Getting back to the original question, I believe hudson was trying to understand when, and for what reasons, one would "push" film.
Before that can be answered, it is necessary to understand what actually happens during development. If you "push" a 400ASA film to 1600ASA, i.e. two stops, you typically double the develoment time (multiplying it by about 1.4 for each stop you "push"). What happens when you do this is that the contrast of the resulting negatives increases. The shadow areas stay pretty much the same (so they're underexposed by two stops, compared to the plain old 400ASA exposure and development). Because of the increased contrast, however, the mid-tones and highlights get more pronounced - especially the highlights. The full "1600ASA" speed is really only achieved in the highlights.
So what you're doing is buying a higher film speed in the midlevel and high tones, at the cost of lost shadow detail (since the shadow areas don't respond to increased development), and coarser grain (always an effect of prolonged development). This can be useful at times - just as an example, think of photographing a stage performance where the actors are under spotlights. Pushing your film might enable you to hand-hold the camera, getting decent prints of the actors, at the cost of having them stand out against a surprisingly dark background.
You mostly don't want to make this trade-off, because the coarse-grained, high contrast, negatives are no fun to print.