The today's trend seems to be more down to be "as accurate as possible" but I've begun resenting it in some levels. That "Accuracy" is just one subjective angle to look our work and in most cases its just fancy cover-up for stylistic differencies or interuptions of details too small to be practically possible to present in our funky scale...
While I do understand your sentiments, Golly, I don't quite agree with you. The fact that SB during my association with it has risen well above and beyond the crude and simple to be an instrument in accurate rendering of historic ships - I don't think you should resent that, but rather applaud and embrace it!
So many wonderful artists today reside here, who are responsible for some of the most outstanding artwork I've seen in nautica! I don't need to recite names, Everyone know who they are!
However, Golly, you're right about the tendency of "style- and rules Nazism" rather spreading its murky shadow across our board. I may have been guilty of it myself, and apologize hereby if it is so. We could have far friendlier discussions about our differences, instead of sniping at each other or handing out crude, rude comments - and we could reach compromises about what style(-s) is/are appropriate for a certain time-frame, ship-type etc. It's, in the end, all about being civil on the board, something we do tend to forget - everyone of us, from time to time!
I personally cherish the strive for absolute accuracy. For instance, I found so many errors and inaccuracies on the published line drawings of the Pennsylvania-class, so that I had to rely heavily on side elevation photos to get the scale correct! SB can, by the various artists' ambitions, correct such errors and present to the world concisely correct drawings!
And Golly, you, as the owner of the site, will have a great legacy to the world already!