Whoah Ric,
you seem to be imagining I'm suggesting some 'one world government' of surfski, mandating the destruction of all skinny skis, burning copies of 'surfski with the pros' in the street and banning all mention of boats with a beam of less than 50cm...
The idea that there would/can only be one set of rules is a curious view (and a particularly kayaking one I suspect). In sailing or motorsport each class/division/whatever has its own building rules, completely different to the rules that actually govern conduct on the course.
I'm simply suggesting that either one design or a 'stable ski class' that would be
additional to the present skinny boats. Rather than being seen only as a transition step to a 'proper' ski, they could be an end in themselves. Which, for many without the skills, the time to practice, enough money to justify a pure raceboat or easy access to the sea, might just be an appealing prospect.
I completely agree with you that the top guys will come out on top whatever, it's the same in any sport, the athlete provides the 'added value'. That's equally an argument for using matched kit - it doesn't matter either way. I'd also agree that this matched kit can often seem more 'agricultural', however it's usually more than fun enough for most. Lasers (the original one-design factory produced dinghy) are widely reviled for their crude rudder/sails/masts etc., but 200,000 built and still going strong suggests they still give a lot of people a good time.
As for it being bad for the sport, well it depends how you measure success. If you see it only as some 'worthiness' exercise for a small in-crowd then maybe.
I'd propose that increasing participation at all levels by making what is a great sport more accessible would be a better measure of success.
And it's here I think that the alarm bells should start ringing...
I'd be surprised if surfski tops 10, maybe 20'000 participants worldwide (and the significant growth has, probably, only come since the advent of the stable boats). Consider that sailing in the US attracts well over 1 million (and used to closer to 7 million in the '80s) or that there are individual races in the UK that draw 16000+. Surfski in it's present form hardly looks like a participation success.
And yet...
Anyone who can sit in a kayak is theoretically a potential kayak racer.
And yet...
Kayaking as a recreational activity has never been more popular.
Surfski is pushing at an open door (the boats sell themselves and most people experience kayaking first through a sit-on-top) if it could just grasp the opportunity. That might mean letting go of the Run DMC defence: "It's like that and that's the way it is..."
Maybe there's something in that accessible equipment idea.