What use is it for one or the other to come up with standards for the industry to follow when both of them can't even share their findings and create a common standard for the sport.
My personal take on the newly promulgated PSP rules is that they buckled under the pressure of the influx of cheater boards coming into the sport. Rather than fixing the problem, they decided to make it dissappear and sweep the sports largest source of potential liability under the rug.
I think that the NPPL is doing a better job at this but what it is that they do is still woefully inadequate.
They have all the necessary data from the ASTM and other safety related sources to stand on. Why don't they just find the courage to make a stand on the issue. If they both intend to be 'the' trail blazer for the sport in particular and the industry in general, you'd think that either one would have grown some balls by now.
My personal take on the newly promulgated PSP rules is that they buckled under the pressure of the influx of cheater boards coming into the sport. Rather than fixing the problem, they decided to make it dissappear and sweep the sports largest source of potential liability under the rug.
I think that the NPPL is doing a better job at this but what it is that they do is still woefully inadequate.
They have all the necessary data from the ASTM and other safety related sources to stand on. Why don't they just find the courage to make a stand on the issue. If they both intend to be 'the' trail blazer for the sport in particular and the industry in general, you'd think that either one would have grown some balls by now.



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