pran, on 2013-December-01, 05:35, said:
We have a saying in engineering: Don't fix it if it aint broke! Has anybody produced any evidence of L46A being "broke"? I have never experienced any such indication.
Some players are reluctant to call the director about an infraction -- especially in club games -- especially when they are visitors to the club -- especially when damage is moot -- and especially when the irregularity involves a subtle and contentious point of law. Unclear, sophisticated and complex laws foster that attitude, partly because rulings are so inconsistent.
There are swings and roundabouts to the law-makers
laissez faire policy:
On the one hand: the director is left in peace; most of the time players enjoy a smooth social game.
On the other hand: dubious practices become habitual; players complain behind each others' backs; the game comes to bear an increasingly tenuous resemblance to Bridge; when an exasperated player eventually calls the director, the law-breaker may resent it as tantamount to an accusation of cheating.
At a higher level, players are unlikely to respect laws that not even top directors can understand, especially if some of the latter claim that the law must mean something different from what it seems to say..
Bridge is a great game. Its popularity implies that its rules must be pretty good. Nevertheless, simpler clearer rules, rigorously enforced, would make the game more fun, and decelerate its decline.