It seems you didn't read the discussion here. My remark was in reference to the Amiga, not the ST, not the Mac (which by the way was in the same price league as the Amiga and not in the league of the Sun: Mac 1984 $2495 with built in monitor, Amiga 1985 $1595 with monitor, Sun-1 1982 $8900 including monitor).
When Commodore released the Amiga they were the last of the big 3 in the US to release a 68000 machine and because of this I said the 68000 was mainstream at this point.
I don't really see your point in lumping Apple, Atari and Commodore together saying they were revolutionary for the consumer market, when my point was that when Commodore launched the Amiga, the competition was already there.
The 68008 ran at about 50-70 percent of the speed of an 68000, this means the CPU still outperformed all other homecomputers in its price range, when it was released in January 1984. For sure the QL flopped horribly, but when it comes to CPU speed it was much better then the other Mirco Computers at the time of release.