mjj29, on 2013-February-18, 13:09, said:
but I have an agreement for all possible situations.
No, obviously, you don't - you have none for the situation at hand. And since we are talking before the start of the round we also have "an agreement for all possible situations" in exactly the same sense as you. Whatever opponents can through at us, we know how we should play
provided their meaning is unconditional. We can even take into account some weird "value showing" doubles by treating them as penalty (for example).
mjj29, on 2013-February-18, 13:09, said:
My defense isn't 'conditional' any more than playing my defense against a strong club is conditional on you playing a strong club. It's just a different auction so my bids mean something else.
But this
is conditional - your agreemens are conditional on
meaning of opponent's bids. Not on the auction - on the meaning of the auction. The only difference is that your defence is conditional on the meaning of bids that would have been done at the moment you are going to bid, and mine is conditional on the meaning of the bids that could be done later. It is significant, but it seems that there is no law against that.
mjj29, on 2013-February-18, 13:09, said:
If I'm the director and you try this you will get very short stick and increasing PPs until you stop
Switching devil's advocate mode off - I fully sympathize
I think that there should be some kind of law that states that opening bids cannot be varied depending on opponents methods or who the opponents are and in general meaning of any bid cannot be varied depending on meaning of possible later bids by opposing side. I'm trying to find out is this kind of regulations enacted anywhere at present.