Trying to regulate "things", i.e. equipment, rather than attitudes is, for me, a losing proposition. It's a dark trail that leads to more and more regulation and it entices folks to push further and further against the edges of the more and more regulations, and so on. As an approach, it didn't work for prohibition, won't work for gun control, and will inevitably lead to more judges and less shooting in sports. This happens in every activity, like it was part of human nature.
Here’s a little parable. Once upon a time, there was a guy named Charlie and a guy named Bill. They both had big lawns and bought riding lawnmowers. They got to talking about their mowers and decided to get together in a vacant field and race them, just for fun. A few other guys joined them. Getting together to race lawnmowers... now there's a silly activity that should be purely fun. They started out getting together on Saturdays with their own machines, with which they actually mowed their lawns. However, inevitably, someone built a special "racing lawnmower", and from there it went, until they ended up with classes, factory sponsored teams, mechanics who can pull a lawnmower apart and rebuild it for maximum performance with the ever burgeoning regulations governing exactly what is "stock". Soon, it was a huge activity with businesses involved, etc. Meantime, Charlie and Bill got kind of overwhelmed, shook their heads and dropped their memberships in the Official Lawnmower Racers Governing and Ruling Organization. If you want to talk to Charlie or Bill about their experience and feeling about it, you can still catch them on Saturday mornings down at that vacant field… just the two of them and their lawnmowers… after they finish mowing their lawns. Meantime, all the other guys are attending more and more meetings of the OLRGRO to refine the more and more regulations defining the more and more classes of lawnmowers and what is and isn’t permissible.
This has been fun, guys, and it's let me get some ideas off my head. Helped me through a real bad night, too, but there’s a new thread on workshops that looks like it’ll be interesting…
Dick