I would say that is an opinion not a fact.
Can you point to a law that requires 'an independent 3rd party nationally recognized certification organization' in order for the word 'certified' to be attached to anything?
Not a law, but thats what a real certification is. I know you just finished becoming a "certified" thermographer, not sure to what level but it met the ASNT SNT-TC-1A certification requirements. Now say after all that training (And expense) you went through, you bid on a IR job that required a "certified thermographer" to do the work and some low ball guy from Joe's Electric* wins the job and produces a certification from old Joe himself, in other words his employer (Joe) made the decision he was certified, downloaded a certificate from the Microsoft word site and printed his guy out a certificate. Should those be treated equally?
The U.S. Department of Education does not itself accredit institutions or programs, but does publish a list of
nationally recognized accrediting agencies that the Secretary of Education "determines to be reliable authorities as to the quality of education or training provided by the institutions of higher education and the higher education programs they accredit. An agency seeking national recognition by the Secretary must meet the Secretary's procedures and criteria for the recognition of accrediting agencies, as published in the Federal Register. Some of the criteria for recognition, such as the criterion requiring a link to Federal programs, have no bearing on the quality of an accrediting agency; however, they do have the effect of making some agencies ineligible for recognition for reasons other than quality. The recognition process involves not only filing an application with the U.S. Department of Education but also review by the National Advisory Committee on Institutional Quality and Integrity, which makes a recommendation to the Secretary regarding recognition.
Anything less than one of those programs is no better than Joes certificate he pronted out on his computer so his guy could win that "certified" IR job from you.
* Joes electric is a fictional company I made up for this post, no offense to anyone who actually works for a company called joes electric.