I'd like to interpose a question here and maybe help keep the temperature of the discussion on the cooler side.
My question is this: the major argument that I've seen on behalf of the KKW is in this and other threads, the one that embraces the majority of TKD people (who can't afford to go to Korea to train) is that the KKW acts as an oversight body and ensures both standardization and the 'portability' of rank across large chunks of space and time. I'm skeptical about how much actual oversight is involved, for the reasons I've given, but like currency, it works if you believe it, so I'm fine with that general answer. But why is it that we TKDists
need this kind of portability? What is there about the structure of the TKD training system which makes this necessary or desirable? Does it work that way with Goju-ryu, say? If you have a BB from a Gojo-ryu school, does the credibility of your belt depend on certification and validation by a world center of Gojo-ryu oversight? I have the very strong impression that the answer is no, and that it's not that way for
any of the O/J karate or the CMAs that have gradations of rank. (If that's a misimpression, I'd be glad to be corrected, and I'm dead serious about that.) In these other systems, the legitimacy of the school lineage seems to be the crucial factor. In contrast, it looks to me as if KKW ranking trumps school ranking, no matter how illustrious the teaching lineage, so far as legitimacy goes. If so, why would that be?