Lou,
Understandable, the conversation certainly started there, but I was thinking more about daily play, as pro tournaments are effectively bifurcated where rules official are at the beckon call to make a ruling if need be.
Your comment about aeration holes being tapped down is really the point. Golf is chock full of rules breakers, most of the time probably not even maliciously, just being unaware of the specifics of the rules. And the violations are in abundance, asking a partner which club they hit, taking an improper drop, not taking the walk of shame without a provisional, improperly marking the ball on the green, too many clubs in the bag, etc, etc...not to mention the willful cheaters who use foot wedges, forget to count a gimmie as a stroke, or play with non-confirming balls.
In the spirit of consistent rules, is it really asking that much to designate divots as GUR, and implement a rule that would have an actual positive effect in the playing of the game? Yes pros can often handle them easy, but Johnny Weekend finally stripes one down the middle, and its in a big divot as a reward and skulls the next one over the green. Yes its a fairness argument, but as I understand it, being able to fix ball marks or other damage on the green is also a rule of fairness is it not?