I think it's the equivalent of the 'me and my friends' school of journalism, you know, those opinion pieces/articles by young writers who spend all their time with other young writers longing for the perfect New York apartment in Brooklyn, and so write with rapt and endless and blind devotion about looking for the perfect New York apartment in Brooklyn -- as if everyone else in the world was equally enraptured by their ridiculous obsession. As nice and as good as they may be, I figure the USGA types spend way too much time hanging out with other USGA types and country-club members obesseing about testing the best players in the world, and so assume that everyone else must share both the goal and the proposed solution. In short, both those young writers and the USGA types live in a bubble...and nothing we chirp at them from the outside that bubble do they consider paying attention to.
Peter
Dan K - very nicely put, i.e. the best players have convinced the USGA (read: golfers who wish they were good enough to be tour pros) that golf's inherent inconsistencies are not the spirit of the game but the bane of it.