That's probably only true if you accept essentially irrelevant amounts of ancestry. If you take 5 generations, there's likely at least one person 50% or more native in that family, but that would be <5% of their ancestry.
Costs of goods hasn't been a meaningful part of final cost of a product in a long time. Companies have been using minor cost increases to justify major price increases for a while now.
I think comparing it to a console is the wrong mindset. It's a computer first that can also be a console. It's also a pre built Linux based computer you can have a higher degree of confidence that things just work even after updates. It's a legitimate competitor for a new windows PC as much as it is a console competitor.
Digital ownership is probably going to happen, but it's going to take a generation of politicians to die off. Once we get more people that understand computers and digital goods aren't magic, there can be change.
Shunning them doesn't work work though. It just pushes people to further radicals. Friendship can actually keep people from and sometimes bring them back from extremism. Shunning feels a lot better for the shunner though.
US IP rights are only a good example of a bad example.