Answers for the 'Laws
of Bridge'
Ton Kooijman's invitation to an open discussion
about the new laws was a very welcome sight. However, players
and officials here at these championships naturally concentrate
on the play and hence there has not been that much discussion.
I would like to describe how we in Sweden recently tackled a similar
situation. A couple of years ago the Swedish federation decided
that a new set of rules for what systems and conventions you were
allowed to play should be constructed. A committee was appointed
but, and this is the important thing, the proposal the committee
put together was presented to all our members at the official bulletin
board of our federation. Numerous discussions and new proposals
came to light and the final set of rules was quite different from
the original proposal. And this final set was also of much higher
quality. What had happened was that most of the best (bridge) brains
of Sweden had put their wise heads together instead of just a committee.
In every federation, especially in an intellectual sport as ours,
there is bound to be a lot of very good brains, the trick is how
to get them involved in the process of legislation.
Now that Ton has showed us all that this new edition of the laws
will be made by means of a more open process than has previously
been the case I strongly recommend that we take one further step
and try to involve "all" members by using a solution similar
to the one referred to above.
We could e.g. use the newsgroup for bridge, RGB, where there are
many intelligent people regularly contributing their views. Another
idea is to open up a bulletin board at the WBF site. This is my
favourite since the moderator of such a site would have free hands
to adjust it in whatever way he or she wanted to and we would keep
all the discussions together.
On this bulletin board the moderator could start a so called discussion
thread on every proposed change of the laws. A thread is a series
of "posts" made by different persons, presented to the
viewer in a way that means he or she can easily follow the discussion
as it evolves. New threads could of course also be started by other
people.
I believe this would be a great success, just as it was for us
in Sweden, and would hugely enhance the quality of the revision
of the laws.
Further more, the same concept could be used by the WBF System
regulations group. As an example of mistakes that can be made by
learned people that have to work without sufficient support we can
take the present regulation which
· defines a partnership agreement that allows overcalls
in three-card suits (when you do not promise four cards in any other
suit) as a Brown Sticker convention
· and then proceeds to regulate the use of Brown Sticker
conventions in certain tournaments
This kind of agreement is not a convention and thus any regulation
that limits the right to use it is illegal - see a) law 40 which
states that only the use of conventions may be regulated , and b)
the definition of the concept of convention which can be found at
the beginning of the lawbok. But when the rule was constructed no
one noticed it was illegal. But I assure you, the number of legal
eagles all over the world is so huge there would be no chance at
all of this kind of mistake being made if we had an open discussion
as suggested.
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Firstly I wrote this article in Swedish and intended to publish
it in that language as an argument against the present trend of
publishing articles in more and more different languages. The official
language of bridge is English, that is our lingua franca, that is
the one language most of us understand, indeed that is the language
all of us must master to some degree if we are going to be able
to compete in tournaments arranged by organisations such as the
EBL. The present trend means that large parts of the bulletin become
unintelligible for many people. However, since this article aims
at more people than those mastering Swedish I finally decided to
write it in English and because of this you are able to read and
understand it.
Isn't that nice J
Daniel Auby
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