Garland,
The number of assumptions that you made in your last post is staggering.
One is the blanket assumption that you make that the mass of golfers are playing competitive matches of some sort. Beyond that, the match is one in which a "straight hitter" is opposed by a "better" golfer, as if those are mutually exclusive terms. I see absolutely NO reason to believe that either of these assumptions are true. The simplest explanation of the tee it forward idea, as well as the most common application, is that golf is just more fun for most players if they don't try to play a course that is simply too long, rather than as a way of equalizing competitions.
Then you really take a leap of logic with the implied assumption that the "straight hitter" and the presumably "better player" will be able to compete equally at match play if they play from the same tees, but that somehow that is lost if the "straight hitter" moves up. Of course, you know that the first part isn't true; the handicap system exists for that very reason!
So you've arbitrarily decided that the correct way to adjust is through awarded strokes, rather than reducing distance, and, in fact, that IS the most common way to adjust in competition.
But it is NOT the only way; the USGA publishes handicap adjustments for players playing a competition from different tees. They are rarely used, but they are available.
You strike me as being HIGHLY competitive, as am I. But I recognize that many, if not most, golfers are not nearly so competitive and would be well served to play a more enjoyable golf course without a stigma attached. That's what the tee it forward "movement" is about, and nothing else.
Now try to relax.