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Kathryn, I do not think that when someone says "this decision is simple", he means to insult you or your question. It is merely a way of differentiating. If the fact is that a decision is simple and there are no good alternatives, that fact should be pointed out I think. If every hand were analysed in page long essays (in this case, maybe about why it is a good idea for a takeout double to contain 3 hearts at least), it would give the impression that you need to think everything over like that. "the decision is simple" is more like "don't waste your energy on these hands, just pass"
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Kathryn, I do not think that when someone says "this decision is simple", he means to insult you or your question. It is merely a way of differentiating. If the fact is that a decision is simple and there are no good alternatives, that fact should be pointed out I think. If every hand were analysed in page long essays (in this case, maybe about why it is a good idea for a takeout double to contain 3 hearts at least), it would give the impression that you need to think everything over like that. "the decision is simple" is more like "don't waste your energy on these hands, just pass"

The problem with this approach is that if we are not careful when giving advice to state precisely what we mean then it is inevitable that those hearing or reading the advice will misinterpret it.

 

I have lost count of the times that someone has explained to me the reason that they took some weird action was because I had told them too. When I know I would never have told them to bid or play that way.

 

"don't waste your energy on these hands, just pass" is difficult advice to follow when the one giving the advice has a clear impression of which hands are 'these hands' and the one hearing the advice has no idea where the boundaries are between 'these hands' and some other similar hands that they mistakingly think are similar or the same sort of problem.

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If we are unwilling to sacrifice the meaning of any other bid to accomodate this hand, then we don't really have that strong of desire to compete.

 

If the answer is only: all actions are worse, then pass is the best bid and thus it is the desired action.

Not only was this an awful lot of semantics, but both these statements are false.

Of course it was semantics - pass is pretty obvious.

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