There are several books that advertise reduced juice. There may be some that offer it to all-comers; most, in my experience, offer it to a selected few. I don't believe I have ever seen a disclaimer in a book's advertisements that says something to the effect "reduced juice is available at the discretion of management only and management may change the rules any time with no prior warning". I accept the fundamental premise that books are out there to make money. I am sure that books that do not make money either go away or change their operating mode to make money. I still think however that there is an inherent obligation to honor one's advertising and "play fair". I find that so many books out there honor their advertising "commitments" as long as they deal with one they believe to be a losing customer. Once they have somebody beating them or betting in a manner they believe may win in the long run they do not hesitate to change the rules on him regardless of what their advertisements promise. Imagine how the game would be if selected teams in the NFL had their touchdowns count for 5 points rather than the six that others get. I invite comments on how to approach situations of the type I described and what pressure the betting public may bring on books that without announcement fail to live up to their promises.