Yaw control only needs brake distribution.
All other things equal as stipulated the rwd is simply smaller. Even disregarding this most buyers here clearly don't care much about fuel economy, and rightly so given gas is relatively cheap.
Under the physics of dynamic friction conditions, corner performance is predicated on maximizing weight (as opposed to balance) over the outside front and then drive wheel, which works out best for fwd. This translates to the basic rally or wet driving technique.
The ladder frame is only strong in very limited directions, thus a frame stronger in most directions is stronger overall.
		
		
	 
Yaw control benefits immensely from torque vectoring differentials. Torque vectoring is more effective on AWD than any 2WD because it has ~2x as much traction to work with. Yes, selective braking can control yaw, but torque vectoring with AWD can improve ultimate cornering capacity. Again, this is a small incremental improvement, but it is a thing.
RWD is not smaller than FWD. RWD generally adds a transmission tunnel and possibly a differential hump. Many of the secondary benefits of FWD are derived from its great packaging, yes, but to dismiss cost and fuel economy from buyer consideration is to be blatantly ignorant of market forces. See: 
http://www.nydailynews.com/autos/bu...ns-people-buy-specific-cars-article-1.2552707 where fuel economy and price rank in the top 10 reasons why people buy a new car, and interior comfort (which is on the JDPA survey) isn't.
In the dynamic traction situation you outline it may be possible for FWD to out perform RWD. However, your situation is based on the unspoken assumption that weight transfer under acceleration won't lift too much weight off of the front axle. I think your thought has some validity, but I don't think it applies broadly to all vehicles and conditions.
Strength should not be confused with stiffness, which it often is, and one should not forget that some chassis strength is derived from the cab and bed bodies. If we assume that unibodies and ladder frames are made with the same type of material, it is possible, if not likely, that unibodies would be stronger. However, unibodies are generally constructed with lower-strength steels (such as EDDS) in order to facilitate the large strains associated with their formation. They also do not benefit from heat-treatments because of the spot and seam welds used in their construction (welding removes heat treatments in a localized area, generally where stress concentrations occur). Ladder frames, on the other hand, can be more readily manufactured from significantly stronger steels and are small enough in height to be heat-treated if that is desired. The new F150 boasts about 70ksi strength steel in its frame, whereas EDDS steel used in the automotive panel forming operations I'm familiar with has a yield strength as low as 14ksi. Thus it is entirely possible for a ladder frame to be stronger than a similarly-sized unibody because ladder frame construction allows the practical use of stronger materials and heat treatments where unibody does not, and it receives reinforcement from the bed and cab, which possess unibody construction. It is also possible for the pendulum to swing the other way, so we should not assume one or the other.
Unibody is almost unarguably stiffer for vehicles of the same interior volume than ladder frames. But we must not confuse stiffness (deflection per unit force or torque) with strength (amount of force or torque sustained without permanent deformation) in the extremely dynamic loading situations a vehicle (where a lack of stiffness can prevent damage).
	
		
	
	
		
		
			For your own sake, next time try for a retort that won't do well on r/iamverysmart.
		
		
	 
I only base my retort on empirical evidence from my interactions with you.
Lets keep the discussion and differing of opinions civil and stop with the subtle insults -- DaTT