Cascade, on May 29 2009, 02:02 AM, said:
2. Give an advantage to the offending side (or punish the non-offenders)
Josh you seem to be proposing that the second method is somehow equitable.
It's again all in the bias of how things are stated. Your statements 1 and 2 are not exact opposites, nor did I suggest the one you claim I did, nor are they the only potential situations.
I have proposed a situation, to use the example of how I play negative doubles there, where 3999 times out of 4000 no one gains any advantage and we simply get to play bridge. 1 time out of 4000 there is (a little) relevant unauthorized information for the offending side. Since this information can legally used by the non-offending side but not by the offending side, the offending side is at a disadvantage not an advantage.
So the "method" I say is equitable is a vast majority of neither of the ones you point out, and a slim minority of the first. None at all of the second. And yes, that is much more equitable than what you are suggesting.
For someone who argues strongly so often for the purest possible form of bridge, such as allowing any methods at all, you sure are in a hurry in this situation to create some artificial form of bridge (that of a player barred from the auction for one round or the entire auction) in situations where the overwhelming likelihood is we would get to enjoy absolutely pure and normal bridge by simply allowing the auction to continue with a correction.

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