gnasher, on 2012-May-23, 04:37, said:
So your "experience" of this problem consists of reading posts in internet forums?
Not "consists of" but "includes"
gnasher, on 2012-May-23, 04:37, said:
In any case, I don't see any reason to suppose that unifying regulations will reduce the volume of criticsm. If, for example, we made everybody play under WBF alerting rules, there would be criticism from all over the world.
Good example: The SBU enforces WBF regulations with few problems
gnasher, on 2012-May-23, 04:37, said:
I don't understand how you get from "There are overseas visitors at some events." to "Wherever they play, most would prefer to play under the same rules".
I made no such argument.
gnasher, on 2012-May-23, 04:37, said:
If anything, the presence of overseas visitors at our events suggests that they are happy to play under other countries' rules.
Another non sequitor, IMO.
gnasher, on 2012-May-23, 04:37, said:
Your solution appears to be that the French Pair should be forced to play under regulations that don't suit them even when they are in France, solely so that they can be better prepared for an encounter with one of the less charming citizens of Reading.
Global rules would prevent their predacament.
gnasher, on 2012-May-23, 04:37, said:
Do you actually have any evidence that "fewer foreigners now play Bridge in England"? From a quick look at the list of teams at the Spring Fours, I would say that English events are doing rather better at attracting overseas visitors than they used to.
I made no such claim. I live in Scotland. It was a reply to a point made by Vampyr. The smileys were meant to indicate a jocular rejoinder.
gnasher, on 2012-May-23, 04:37, said:
Apart from this French pair who had a bad experience at a provincial bridge club, do you know of any other overseas player who has chosen not to play bridge in England because of the regulations?
I don't even know whether that French pair stopped playing bridge in England..
gnasher, on 2012-May-23, 04:37, said:
So you keep saying, but I'm still waiting to hear who these "many" are. You have made what feels like 1000 posts on this subject, but I cannot remember anyone agreeing with you that the regulations across the world should be made uniform. Many of the users of this forum do actually play in multiple juriusdictions. If they were all craving uniformity, don't you think that one of them might have said something by now?
Good point, Gnasher. I get private emails from some with similar views. but fewer than I'd hope. And none can be bothered to pop their heads above the parapet.
Incidentally, there are thousands of unresolved on-line disputes about the interpretation of Bridge law and regulation in simple basic cases. Many high-light legal anomalies, some of which are decades old. IMO local regulation makes resolution harder.