Brent Hutto writes:
So let's say you had played the eleventh at Lake Merced 500 times and I was seeing it for the very first time. We're playing a friendly match for a dollar a hole. It would be perfectly fair for you to hit the correct shot based on your years of experience there and watch me hit it OB over the green because I got fooled by the architecture. Them's the breaks, you win a dollar.Back in the olden days that was part of the challenge of playing a new course, figuring out the architecture. Now you just point and click. Does the course really matter?
Yet in the same situation if I pull out a rangefinder, get an exact number and hit the ball five feel from the hole I'm cheating you out of something because I was supposed to be fooled even if you were not.Nothing wrong with a bit of knowledge you didn't earn. Mike Golden earned his knowledge; you want your's as a gift from up high.
That's a mighty two-faced attitude right there. The old selective moral indignation.That's might American attitude of your's. "I want something, but I don't want to put in the work to earn it. If my fellow man earned something then it is my right to get the same gift without work."
Dan Herrmann writes:
There's an old saying - "Choose your battles."When the USGA allowed buggies,
I remained silent;
I sometimes liked to ride in buggies.
When they allowed everyone to touch the golf ball,
I remained silent;
I didn't have to touch my golf ball.
When they ruined the U.S. Open setups,
I did not speak out;
I've never qualified for a U.S. Open.
When they dumped
Golf Journal,
I remained silent;
There were plenty of other golf publications to read.
When they allowed rangefinders,
I was told to pick your fights, you allowed all this other stuff, leave it be.
Cheers,
Dan King
We are living in the future
I'll tell you how I know
I read it in the paper
Fifteen years ago
We're all driving rocket ships
And talking with our minds
And wearing turquoise jewelry
And standing in soup lines
We are standing in soup lines
--John Prine