bluejak, on 2011-July-27, 17:50, said:
No, not necessarily. You really want black and white, and the Laws do not require it, and tournament direction does not require it.
What I'd like is a law that says "If you ask a question which you didn't need to ask, and it misleads an opponent, your score will be adjusted." But I realise that I'm not going to get that, either now or (probably) in 2017.
Even with the most extreme bending of the laws, the best we seem to be able to get to is "If you ask a question which you didn't need to ask, and it misleads an opponent, we will assume that you did it deliberately, and your score will be adjusted."
I realise that you're not responsible for the content of the laws, but I'm astonished that you're apparently happy with this.
Quote
When a person breaches a Law, it may be
- deliberate: he is trying to break the Law
- ignorant: he does not know the Law
- accidental: he broke the Law accidentally despite knowing the Law
- forgetful: he forgot what the Law was momentarily and broke it
- trivial: he broke the Law deliberately but considers it trivial: players do this all the time and we do not call them cheats
- and so on
Now a simple rule of being a TD is you do not accuse people of cheating. There is no need, except in obvious cases [eg signalling with fingers], so you don't.
When you rule against someone using Law 73D2 you do
not accuse them of cheating unless you are a very very poor and incompetent TD. Furthermore, a decision of a breach of this Law is not an accusation of cheating. Look at the list above, for example: only the first one is cheating. The TD does not decide which applies.
You may choose not to use the word, but that doesn't change the meaning of the ruling.
You are ruling that the deceit was intentional, because that's what 73D2 says. If it's intentional, it can't be accidental. If the player is Blackshoe, he definitely wasn't ignorant or forgetful of the laws.. That seems to leave us with "deliberate" (unless there's more to "and so on" than I think). So, against Blackshoe, the meaning of your ruling would be "I think that you deliberately broke Law 73D2 in order to gain an advantage."