Melvyn,
OUCH! IMHO, all of human history is more about overcoming things than accepting status quo. We would have NO progress if everyone just accepted things the way they were. Besides, please tell me how a handicapped golfer trying to enjoy golf has ever negatively affected your life?
For the record, when I worked for Killian and Nugent, we designed a handicap only course for a rehab center in Staunton, VA, but it never got built as far as I know. We stayed in the dorms a few nights in the design phase. I admit, the first night, I darn near threw up while eating and living amongst the "crips." By the third day, I was more inspired by just how much they did to overcome their limitations, often using medical devices to assist them.
Sports was a big part of many of their mental rehab, if not physical rehab. No way bowling by setting a ball on a sort of stimpmeter device or golfing is ever the same, but dammit, its bowling or golf to them.
Later, when ADA came in, I agreed to play in a handicap golfer tournament and came away with a completey different view of how much I should work to ADA accessibility. To paraphrase a song, "The gimps, they just want to have fun, the gimps just want to have fun!" (sorry for the derogative names, but it fits the lyrics)
Even today, contractors, gca's and shapers look at me as if I am from Mars when reading my ADA specs. And when I keep making them change shaping around greens and tees to provide that ADA ramp. Very few seem to really take those regs seriously, but I do. I have found that adding the ability for wheelchair golfers has not detracted from my designs one bit. In fact, as I begin to feel my knees at age 55, in general, I pay a lot more attention to flat access routes onto greens and tees for the soon to be senior golfer, moi!
Now, I do have some worries that some future version of ADA regs will stipulate wheelchair accessible bunkers, which I would agree with Melyvn would really detract from the game. But, so far, ADA golfers aren't demanding that. They love golf courses as much as anyone and hate to see them totally wrecked just for their benefit. They must want some minimal accomodations so they can enjoy life similar to what we do. I am not usuall a big govt. guy, but this is a case where the USA has decided that the equal rights of the disabled are more important than our rights to enjoy golf as it was enjoyed 100 years ago. Who can disagree with that big picture decision? (especially since so many use carts anyway)