aguahombre, on 2012-February-27, 12:56, said:
Yes, we understand that is your objection. The cheapest club bid asks about partner's major suit situation, regardless of which method of responses to that question are used. If we refused to tell the opponents that, when asked, we would be violating 20F1 and the basic tenets of disclosure; but what opponent wouldn't already know that?
Going any further than explaining it asks about major(s) is entering into prediction of future happenings; 20F1 is clear. It refers to bids already made, and only bids already made. It is O.K. that some people do not like it. I like it, and do not consider my approach or the ACBL approach unethical.
What Law says you can explain part of the meaning of a call but not all the meaning? Asking about majors: what does that mean? What Law says that you have to explain 2
♣ as asking about "majors" but not about whether you are asking about four-card or five-card majors?
kevperk, on 2012-February-27, 17:04, said:
You keep addressing a problem is not being discussed. Noone is advocating not telling the opponents what the question is. I, and others are advocating not telling in a way that helps partner know how one is going to answer the question. If you are saying that the only way to tell the opponents what the question is requires telling the table what the responses are, then say that. I think that one CAN make it clear what is being asked without giving UI to partner. 2 clubs over 1NT asks "what is your major suit holding" not "what is your response to puppet stayman"
No-one? Perhaps you should read aguahombre and a few other odd posts here, and many similar posts on rec.games.bridge. Yes, they are advocating not describing the meaning of an asking bid in full, whether it be asking for majors, asking for aces/controls, responding to weak twos and various other asks. There is a view that you are allowed to hide part of the meaning of the call.
pran, on 2012-February-27, 17:15, said:
Oh dear!
Then frankly I did not understand the problem.
Of course opponents are entitled to all relevant information about a call already made, does anybody dispute that? (But players are not entitled to disclosure of possible future calls until the time such a call has also been made.)
Yes, several people dispute it, pran, that is the problem.