As someone who took up golf as an adult, and has introduced other adults to golf, I think the "stuffy for stuffiness sake" is a bit much. It's odd having to explain to people why they have to buy a specific wardrobe for a game they are trying for the first time. And before I get called down by those who don't own work clothes, most folks in my demographic don't wear a collar for anything short of church or a funeral. Some not even then. It just isn't baked into the culture.
The worst part of it all is when people don't have the patience to explain to someone why there is a reason certain etiquette norms exist. I once took 2 adult friends to my private club to try golf for the first time. I saw them about to do something they saw as normal, and I ran to stop them. Before I could get to them, they were literally shouted down by an older member. My friend said he didn't know it wasn't allowed, and was told "if you don't know that, then you don't belong here!"
I apologized for the mistake, but they both told me they would never try golf again. I don't blame them.
First off, the member who barked at your guests is WAY out of line and he should be the one to get a letter from the board. If club staff is trained by decent management, then they should say something or the dick-head member should say something to the staff. It's not a member's role to be the rules police.
But....Please dont confuse basic golf game culture with private country club "rules" and decorum.
For every one "stuffy" private club, there are 6-8 public venues. Golfers have choices, just as workers have choices.
If you really seek to be so egalitarian, why dont you crusade against a dress code in the office?
Some questions:
1. Why shouldnt it be normal to wear a hoodie and gym shorts to your job as an admin, clerk or lawyer at a law firm? You CAN wear that if you work at a tech firm afterall...;-)...jeez, I mean...how ridiculous....law firms should be castigated...;-) Dress codes arent about "office attire" per se, they are profession-specific.
2. Why shouldnt you wear a tee shirt and skinny jeans to your aunt's wedding? I mean, come on, how stuffy can a wedding really be?
Dress codes arent about parties per se, they are about being occasion-specific.
Dress codes are not about the game of golf, per se, they are club-specific.Private clubs are not there to accomadate the whims and trends of their "Gen Pop" guests...;-) You want a lax dress code, then find a club that has one.
You want to talk on your cell phone at dinner, then find a club, venue or restaurant that facillitates that. This is a great country that offers a variety of options.
Many, not all, Private clubs are an escape for the fortunate and members pay for that privelege. No cell phones, reasoanble dress codes, civil discourse...who are "you" to tell "them" that you disagree...? Dont like it, leave. Just like the private club member aint gonna go to the corner gin mill and get all uppity with the locals about their customs...;-)..cuz he doesnt belong...
And I believe the OP described a "top 100" course/club placing it firmly in the top 1% of this category. So, 99% of the world's courses may have more relaxed policies and the OP's choice was to NOT go there but to the epicenter of eliticism then cops an attitude about it....?
Shit, this post should be about chips on shoulders, not dress codes....So, you take your significant other out to dinner at a nice (not snobby) restaurant to celebrate a special occasion in your medium to small town. In walks some jack-wagon barking on his cell phone wearing a tank-top and jorts and sits down next to you and he stays on his phone while scartching his nuts and gets plowed.
He's totally allowed to do that...right...?
Question: Will you return to that restaurant again?
The restaurant wants YOU as the patron, not the jack-wagon.
Finish the analogy on your own....