I confess, Mr. Hughes, that I am not following you.
First, you profess to not care what the elite players do in national championships. That's fine by me if you don't care; I assure you that I DO care, not because I want a Corey Pavin to win or a JB Holmes to lose. (That's not the case, anyway.) I care because if the tour pros can, by use of technologically-juiced equipment, render Merion obsolete (we're taking a hypothetical here, let's not debate Merion's merits, per se) then there are only a few options. One option is to alter Merion, to defend against the new length. Another option is to abandon Merion, and instead go to the 7,800-yard TPC at Viagra Bluffs. Those two options seem obscene to me. Meanwhile, the third option is to scale the ball back so that the tour pros fit Merion more comfortably. (I suppose the other option is to do nothing, let Tiger Woods play the Open without a driver or a three-wood, nothing but a hybrid and five wedges, and where all but a few holes will be approached as drive / wedge.)
Now if, as I originally pointed out, that you "don't care" what the tour players do, why would you care if they had a ball rollback? Why would you object to any new ball regulations that preserve the usability and integrity of hundreds of great old championship layouts like Merion?
If it is because you might get scaled back along with the tour pros, I'd ask, "Really? By how much?"
You seem to think that the only fair option is for rollback proponents to voluntarily roll themselves back, and leave the rest of the game to go on. You seem to take it for granted (perhaps rightly) that there is no technology crisis among recreational players; that only the elites are making courses obsolete with their newest equipment. That is precisely why a rollback is neccessary, unless you want to bifurcate things, which I don't accept. We need to roll back ball specs for the elites, and if recreational players get nudged back a little (I doubt it), they can be told "Your game is now a LOT closer to those of Els and Woods and Singh. You lost 5 yards, but they lost 25 yards."
As for people who just like to hit it far, and who don't care about the rules, and who don't care about playing by a single set of rules at all levels, you can go buy yourself the biggest, hottest driver and the longest ball that technology can produce. There's you personal preference at work. Do what you want to.
Meanwhile I am debating what is best for golf.