Actually you would only need a representative sample to render some valid statistics. Read up on sampling…
Get emotional as you want but what you suggest is not only not proven it wouldn’t explain why most people who grew-up with COTT now receive CITH.
But, you have yet to provide any statistical data to back up your assertions. You have only stated your opinions, but, no factual information.
With all due respect, you have yet to address the question I raised about the possibility that there may be an underlying issue behind the question.
Regarding the issue of the spoon, Redemptionis Sacramentum notes that:
[103.] The norms of the Roman Missal admit the principle that in cases where Communion is administered under both kinds, “the Blood of the Lord may be received either by drinking from the chalice directly, or by intinction, or by means of a tube or a spoon”.191 As regards the administering of Communion to lay members of Christ’s faithful, the Bishops may exclude Communion with the tube or the spoon where this is not the local custom, though the option of administering Communion by intinction always remains. If this modality is employed, however, hosts should be used which are neither too thin nor too small, and the communicant should receive the Sacrament from the Priest only on the tongue.192
I am unaware of any Latin-Rite parishes where the use of the spoon is employed. Furthermore, as RS indicates, if it is not the local custom, then this manner may be excluded. While it was not you who raised the issue, I believe that some clarification should be in order.
Regarding your insistence that folks who were reared under COTT now receiving CITH, you have yet to provide any factual date to support that assertion. All you are stating is your opinion, but, you do not have any quantifiable nor qualitative information to back up your claim.
My father, my late mother and late grandparents all grew up with COTT; however, all of them received (in my dad’s case, receive), COTT. They never received CITH. My father takes Holy Communion to the sick, visiting about 30 at a senior citizen’s home. All of them receive COTT (this pool includes those who have the motor skills to receive CITH if they chose). The elderly at the Cathedral parish, who, obviously were taught COTT, still retain that practice. This is based on my first-hand experience as an EMHC there. In my parish, there are three elderly women who receive CITH; the rest receive COTT. Again, this is based on my first-hand experience as an EMHC in my parish.
One clarification: I would not use the term distributors when referring to either the Ordinary Minister or the Extraordinary Ministers of Holy Communion. Another poster used this term on many occasions. The wording is reminiscent of his. We need to use the terms that the Church uses as this is the vocabulary that she employs when referring to the OMHC and the EMHC.