Does Matt Ward have a conflict of interest criticizing a fellow editor (Ron Whitten) of a competing golf magazine (GD)?
Even granting you your ludicrous premise (that The Jersey Golfer and Golf Digest are "competing golf magazines"): No. What conflict of interest do you see?
Do you have a conflict of intertest criticising another magazine or newspaper editor (Ron Whitten)?
Ditto. (And just for the record: I have not criticized Ron Whitten in this thread, and don't intend to.)
RW should be held accountable for his views, if he is wrong or reasoning is not sound, make your case (TFazio) why he is wrong...don't tell him can't be critical now that he moonlights.
I didn't tell him he can't be critical now that he moonlights.
I didn't tell him he can't moonlight.
ALL I SAID is that he has a conflict of interest in being both a critic and a producer of golf-course designs. It's not up to me to JUDGE that conflict; it's up to Mr. Whitten's employer.
There will be very little learned if we do not allow intelligent give and take from competing professionals....thank God Simpson, Behr, MacKenzie and Travis were not paralyzed by our current politcal correctness. I want my most intelligent, passionate and experienced golf architectural minds designing and anaylzing, not choosing one or the other.
Good. That's your opinion. You've decided that the benefits of the conflict of interest are greater than its costs. You might be right; I, for one, certainly haven't said you're wrong.
I can't see that this has ANYTHING to do with "political correctness."
"- The critic's interest as a critic is to tell the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth about his opinions of the golf courses he sees and plays, and about his opinions of the architects of those golf courses. (Never mind that it rarely works out that way.)"
That sounds like a description of a witness under oath, not a critic. A critic is simply giving his expert opinion--and an opinion is not the truth, its one man's opinion.
Please reread what I wrote. I wrote: "The critic's interest as a critic is to tell the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth about his opinions of the golf courses he sees and plays, and about his opinions of the architects of those golf courses."
I said the critic's job was to tell the truth ABOUT HIS OPINIONS (emphasis added, because apparently I must).
It is my OPINION that a critic engaged in the business will have an EVEN HARDER TIME expressing his true opinions than he had as an independent critic.
If you don't like what he writes or what he designs, criticize him. No need to stiffle his passion or expertise by making him choose one or the other...most people are honest and guided by principle...those who are not, will be exposed becasue their arguement will not hold water.
I want to make it very, very clear that I am not talking about Ron Whitten now:
(1) Most people are honest and guided by principle? Do you really believe that? If you do, I understand why you take the position you do.
I, personally, believe that most people are as honest and guided by principle as they can afford to be.
(2) Imagine, for just a moment, that you're a golf-architecture critic. Imagine that you decide to branch out into the business -- with, say, some co-designer or consultant gigs. You take a consultant job with Architect A. You do the job. The course is finished. Naturally and properly, you recuse yourself from writing a review. Six months later, Architect A finishes another course. You go to play it. You think it's a pile of crap.
As honest and guided by principle as you (and many others) undoubtedly are, Tom MacWood: Wouldn't you find it difficult to say it's a pile of crap? Might you not be tempted to trim the sharp edges off your opinions of those with whom you're worked, and of those with whom you might someday work -- even as, even without meaning to, you sharpen the edges of your opinions of those with whom you've concluded you'll never work?