JanM, on Sep 21 2010, 05:39 PM, said:
I know I shouldn't get involved in these discussions, but somehow I forget. However:
1. I did not say and do not think that I was ignoring any regulation by not filing my WBF convention card in advance - what I said was that I did not believe my bidding system qualifies as a Red system so my convention card does not have to be filed in advance.
2. I did say that people who play Polish Club have consistently failed to recognize that the Systems Policy defines their system as Red.
3. I think that if the requirement that Red systems be filed in advance is to have any value, Red systems should be defined fairly narrowly (oops, there I am using "fairly" to mean "to a reasonable extent" not "in a fair manner;" I apologize if you don't understand me). I don't want to have to review 50 Polish Club convention cards to see if someone is playing a system for which I need to prepare in advance. It is my guess that the Systems Committee, in making the regulation that Red System convention cards had to be filed in advance did not think of Red as a "catchall" for things that aren't anything else, but thought of Red as pretty unusual but not so unusual that it should not be allowed except for long KO matches (Yellow).
4. The language you quote about "obviously fairly straightforward NATURAL" systems being Green, and Red being a "catchall," does not appear in any regulation. It appears in the 70 page Guide to Completion of the WBF Convention Card. That document was Eric Kokish's attempt, a long time ago, to help people do a better job of completing the WBF Convention Card. It is distributed by the WBF, but is not a WBF regulation of any sort and it doesn't pretend to be. Unfortunately, it is so long that few people read it, and so far as I know it has not been updated since it was first written.
In answer to your points:
1. The Opening Post made it clear that the WBF secretariat has provided information that an unnatural 1
♣ opening makes your system RED.
You did say:
"players have (sensibly) decided that the part of that territory that's pretty close to Green shouldn't be treated in the same way as the part that's close to Yellow"
And it seems to me with your parenthetical use of "sensibly" that you approve of this action or rather rebellion by players.
I am sorry but I think that deliberately ignoring regulations is reprehensible.
The fact is that the regulators for Philadelphia have decreed that everything that is between GREEN and YELLOW needs to be filed in advance. The WBF have indicated that your short club is RED and therefore in that category.
Knowing that information I think a player would find it hard in good conscience to intend to turn up and play a RED system that they have not registered in advance.
2. Maybe they have I bet there are more short club players who have consistently failed to recognize that the System Policy defines their system as RED.
GREEN is natural. A short club is not natural. Repeating a mantra that it is or is fairly natural or just ignoring the regulations does not make it so.
3. They are defined as not NATURAL, not HUM.
I get the feeling that you don't really want to review any systems.
1
♣ short is artificial, not natural I don't see why you think you should get some special allowance if you play that artificial method so that you do not have to follow the regulations.
Twisting the words and conveniently guessing the regulators motives do not change the fact that noone has registered to play a short club at the world championships. And therefore none should be allowed to play this RED system.
4. If the WBF refer to this document then they should make it clear that the information is unreliable if in fact it does not correspond with the official position.
It seems from the quote in the opening post that in fact it does as it has been advised that a short club is in fact a RED system.