David Levene wrote:RobinC as guest wrote:So as far as the ISSF is concerned these are the new rules!!!!
I'm sorry but that is rubbish.
They are not the new rules, merely a summary of some of the major changes.
We will only understand what most of them really mean when we see the actual detailed rules.
It's not rubbish, it's just not precisely stated, and that should be obvious, as should Robin's meaning. These are not the new rules, true, but merely the summary of those new rules.
However, that distinction is not what RobinC and myself (and quite a lot of other people, many with more recognisable names than ours) are worried about. What we are talking about is the nature of the process by which these new rules have been drafted and the nature of the process by which they will be approved.
Yes, there are problems with the rules themselves; this would never have been otherwise - as a general rule, in all walks of life, all change is resisted, sometimes for better reasons than others, and that's how it should always be so that no change is too radical and no status quo gets to be too stagnant. Change itself isn't the problem;
bad changes are the problem. It was ever thus. And in any sane and well organised system, changes are discussed by everyone in the system and agreed on by everyone in the system, and that's perfectly healthy;
how that discussion is carried out and how that agreement is reached are how you tell how well organised a system is and it's that
how that's worrying here.
ISSF has a truely lousy system for carrying out that discussion and reaching that agreement and their system is so bad that with very few exceptions nobody in the sport in general has had any opportunity to take part in that discussion before their agreement is deemed by ISSF to be given. And from what's been said
sotto voce here and elsewhere, even some of those
inside ISSF, on the athletes and coaches committees and elsewhere,
have not been listened to.
This is a way of thinking and operating that has destroyed a lot of organisations in the past, and ISSF isn't some special case.
That they haven't even recognised the problem for what it is despite the massive uproar during this Olympic cycle just past is really worrying because the longer an organisation lets a problem like this go unaddressed, the larger, more radical, and more painful and costly the action required to fix it becomes.