I was making 2 points really ....
1.) Eliminate the the house walls, the unsanctioned sport shots and the disparity in lane conditions. We needs some enforceable standards across all sanctioned leagues -- why else have a sanctioning body? -- the other alternative is roll back the ball technology but that seems counter productive.
You are up against bigger forces on this point. The proprietors have a financial interest in happy customers. It has been pretty well proven that higher scores tend to create happy (and scoring entitled) customers. Happy customers tend to spend more money. The USBC cannot outright ban certain patterns, and they know it. But they have put in place avenues to recognize bowling on more competitive patterns. This is about as good as USBC can do at the house level.
2.) Make 2 handed / thumbless stuff illegal as it gives the bowler an unfair advantage over the field. I make a parallel comparison to the anchored putting with this.
We can all beat this to death, and maybe already have, but you aren't going to win this war either. If it isn't two handed, or no thumb, it will be the Maximum Bob's or Jimmy Keith's of the world. In many ways, allowing two handed and/or no thumb is a way to level the playing field for most of us who don't have the large hands or otherworldly physical gifts of some of these guys.
In general, with the equipment and conditions of today, more rev's is only an advantage if you can manage it and control it. At the highest level, they do. As you work your way down to the house shot heros, they have the rev's but not the control, so they look great on the THS, but self destruct as the patterns become more demanding. I'm only about 300 rev's myself, but in may cases can complete on sport type conditions with 500 rev guys because of speed control, or accuracy, or spare shooting, or ability to read transition. At times I can keep up on a THS, but when they get matched up, they blow past me. If they lose the look, I can blow past them.
Rev's are only one part of the game, but at times it is the poster child for complaining about all problems with bowling. I respect your opinion, but I do not agree