The thing is, you know all of this about yourself. But some random person off the street doesn't. And they're going to make decisions very quickly. When I applied for my job in IT, I needed to have specific certifications. I needed to have Security+ and Server+, which I hold. However, I still had to interview. If I didn't have Security+ or Server+, I couldn't even have been considered, even though I was a perfect candidate for the job. But my interviewer made it clear that my certifications just got me to the interview. It was how I conducted myself in the interview and the critical thinking skills I presented that got me the job. Neither was more important than the other. My skills I could demonstrate and my skills on paper were both critically important to me having the job.
To give you another example on this forum, you have some people like you and
@Dirty Dog and
@gpseymour who have enough years in Martial Arts that you can take the attitude of the State Farm commercials "we know a thing or two, because we've seen a thing or two." Then you've got people like me, who have a fair amount of experience - enough that we're considered teachers or experts within our art, but still have a lot of room to grow. And then you have people that I'm not going to name (but you might know who I'm thinking of) that are armchair masters. The kind of person personified by Matt Page when he plays Master Ken (Enter the Dojo on Youtube), who washed out of every school they trained and have no practical experience, but talk like an 11th-degree-black belt.
On this forum, we all have the same authority. While I'm a lot less experienced than you, I can say a lot of the same things you can. I've trained for years under a Master. I've trained others under me. I've mentored other instructors at my school. I've gotten with peers, and developed a few ideas myself. I don't know that it will make it into a KKW curriculum, but I hope one day to have my own curriculum I can teach. I know you can claim all of these things and more. And yet, someone with only a few months of experience and a huge superiority complex (okay, we may share that second trait) can post advice with the same clout. So what is it that sets apart your message, or my message, from that uninformed one?