When I read this thread, all I can hear is Jim Carrey's awful "eeeeeeeeeeeeeeehh" squeal in Dumb & Dumber.
I don't have an agenda, other than saying "why do we have to have an agenda?"
I understand that you, Melvyn, protect what you feel is the purest, cleanest, best way that golf can be played. That is abundantly clear. That is your path to the enjoyment of the game. You have been taught to play the game a certain way, and it is admirable you stick to it.
But why is that the ONLY way it can be?
Personally, I enjoy golf for the practice, for the mental workout, and to see if the combination of the two can produce something special that day. I totally admit that I am a slave to distance. I like to know my exact yardage if I can find it, even if I'm not skilled enough to use the exactness of the number. Golf is a technical game for me, and I prefer to fly my shots near the hole. I have learned that this approach is the most efficient way to better scores or match play victories, for me anyway.
Would I like to be able to look at a shot and hit it 4 different ways? Sure! But 9 of 10 times a high shot that stops on a dime works for me. If I had grown up over a links course, I would certainly have more shots in my repetoire. Hell that's why I love going over there so much, because it multiplies the options.
However, that is not how golf is for me. I play a decent game that is efficient through the air. Conditions in Boston in the summer are generally benign, the ground is medium to firm. I play in many local amateur events where everyone looks for the spraypainted yardage on the par 3s, if they don't already have a (recently-legalized for competition by the MGA) rangefinder. I work an hour from my home course, so much of my golf is with the use of a cart. I choose 18 holes in 2-2.5 hrs. over walking 11 of them before dark. So sue me.
You might call my golf perspective depressing, or my locale and conditions of play unfortunate. However, in the framework of my life currently (i.e. not in Scotland, not in the 1860s, not with a gutty), I find quite a bit of enjoyment out of golf in New England.
People love golf for many reasons. Some because they like to challenge themselves and eyeball a distance, some because they like to challenge themselves to hit the ball the exact distance the laser tells them to. Some because a golf cart allows them to get in 18 in 2 hours after work, or 36+ in a day without needing a new set of leg tendons afterward.
I tend to think that somewhere in your theories you are looking out for us, Melvyn, combatting what might be the undoing of the game, the runaway ball, course lengthening, and other departures from the game's roots. Totally cool. I just worry you are isolating yourself.
You have mentioned a few times how GCA is a discussion group and it's a forum of opinions, etc... but you only have one, and it's so fiercely defended that the discussion is no longer a game of catch. Your opinion seems to just be bouncing back to you off a brick wall...