NoZed Avenger
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Apr 19, 2002
- Messages
- 11,286
I suspected that was a lot of it.
I can say, though, that over the course of twenty years, it has grown more difficult to find meeting places. That's anecdotal evidence, but I think stats would back me up that liability insurance rates have increased in that same period.
However, so has the price of bread. Correlation, causation, etc.
Urban legends and bogeymen don't make rates increase. There must be something real to the phenomenon, and my point was that the liability/lawsuit culture affects us in ways we don't realize, including making it more expensive to run a chess tournament.
Well, *if* the culture is doing it, then yes. And it may well be so -- it is not an unreasonable idea. But you're kind of assuming it is so because it intuitively makes sense, and then using that assumption as proof that the culture is affecting us in ways we don't realize. It's kind of leaving out a big step.
Community centers in other communities have been more accomodating. Different cities definitely have different attitudes on what is appropriate use of their facilities, and how much they want people in them. It's just a matter of finding the right ones. Nevertheless, the issue of liability insurance is a very real, and very costly, complicating factor.
But again, it looks like liability insurance is definitely a factor, except in those cities where it isn't. . . . Wouldn't a "very real" factor be easier to see?
I mean, John Edwards has a very real power, except in those times where it doesn't work as well - it's a matter of finding the right hits.
To be clear, I suspect that you are right. However, it always makes me uncomfortable when I cannot 'show my work' in getting at a conclusion.