Riverman, I don't know about any standing, but I do know about having fun. And I know that QRO isn't possible in all places or circumstances.
As most know, I have never gravitated toward high power. The most I've used on a continuing basis was ~100w. Usually it has been whatever the radio supplied. My Icom provides up to 100w, and I often find it tough to get into pileups with that. Managing contacts with QRP just offers another dimension of operating with its own allure.
Operating 100w on 80m a ham once told me to get more power or get off of 80m (I did not "friend" him on Facebook). So, I realize some hams find it frustrating to try working a station sending to them QRP. They can do what they do when they don't want to talk to a station... Some of us enjoy the challenge and the joy that comes from a long distance QRP QSO.
Then there is the portability aspect. Having a light weight, fast deploying station in a bag, box, or suitcase is the solution to feeding the ham radio appetite, especially in and from obscure locations (like my mother-in-law's house ). I am disinclined to pack up my entire station to go stay a week somewhere, and mobile setups are, IMHO, a terrible compromise choice on lower bands.
Besides, building an antenna system that works well QRP is my kind of thing. If it will do QRP, I believe it certainly will do QRO.
I have to wonder what I can possibly be missing...?
Radio
Antenna system
QSO...
Yep, it's all there.
Homer