As Freedom Ventures is trying to say (correct me if I am wrong, as I didn't catch all of your deleted posts)..........Common sense has to prevail in the course design.
The targets were intended to utilize smaller ranges and give the effect of a distant target. Because of the idiocies of politics (thanks for pointing it out Storm), we cannot use both large and small targets in a single stage. This would have been the correct use of the targets.
Some people do not realize the implications of poor stage design. Some "course designers" think it is fun to make a course of fire as ridiculously hard and troublesome for shooters as they can. This is not the point of IPSC, and hence creates what some people may call a "bad match".
I see many more gimmicks in Canadian courses of fire, than compared to larger US matches. The odd stage is fine, but if the misuse of the small targets gets out of hand, then the fun stops. Very few people will shoot to their classification, and will eventually tire of the folly.
The original design of the IPSC target (RIP) was a fine one, and that dictated accuracy quite well. It's not bullseye, and never was meant to be. Let's hope the course designers (and the approvers) keep their wits about them.