Your suspicions are wrong! As I stated in the earliest posts of this thread, it's simple curiosity. There's no denying I lack "standing" in lawyer-speak. I'm in the ASSRA for the Archives and the magazine. I take my single shots to the range with friends and family; I don't drive them a 100 miles to an organized shoot.
I didn't locate a copy of the Association's charter on the site. This forum post, not contested, was the closest I could come to a statement of purpose for the Association:
Quote:To promote fellowship among those interested in the use, study, and preservation of single shot rifles of the type developed between the close of the civil war and the onset of WW1.
I find nothing about action type or country of origin in that statement. If that's elsewhere in the charter, so be it; otherwise, I did have a valid point.
I must admit I see one reason to Ban All Bolts at this time. As I understand it, you can show up for a match with a Ruger single shot, an action developed after WW-I. It's kind-a, sort-a, in a way, more or less like the actions from Britain in the late 1800s. Were the directors to do The Right Thing and allow bolt singles similar to those in Rowe's book, they'd be hard pressed to deny more modern bolt singles. "Oh what a tangled web we weave when first we practice to deceive."