fred, on Dec 25 2008, 11:10 AM, said:
Justified.
Assuming that people who don't complain are satisfied with the current state of affairs, or that they would start complaining if things were to change, is not necessarily clear.
The fact is that virtually no one even understands the current regulations. This includes directors at the regional level and above. Certainly these particular regulations don't effect the majority of players. But the current approach seems to be "90% of the players don't care about these regulations, so lets screw over the other 10% and pretend it's the will of the majority." My guess is that of the 140K or so members you refer to:
(1) A substantial percentage don't even play outside their local clubs, so these regulations are totally invisible to them.
(2) Of the rest, most have no idea what the various charts allow or disallow, and would not even notice if it were changed (even if it were changed in a fairly drastic way).
(3) Some of the people you refer to would be flummoxed if faced with a strong club or a weak notrump. They may complain about these things. Sure, they would also complain if they had to deal with multi or a forcing pass system, but it is not clear that they would complain more or differently.
(4) Some of the people in this set are actually intrigued when they see different methods and find them fun to play against.
On several occasions I've played unusual methods (ACBL legal but still weird, like a strong diamond and light major suit openings) in various events. The reactions I get are generally:
-- Newer players think our methods are really cool, want to know where we learned them or came up with them. A far cry from "my weird bidding is scaring new players away from bridge."
-- Older "novice" players (who have typically been playing duplicate for 20-30 years) sometimes complain about the methods. Frequently this leads to calling the director and a long discussion because no one can really figure out the general convention chart. However, these folks also complain (and sometimes call director) if we alert any bid. So if we want to make these people stop complaining we probably have to ban everything alertable.
-- Expert players (even at the local level) usually laugh at us, sometimes make derogatory remarks about "crazy youngsters" but don't generally complain about having to play us.
-- The people who complain most are the "bunny bashers"; folks who are decent but not great players and play every day at the club, usually winning or placing very high because they are better than the typical club pair. Their most common complain is that our methods "will scare new players away."