I understand playing for a state has nothing to do with playing international footy, but the ARL have every right to pick whoever they want for their own rep series and their rules are you must be eligible for Australia. There is nothing wrong with picking only players eligible for Australia. What stinks is when they target players such as uate who was a current Fijian rep. He simply should not be allowed to play origin at all and shouldn't have to switch to Australia to do so. I agree, players such as him should not be targeted by a state and forced to swap to Australia for the benefit of an interstate competition.
How many players have been coaxed away purely for origin? Uate, Teo and possibly tamou. Doesn't make it right, it absolutely stinks but the amount of anger directed at Australia for this is ridiculous when dozens of players have switched to nz and england. They are both wrong but the circumstances aren't that different.
Again, coaxing players away that were born and raised in other countries is only half the problem (and AFAIK one that has now been fixed), the point is players sitting out international matches to play Origin. I've already provided several examples of this. Yes, the ARL can set their own rules and nobody can stop them but that doesn't mean it's the right thing to do. Origin is a carrot that the other nations don't have, if players switch nations because they want to play for Australia (or England or NZ) then that's fine, if players switch because they want to play in an Australian state competition then that's a big problem, they are effectively leaving the international game. It's quite a big difference.
Who benefits from the ARL forcing players to declare for Australia in order to play Origin? What is the practical purpose of it? As far as I can see, the only thing being achieved is weakening other national teams and thus keeping Australia dominant.
For one, it reaffirms origin as the so called pinnacle. We are heading towards stand alone weekends in the near future for origin games, I would assume (or hope) on those weekends there will also be tests between either pacific island nations and nz, a pacific island team v nz or a nz origin game. What happens when a player is eligible for both Samoa and nsw? How ridiculous would it be if they picked origin over the country they so desperately want to play for. What if a player plays for nz in the mid year test, then nsw in the origin series while nz play their own rep series. What if 15 top Samoan players all play for nsw? It damages the integrity of both origin and test football. Or if a player plays origin and then for England at years end? Why should players be able to get everything that they want without committing to anything, play for an Aussie state, then their heritage nation, then switch to Australia for a year, then back to heritage nation? (I suppose we have that now anyway).
I would rather build our international game up so that players want to play for these nations then do it artificially like this would suggest. A regular schedule for all nations, end nations swapping or at least make it harder to do so and a lot more funding to all nations for either match payments or facilities would go a long way to building our sport up over the next decade without being a quick fix.
I disagree, it affirms Origin as a state series, which is what it is. If players qualify for NSW then they should be able to play for NSW, after all they would still be NSWelshman and NSWRL products regardless of which national team they play for. We're not talking about changing the eligibility rules as to which players qualify for Origin, if a player is from NSW or Queensland and qualifies under the Origin rules then why should his national team choice matter?
If players were choosing to play Origin over an international on the same weekend it wouldn't really mean anything since it's not a like for like comparison, it would be like playing for your club instead of playing an international match, which already happens a lot. And that's still a hell of a lot better than players just not playing for their chosen country at all so they can play Origin.
I agree with your second paragraph but it's not an either/or situation, there are many problems that need to be fixed and this is one of them. Making vague statements about unrelated problems or 'quick fixes' or whatever doesn't do anyone any good, removing Australian eligibility from Origin would provide a boost to international footy and remove a needless problem being caused by the ARL. Yes, there are many problems that need to be solved, and this would solve one.