They're all on the take from Big Tech.
Shit. You're right - they're literally paying them! Like, salaries, even! Check mate, man.
As has been said by several people above here, I'm not worried about these thermals. Laptops and a lot of other hardware operates at these temperatures entirely safely. Yes, laptops fail more often than desktops, but when that is caused by thermals it is mostly VRMs failing, not CPUs. And you obviously still need VRM cooling on your desktop. There also won't be excessive heat dissipated into the board from these chips despite their high thermals - the high thermals are caused by an inability to efficiently dissipate heat into the cooler, after all. The additional heat through the socket will be negligible over what is caused by the increased CPU power.
AMD is saying these chips can run 24/7 at 95°C, and I trust them when saying that. The Zen3 boost and voltage control and chip protection system has already proven itself to be very capable, and this is improved over that. Us enthusiasts need to change our thinking though. Our already rather irrational preference for more or less arbitrarily low temperatures will no longer work - we need to start trusting the chips to govern themselves. They can do so far better than we can, after all. No human can keep track of core voltages thousands of times a second, or temperatures, or clock speeds. That's just reality. PCs are for using, not monitoring.
That increased CPU power worries me more, especially as a long-time SFF builder. Luckily it seems that these chips have tons of potential for power limit tuning while sacrificing minimal performance, especially in ST but also MT. I'd be very interested to see what a 7600X could do in my Densium 4+ with a Noctua L9, but I won't be upgrading that system any time soon.
A more significant issue IMO is that this change necessitates a paradigm shift in how we think of fan control - a linear relation between fan speeds and core temperature is insufficient now that CPUs are doing this degree of fine-grained boost and power control at high temperatures. Controlling fans by CPU power, but somehow also weighted by temperature, would likely be better. This is what laptops do after all, and it allows them to run relatively quietly (for their size).