I guess I should respond, since I'm the guy (or at least one of the guys) who touched on it in Mike's thread.
I'm not an extremist, so I generally don't care for ideas taken to the extreme.
But in this case, as a matter of fact, I don't like your idea -- "easier is more fun" -- even if it's NOT taken to its extreme. I don't agree with it at all!
I like Hard! Demanding tee shots, demanding approaches, fast-running turf, bunkers in the line of play, tough bunker shots, contoured greens maintained as quick as they can be maintained. I don't mind water at all. And you'll find at least a dozen posts where I've advocated a Competition Ball -- and said that I'd be happy to play it.
What I DON'T like, and don't enjoy, are two things -- and they happen to be the two things that seem the most common embodiment of Hard on most American courses: thick rough and dense fairway-side forests.
When the rough is so thick that the ball must be hacked out and laid up, I think that's no fun. And when the trees are so densely planted that all you can do when you get into them is look for some avenue to punch out, I think that's no fun.
Rick Shefchik and I played at University of Minnesota this morning and were discussing trees as we played the 10th -- a shortish par-4 with a very narrow fairway between two thick lines of trees. Rick was saying he'd take down every tree that overhangs the fairway on the right side -- and maybe EVERY tree on the right side (which is also the right side of the opposite-direction 11th). I said I wouldn't go that far -- but I would clear out enough of the trees that, if one hit one's drive into them, one would have to pay a price, but would still have realistic possibilities to work the ball around them and go for the green.
That, to me, is fun: the constant possibility of an exciting, dramatic (heroic?) shot. Thick rough and thick stands of trees negate that possibility.