LT3-
First and foremost, I am not trying to be argumentative. I never once said your way of training was inferior. I'm stating that there is more to lifting/BBing than pump, soreness, isolation, etc. This is discussion to me, and serves to further enhance my understanding of how the body works. I feel no need to insult anyone or make myself out to be any kind of authority on this subject.
That said, I think that too often people seek to create a huge divide b/t BBing and other strength sports (PL, Oly lifting, etc.). Clearly there are differences, but building muscle is building muscle. A bigger muscle is a stronger muscle (meaning if person A gets bigger, person A gets stronger, not that if person A is bigger than person B that person A is stronger than B). Sure, PL's have minimal concern for their appearance, but if you take a look at some of the Westside guys or Oly guys, they have incredible physiques that would do quite well on a BB stage if they took the effort the shed bodyfat. We don't need to reinvent the wheel for the sake of aesthetics - the time tested methods of putting more weight on the bar over a period will add muscle to anyone. Sure, rep ranges are different at times, but the really foundational stuff is (or should be) similar.
Speaking from experience, in the last 6+ months I have used almost ZERO isolation exercises and no machines other than pulldowns when I couldn't do enough pullups to achieve my desired rep range, and have actually improved many of my muscles that are typically thought of as needy of isolation. Specifically, my rear delts have vastly improved from performing the rows I linked to in my original post in this thread.
And BTW, you seem to think that I'm a PL or something. Well, I don't really fit a category. I wanna look decent and be strong, but I have no competive aspirations. So call that what you want

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EDIT: And I'm not ignoring overload at all - I'm simply not defining it by how sore I get (subjective) but rather by how much more work (repsxweight - objective) that I perform. Here are the last three training cycles I've completed, and a link to my current cycle.
http://www.elitefitness.com/forum/showthread.php?t=399754
http://www.elitefitness.com/forum/showthread.php?t=413313
http://www.elitefitness.com/forum/showthread.php?t=430297
Current:
http://www.elitefitness.com/forum/showthread.php?t=442968
You may notice that in the second link I managed to overwork myself pretty well

But I learned a bit about my tolerance for workload and how it is possible to overwork a specific area of the body while keeping systemic fatigue in check.