mikeh, on Nov 15 2007, 08:53 PM, said:
Where...precisely where. .did I say or suggest that the USBF could 'make any rules they want'???
What I said was that they had made rules, that the members of the VCT either knew or should have known what those rules were and that those members of the VCT who broke the rules should expect sanction. They agreed to abide by the rules (such agreement is implicit in entering the event). Gandhi, in protesting what he saw as unfair laws, did not protest that he should not be punished for violating them: his point was that the laws should be changed, not that he should be allowed to violate them with impunity.
Where do you go from that rather obvious proposition to me stating that the USBF can make any rules it wants, including the swearing of loyalty oaths to George Bush??
And I am truly bewildered by your apparent belief that the rules announced by the USBF and the WBF are 'anathema' to American values. Which rules? The ones that require sensitivity to decorum?
BTW, if the WBF rules are 'anathema' to American values, just who is it who forced any American to participate in the VC competition??
So when I see an appeal to 'traditional american values', a red flag goes up and I have to restrain myself from asking which values: the list of dubious values (as would be the case for just about every country I can think of) is quite long and easily compiled.
Take a deep breath, Mike.
I'd be happy to explain to you what 'taken to its logical extreme' means if you'd like. Let me know if that's the case. If not, let me know which of the rules I mentioned a private non-profit organization would not be allowed to adopt.
The values I'm referring to (some American values and some 'Bridge values') are pretty much those I've outlined earlier:
Freedom of expression, decency, tolerance, compassion, forgiveness, sportsmanship ... and yes, sensitivity to decorum.
The fact that the ladies breached the last one in the mildest fashion imaginable doesn't give the USBF BoD carte blanche to violate virtually all of them.