One of my pet peeves with GolfClubAtlas is the way many of its most intelligent members seem unable to answer the questions that are asked of them. I see this manifest itself in two particular ways:
1) When asked to name *one* hole or course or archtectural feature that they like or dislike, they can't help themselves and name two, three, four, six, 10, 12, dozens, etc. of examples which fit the criteria. The point of being asked to name just a single candidate is that it forces you to make difficult decisions and justify your answers, encouraging greater use of your critical faculties. Instead, they take the easy way out and rattle off a lengthy list - possibly to demonstrate their knowledge or exposure to many different courses, but usually because they can't or don't want to tax their brains and make the tough subjective decision.
2) When asked a question by someone looking for a specific piece of advice, they reject the premise of the question and ramble on in an unhelpful direction. I'm not talking about the Patrick Mucci sort of thread-starting question, which is often used to great effect in stimulating discussion. Rather, I'm thinking about threads like the "Don't play this Scottish links!!" one on the main board at present, where a relatively new poster asked for some advice in narrowing down the field of potential candidates in his first trip to Scotland, and was instead met with a bunch of answers about how every Scottish links is wonderful and worth seeing. I see it also in every thread where someone asks about public courses in an area and receives answers to the effect of "You should try to get on [super-private course X]", even though many golfers have no elite private-course connections or lack the wherewithal and/or inclination to seek them out.
The second category is more problematic, even when you ignore that such answers seem to ignore logistical questions and assume that every golfer can spend as long as they want to play as many courses as they want. I hear a lot of talk about how GolfClubAtlas can reach out beyond its walls and connect with a wider audience, but it's precisely this sort of insular attitude - where responses reflect the poster's attitudes rather than trying to consider the questioner's viewpoint and give advice which is helpful vis-a-vis that viewpoint - which makes it seem impossible that the attitudes stated on this site will ever become mainstream. Tom Paul's "wide world" theory should apply here - that golf is a wide world full of many different tastes and perspectives - but not in the slightly condescending way that many people use the term. Seems to me that first you have to meet someone where he is - accepting that viewpoints which are different from your own can be equally valid - and only then try to change his attitudes through reason and demonstration, rather than the other way around...
Cheers,
Darren