If I had the choice of having a C++2020 with absolutely no backwards compatibility but a greatly cleaned up language or having yet another step down the path it's heading now, I'd chose the former even if it breaks backwards compatibility. But the language is going to follow the developers and they want to continue down the path where they get to explain again and again and again the intricacies and delicacies of rvalue semantics, exotic template meta-programming and what-ever the next big thing is going to be. All the while we seemingly still don't even have a clear road-map for providing simple modules.
I was enthusiastic back when C++11 hit and it felt like a great big push going on in the language development, I had the feeling that things were really going to take off... but now it feels like it just died out, and now there's nothing that really gets me exited about the future of C++. I'm worried It's going to get more and more complex and less and less used.