Jim:
It's good that you are distressed. Maybe you should go visit Rees Jones or Tom Fazio and explain it to them.
As I said before, necessity is the mother of invention. I am not at all sure that Old Tom Morris really thought the Alps and the Narrows and the Cardinal's Back were really among the best holes he had designed -- it's too bad he never wrote anything (that I know of) to that effect. They were just the best he could come up with considering the restrictions of a very tight property. My guess is, if he'd had 200 acres to work with, there would be less quirk at Prestwick, too.
[And Prestwick's quirkiness is about far more than blind shots, incidentally. You have never seen a green like the Sea Headrig in your life.]
A lot has been made on this thread about safety, but I don't think it's really about safety. Safety is important in the modern world, but in this discussion, it is often used as an excuse for architects or clients to steer clear of building some types of holes they really dislike for other reasons. It's more about today's norms. There are surely some architects who are all about "fairness" to the point that their work fits Peter's comparison with movie lighting just perfectly. There are others of us who are not afraid to have a bit of quirk in our designs, yet, we have clients to answer to and it helps us to make our case if there aren't many obvious alternatives for avoiding it [i.e., "Why don't you just put the green over THERE?"]. There has not been an architect immune from that issue since golf architecture started being a profession instead of a hobby, and that right there is probably the biggest difference between then and now.