Niall,
The club I'm referring to is St. Andrew's Golf Club, subject of the article and thread! I was a member there, as I mentioned.
I also belong to RD, and have for 10+ years. I've traveled widely in Scotland to play golf and have a solid understanding of how many clubs have separate gender organizations.
While St. Andrew's Golf Club has allowed women in the clubhouse for a very long time, they have not permitted them in the main bar area...basically the most central and normal place ALL would generally wish to use after their golf to converse, share a drink or get a nibble. Again, it's simply a silly, exclusionary policy. They're finally going to correct it and I'm glad, even if it took a governmental law to prompt the change.
Just because something has been done for a long time doesn't make it right. In the states, many clubs and facilities stuff their caddies in idiotic white suits that are uncomfortable and degrading. Much of this is due to the misguided rationale that because Augusta does it, it's the way to go. How disgusting!
That white suit crap is a vestige of the racial prejudice era and needs to go! If you look at footage of the early Masters there were no white suits. The caddies wore normal clothes and many looked not much different than the players. Someone decided that the caddies needed to be put in their place and that white suit sure looks good against that dark skin of the caddies, almost all of which were black up until recently.
Spare me the... they look professional, it easier to tell who is a caddie, is simplifies the dress code etc. EVERYONE with one ounce of reason knows it's all B.S. Will Augusta ever be big enough to burn the white suits? It saddened me to hear Ben Crenshaw's caddie talk about his fifty years at the Masters there and describe the "proper" uniform that Mr. Roberts had stipulated they wear. He said he was going to keep it on for a while after his final round this year. I recognize the pride he had being an Augusta caddie, but it's pathetic that he defined his place by that suit. Now he was always well treated and enjoyed a special relationship with some members most other caddies didn't, so he may not have experienced the sting so many others have. But to not understand what it really stood for and represented was revealing.
If one looks at the practical responses made throughout this thread, it appears we are headed in the right direction, but there is a long way to go, both in the game and society in general. Let us all keep striving to improve both in our own small ways
Cheers,
Kris