Shel
always good to read your perspective, and the measured tone of your thoughts.
From afar, I think this is what most bothers me (in my romantic naiveté) about one of the game's governing bodies, i.e. that it has rushed so happily to embrace the widespread 'corporatization' that now dominates American life.
I've seen and/or experienced the same 'consolidated' and 'top down' management approach (instituted by the same kind of 'career officials') take ever-increasing hold in an ever-widening range of sectors & industries: government, financial services, entertainment, health-care, education, charities-not for profit, hospitality etc.
Everywhere there is the same kind of 'penny pinching' you describe -- everywhere, that is, except by/for those at the very top, i.e. the consolidating careerists who manage the operations mainly, it often seems, for their own personal benefit; everywhere the 'pyramid' as been flipped on its head, with more and more of the resources & salary dollars supporting the very select few.
The pyramid used to be wide at the bottom and quite pointed at the top i.e. with many junior and mid-level employees, and then fewer executives, and then only one or two people in charge. Now, whether in government or charities or financial services, it's been turned upside down: wide at the top, with many well paid and 'centralized' administrators, and very pointed at the bottom, since there is so little money left to pay for the entry-level 'clerks' and mid-level managers and front-line workers.
In short: more and more organizations seem 'organized' not to do the actual work & perform the important functions they were meant to do and fulfill, but instead to serve the organization itself -- the organization being defined as/by the people at the top, as/by the careerists who run them.
That's what I mean by the corporatization of American life; my romantic naiveté is in thinking that the game's governing body might've stood against the trend, or at least wanted to try to stand against it.
That is what's so charming/refreshing about discussing golf course architects, i.e. after all these decades and a century+ of change, their 'job description' has remained exactly the same as it's always been -- to build good golf courses.