I agree with OP. I don't always carry it along, but it has been a massive boost to my productivity.
The only issue this house had was it overheated. We had glass facing south. Even in winter it instantly became too hot.
The link I pointed to is all about ventilation, so just because people ignored an important component of building science, and focused on one aspect, does not invalidate it.
And while climate change is important and using efficiency to deal with it is useful, the thermal control layer is actually the least important of the four:
* https://buildingscience.com/documents/insights/bsi-001-the-p...
'Bulk' water (precipitation) and moisture can cause deterioration of the building materials (rot, crumbling), and also mold, which has its own health effects. Leaky houses can often blow conditioned air at much faster rates than thermal leakage.
HRVs only deal with temperature, but then you have humidity that is non-controlled: moisture coming in during the summer, and getting vented out in the winter (too-dry air coming in).
ERVs handle both.