Because its a stupid, moronic and entirely arbitrary distinction.
You don't exactly put the "moderate" in "moderator," do you? I've marked this phenomenon before: that those who delight in policing the utterances of others are never quite so stringent about their own.
"Abjectly," forsooth!
failed to makr any case of why a batsman's intent matters at all;
I've made the case, alright. You just haven't spotted it. But it's implicit in everything I've said. If the batsman does not intend an outcome -- if, in fact, he intends a quite
different outcome -- then that outcome is the product of error (or, as Fred points out, at the very most of luck), and the batting team can no take no credit for it. Sports try, wherever possible, to punish mistakes while rewarding merit. The legbye does the opposite.
you've assumed you are correct, refused to defend your viewpoint as anything other than self-evident, and been insufferably condescending in doing so.
Oh, don't be such a wimp. If strong views, robustly expressed, are so offensive to you, then you shouldn't be frequenting forums at all, less still moderating them.
The game is about defending your wicket, and then scoring runs. If you have successfully defended your wicket and are capable of scorijg a run following that - irrespective of what thr ball hit or did not hit (your argument would also ban byes,
It most certainly would not.
because the battimg team did nothing to deserve them)
The reward element is only one half of my argument. The other, adverted repeatedly, is the element of error, which in the case of legbyes is rewarded rather than punished.
Byes are quite different: the outcome of a mistake by the fielding team, as represented by the wicketkeeper, and duly punished. This seems trite.
then you should have a right to take that run. The only moderations, lest you get pedantic then shout my clarification dowj for pedantry,
You're the only one shouting here, Dan. There's a shrill and querulous tone in everything you've written. And you set yourself up for a terrible fall when you throw around words like "stupid," "moronic," "abject" and "insufferable."
is disallowing in the case of pad play (since neither the bowler, hamstrung by the LBW law, nor batsman, through disallowed leg byes, is rewarded for cynical, awful, aesthetically displeasing cricket without the symmetry of the game being impacted), or in the case of unintentional obstruction.
I've read this sentence several times now, and I still can't fathom what you're trying to say. Why don't you fix yourself a nice cup of tea, take a long bath and a deep breath, remind yourself that it's only cricket we're discussing, and try to frame this argument in a polite and measured way? I promise I'll reciprocate.
You're the one trying to change the laws of cricket. The onus is on you to demonstrate why.
I've been doing that from the start. If I hadn't put forward an argument, you wouldn't have been able to spend three paragraphs responding to it.
"I don't like it and I'm important because I nicknamed myself after an important cricketing figure" is not an argument for change.
Yeah, dude. Seriously. Run that bath.