There is a difference (and a significant one) between someone looking at this site and its content, or referring someone to it, and taking a screen shot and posting it on Twitter to cause controversy. Not least because that deprives a response in a thread of any context. The Twitter post I saw was, very clearly, shit stirring (I hope that expression translates).
I have never participated on Twitter, in large part because it seems that the only purpose of it is talking loudly over others.
Whatever discussion there is on that platform about me, I don’t really care. They don’t know me well enough to comment.
But it takes a special kind of [redacted] to screen shot a post here and put it on Twitter, declaring open season on me there while knowing that I’m not going to respond. [Redacted] that guy, whoever you are.
Tom,
You might believe I'm that (redacted), but I assure you it was brought to Brandel from someone else. I don't traffic in, nor post on Twitter and share the same reason as you, yet I have to ask that if you choose to describe someone as "washed-up.. (sic)..who can't compete*" here on GCA.com, how can you be truly upset if it finds its way to that person, or others? Is there not something inherently denigrating and somewhat challenging to those words?
The internet is often little more than a web of algorithms and connectivity. Can you really say you were innocent of any form of "shit-stirring" by making such a statement and attacking someone knowing or believing they don't participate on GCA.com? Based on your last post here, that's considerably hypocritical.
For the record, I couldn't agree more with your take on architecture (and I posted as such on the original thread) and have spent dozens of hours trying to educate Brandel about the nuances of angles and protection of interest and fun on the course. His take on thick rough and trees is rather banal and antithetical to where great golf architecture has come from....and should continue to to go.
His occupational role is limited to commentary about all things related to professional golf, from A-to-Z. He personally loves finding, and unafraid of generating, controversy (it creates interest and draws eyeballs for the Golf Channel), yet he does hundreds and hundreds of hours of real research to back up what pro golf "shit" he stirs. He mostly avoids personal attacks, instead engaging in statistics-backed debate. That's his expertise and milieu. Yours is undeniably golf architecture. I, and suspect many others, genuinely enjoy both.
Lastly, posts on the Golf Club Atlas Discussion Group belong to the world, not just the relatively few participants who are here from time-to-time. Otherwise, it is no more than narrowing echo chamber. Is that what Ran, Ben and Joe intended when they created it? I really doubt that. Perhaps all posters should realize that before they hit the blue button?
* He did win once on the PGA tour and won over $4M in the late nineties....hardly the stuff of "can't compete."