nige1, on 2019-November-24, 08:36, said:
Some American sponsors adopted short club openings. To pander to professional teams, the ACBL reclassified these openings as natural and non-alertable -- severely handicapping opponents by restricting the conventional defences that they are allowed to use.
Simpler would be to scrap all the dreadful alert rules, reducing the strain on players' memories, and avoiding some controversial rulings,
Instead, insist that you announce all partner's calls (preferably by pointing to relevant boxes on a card on the table). This would speed up the game and improve disclosure.
I think that your assumption about the genesis of the ACBL's regulation regarding "short club" openings is incorrect. My understanding is that it was done to prevent people from using those horrible conventional defenses against Aunt Gladys.
As to your last, why not just eliminate the fifteen words of the language of bridge and just require players to say what they have in the common language of the people playing the game? "I have 5 spades and 12 to 21 points"... "I have 3 spades and 6 to 9 points"... "I think this is a good spot." End. Of course, some auctions are more complex than that, and there may be "unintended consequences" to this simple change.