dork, I've yet to hear a complaint about CD players or CD-ROMs wearing out CDs (other than Soop's post about DVD's in an XBOX). Can you find individual anecdotes and freak occurrences? Yes. And there are certainly some faulty players and poorly made devices, but it's not a failure of CD's or optical technology.
CD Bronzing is only a problem with music discs made at one factory over the course of five years.
Disc rot exists, but it's not a widespread problem. If it were, sites would be devoted to tracking it like collectors do with poorly made LDs. Disc rot is a problem with CD-Rs and LDs, not replicated CDs.
You keep waving your arms about CDs wearing out, but there's no evidence of a problem on the horizon. CDs have had ample time to exhibit disc rot and they haven't. Other than bronzed CDs from the Blackburn plant, there don't seem be any other large-scale manufacturing mistakes in the West. I have yet to see disc rot on a glass-mastered CD. Gamers come here every day with broken hardware, but we haven't heard about CDs damaged by anything other than abuse. Until I see concrete evidence or frequent reports, I'll worry about my hardware first, cartridges second, and CDs last.