blackshoe, on 2018-August-31, 10:33, said:
The alternatives seem to be willful disobedience, or not playing in games where those rules exist.
An impractical alternative would be to stringently penalize infraction of such rules.
But that would unrealistically expect directors to be know the rules, to actively police the tables, and to impose appropriate penalties.
Perusal of old threads about "opening 1N with a singleton", "Opening 3rd in hand without opening values", "using illegal bidding designations", and so on, illustrate that suspect actions are rarely reported and directors rarely award redress to putative victims.
Paradoxically, players and directors are more likely to criticise the victims as "unethical" just for calling the director
The only sensible alternative:is my earlier suggestion: Law-makers and regulators should radically simplify the rules. They could make a start by dropping sophisticated and unnecessary rules that most players break (deliberately or carelessly -- only a mind-reader can know for sure). These rules add no discernible value to the game but unfairly disadvantage the minority who comply with them,