All these comments make me wonder if there is an analogy to be drawn with the profession of medicine. In the practice and advancement of medicine, there are several entities that have a stake in the process, and affect the outcome of the overall state of health care in quality and efficacy.
The primary tenet and professional ethic of medical doctors is, “first do no harm”. From there a symbiotic relationship takes place between the practitioners of medicine and all the supporting entities, from facility administrators, to product producers an innovators of medical implements, to pharma, and the professional organizations like AMA. There is oversight on several levels from government to specialty board practice reviews. All of that is brought to bare where the rubber meets the road in the health care patient-consumer’s outcome.
In golf, the archies are like the M.D.s. They are the practitioners. There are supporting entities just like in medicine, and all have a symbiotic relationship in order to derive an outcome to the ultimate quality of the player-consumers. The archies have their version of AMA in their ASGCA or BIGGA. They are subject to positive or negative effects on how they design and present their craft by technology implement advancements. And, there is oversight of the product in golf being the hiring entities and the regulatory entities that have jurisdiction over environmental issues.
But to boil this down to the issue at hand - that being criticism of an archie who has taken a commission to ply his craft or practice on an iconic historical ground (owned by a town and not that third party governing body R&A – third party like the AMA in medicine would say a particular hospital or clinic is theirs when it may be a community hospital) where the ultimate consumer is the golfer (most particularly the golfer seeking the experience of going back to the cradle of the game to experience it a close to the pure old game as can be had at such a well used facility) isn’t that practitioner’s main charge, “first do no harm”? Is this mostly an ethical question, and to be put to Mr. Hawtree?