Rick:
Thanks for that. You can understand how it's difficult to separate out attacks on the system from attacks on us personally though, right? As much as you say "it's the system", well.... a bunch of us here are a part of it, proudly so, and thus it's human nature to defend it from attacks by outsiders.
But your words remain powerful to me... I do think the perfect rating system would have many of the elements you and Dan and David suggest. There just remain two insurmountable hurdles, which cause the whole idea to fail, by my reckoning:
1. No way to do for private clubs - you said it yourself. Sure, some of these don't "need" the perception help that a ranking might give, but many do. And given it's going to be impossible to do under your system, well... make this apply just to a separate list of public courses, and I am right there with you - it's a good way to go and that would make for a list free from any perceptions of impropriety, which is a good thing. But the worth of this list would be limited, and one would always wonder how the best publics stack up to the best privates, something very much worth assessing... and it doesn't also solve the next problem, which is:
2. It's just gonna cost too much damn money to do. No magazine is going to want to pay this, it's just not in their interest to do so - for them, the ratings are a huge success as it is! I also can't imagine any other organization that has such altruism as to make this happen... who cares enough for "pure," "uncompromised" ratings to go to this expense and trouble? Wishing won't make it so. So then the answer might be make raters pay for everything themselves, and I have said several times why I see that as an overall negative, which I gather you understand. If not, I'll be happy to explain it again. I know David doesn't buy it, but I think you and Dan do and that's good enough for me.
So in the end, for me, all these ideas are wonderful, but these two definite problems are insurmountable and make the idea fail.
It's tough to crusade for ideas doomed to failure. Come up with a solution to #1 above though, and maybe it starts to be worth the effort. Of course you're also gonna need to make #2 seem more viable, but at least we'd have a start.
TH