Wait... Is being popular on the Internet supposed to be important?!
I've been watching the eligibility debates go over and over and over for 25 years now. While some issues are simply resolved, far too many fester, sometimes indefinitely. They are the gangrene of our sport.
Think about how much damage is done every time someone is knocked back at scrutiny, or protested - I've met people who still harbour grudges from 15 years ago, FFS.
I've lost track of the number of people I've met who clearly have enthusiasm for old dirt bikes, but when I say "why don't you come along to...", they point-blank refuse to because of some eligibility dispute that happened in 1997...
There ARE people who try it on - we don't want or need to bend over to them. But while the rules are unclear, it encourages uncertainty and division.
Everyone hates uncertainty - look at the buyer's strike that happens before every federal election, for one example.
So it seems very clear to me that clearer, more concise rules are hugely important for our sport - that our "it will be right" attitude to the rules is actually doing us a massive disservice, as theyre the source of 90% of the conflict we see (both on the forum and at events).
It would seem that the CMX commission would agree with me, as they've been slowly moving in that direction for the last few years.
But any time it gets brought up here, the automatic response is to refuse to talk about it: "The rules work, let's not talk about it"... Hell, Firko and Brad are nearly as happy to dig in when they are certain they're right - but when I do the same, suddenly the topic shifts to being all about Nathan's personality failings...
I can see a problem - everything I've seen, heard and experienced in the last 8 years of active participation strengthens my belief that it is a problem that is limiting the sport.
Should I meekly say nothing, and continue to watch the damage?