Doug,
Don't get me wrong on the distance issue. Length off the tee is not an issue that causes me, personally, a lot of heartburn. The courses I play are plenty long from the middle of 5 tees that I play. But, if the USGA rolled back the ball, I wouldn't loose sleep. I might move up a set of tee blocks, but that is the only impact it would have on me. The courses I play are not inclined to lengthen themselves (and they've had pro tournaments) nor are they inclined to narrow the fairways or grow the rough any worse than it is. I don't get to play the classic courses that are apparently being defiled to protect themselves from devestation by touring pros. I don't think that such courses can be preserved as museum pieces anyway. So, I'm not terribly disturbed by that either.
My point, if I had one on distance, is that it is an issue that pertains to a very small percentage of the golfing population - those that don't want touring pros to score well and those who want to preserve classic courses in some static state for a game that was played 20 or 50 or 100 years ago. Progress has a way of overwhelming those who try to stand in the way.
As to majority rules, sure, the majority gets it wrong sometimes or even often. Hitler was elected wasn't he? But benign dictatorships don't necessarily get it right either. Who's to say that rolling the ball back 10% is right? What are the criteria for what's right. But if the benign dictatorship of the USGA regulates it back, then so be it.
Last year I councilled patience on the distance issue. Seems like more patience is required. My money is on them further regulating the ball. When, is the question.
In the meantime I get e-mails from Sean O'Hair shilling the new TM drivers (which he hits so much further). Seems the only difference is they made the shaft longer. In the next couple of days Titleist is to launch the "new" Pro V1's. Will the sky fall? I'm betting that the Pros are playing them already and the average distance this year, so far, is down 3 yards on average.
If they regulated the OOB rule to be one stroke and drop at point of exit, that's OK with me. I doubt it would have any impact on my enjoyment of the game or the challenge presented by the game. As long as we all play under the same rules in competition. Seems to me that I recall an earlier thread on the evolution of the OOB rule over the years - wasn't it drop and a stroke not so long ago? On the rules, who's to say what's "right". The rules are pretty arbitrary.