I have not given up on the world, I have made a compromise. No operating system is ever going to be 100% perfect, so instead of complaining unendingly about how it's not perfect, you compromise and meet the operating system the rest of the way. I agree with you that Windows 10 Mobile needs some serious work on the gesture front. You should be able to swipe from the left side to open the menu at the very least. In quite a few ways navigational cues aren't as polished as they were on Windows Phone 8/.1, either. But they still work, offering a single place for every menu in an application to be accessed at any time (rather than swiping through menu after menu until you find the one you're looking for), while an ellipsis in the bottom corner often offers a place for quick actions on that particular page or menu. And, no matter how you look at it, familiarity for iOS and Android users is important. After all, they have 96% of the market commutatively and are the main target for Microsoft. We want users from them. We can't alienate them by giving them an interface that they won't understand, and force them to rewire their brains when they probably already aren't certain about Windows Mobile. Instead of using pivots (which has plenty of their own issues), and instead of using hamburger menus exactly like the competition, Microsoft needs to improve the menus. Like I said, not perfect, but Microsoft has the potential to take an idea already in use and already known and improve on it to make it faster, more intuitive, and better implemented on touch screen devices.
I don't have the wrong attitude sir, as I'm not the one completely against any change without first thinking about the positives of those changes. Instead of yelling for Microsoft to go back to the past, without any improvements on something that worked but had its own issues, think instead on the improvements Microsoft can make now, and the possible benefits in store for these decisions. Let the user voices flow, indeed.