Posted 2025-March-07, 20:19
What, specific, question (yes, I am getting repetitive) would you send someone to the FLB and to the Blue Book, because they both have the answer? What specific part of the Blue Book do you think helps with the Law? I sure hope it's in Chapter 2, wherein the regulations and interpretations of the EBU at least relate to Full Disclosure, UI, and what, exactly, is considered a Partnership Understanding. The rest of the book is great if you're using an EBU Card, or if you're using EBU terminology, or you want to know what is legal or Alertable in an EBU event. None of which could possibly be answerable in the Laws (which *allow* RAs to do all of that, sure) - but also, is not in fact relevant at all to ACBL play (where the *equivalent* Convention Charts and Alert Procedure apply).
If they can't understand the CC and the AP, some simple (for directors and others who have read a contract) explanation of how you would go looking and finding the answer can help; after two or three of those, if they are interested, I'm sure they'd be able to do as good a job as most experienced players who actually care about what the documents say/whether their treatment is legal or Alertable.
Now, if they're wondering about the arcanities of the Law and how it might be ruled, being sent to the *White* Book as a supplement to the FLB (while being told that some things are different Over Here) might be useful, yes. But the White Book, exemplar of the field though it is, isn't exactly grade-school either. While you're at it, you could pass them Duplicate Decisions (an ACBL equivalent, more aimed at "easy reading of the FLB for Club Directors who are, frankly, pushed into it or care more about table count/profit than absolute correctness". Which, for newer players investigating how things are (supposed to be) legally done, is about right, really, and certainly better than experienced players' old wives' tales) or Kooijman's/WBF's Commentary on the 2017 Laws (but again, not exactly easy reading!)
Yes, the Blue Book is a wonderful document. And the regulations therein, especially at the "open" level 4, would make a nice change both in what is legal and how it is explained, and how Alerting is done. But its relevance to the ACBL at all is specious at best (again, excepting Chapter 2, and even there be careful - for instance, I would like if 2A3 still applied in the ACBL but it has been replaced).
When I go to sea, don't fear for me, Fear For The Storm -- Birdie and the Swansong (tSCoSI)