Brent,
Much as you said to me earlier in the thread, I'm certainly not saying that I'm write and you're wrong.
Much as I said before, a second or third tee is fine by me. Essentially, as it always was over here: ladies, men's and pros. It's the philosophy of 'a five iron for all' which I don't agree with, meaning I don't agree with the notion that you fit the course to your game rather than fitting your game to the course.
Slight tangent but I think multiple tees is often wrongly promoted as being some sort of freedom of choice issue. Reality though is, hence so many people playing courses at length which are too long for them, people feel that they need to go back just a bit further than they really should. Peer pressure can be a terrible thing. So by increasing the difference from one set to another, i.e. removing the in-between tees, you set a clearer message as to where you should be playing from. Condescending as it may sound, and I don't include you in this for a minute, people need guidance because, despite the average golfer seemingly thinking the opposite, he or she is not an expert on architecture and needs a little help from the architect/club in terms of where the course should be played from.
Of course, and this is what Pat alluded to when he mentioned Augusta, if you're out there having a game with your long hitting friend and the difference is such that he plays from 7,000 yards whilst you play the next set up at 6,000 yards, all well and good. It's the micro manipulation of a course in an attempt to promote some sort of false equality which I really don't think is good for golf. I guess really that's less about pragmatism and more about a genuine believe as t what the trials, tribulations and corresponding triumphs should all be about. It's ultimately an issue about the soul of the game as populism doesn't really interest me.
But again, it's just my opinion and I'm not saying your wrong.