mgoetze, on 2012-March-14, 19:00, said:
If it is bid on 100% of all hands with 13 cards, then it's not artificial. As you point out, most people don't actually play that.
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I cannot believe that this is what is intended, even if it is the correct strict reading of the sentence. I think that they didn't think about your interpretation. If they did, I'm sure they would have included the phrase "or has no meaning at all."
This is yet another time that I feel people stray by not trying to understand the lawmaker's and regulation-maker's intent. Sure, it would be great if the laws and regulations were written in a clear and unambiguous manner, but when situations like this come up, surely common sense must prevail. If one tries to write the law/regulation to cover the way meant(in my mind) one can easily see the problem. This seems much more plausible than the nonsensical consequence that bids that are clearly not natural are not defined as artificial.