And penalizing one for diving deeper on a repetitive dive than on the preceding dive....which was discredited a quarter-century ago.
The proceedings of the workshop that discredited it a quarter century ago are worth a deeper dive. There was no clear scientific evidence presented in favor of the rule. It was discovered that the rule originated with a 1972 PADI OW course manual, which
suggested that in planning deeper dives, one should plan the deepest dive first. No one from PADI knew why that
suggestion was made, nor did they know the individual source of the
suggestion. (More on that later)
The "deeper dive first" concept had one real supporter at the workshop, and he was
fanatic about it. His insistence was the reason that the workshop kept the recommendation for technical dives. His name was Dr. Bruce R. Wienke--the creator of the RGBM algorithm used by Suunto.
If you do some table work, you can easily see the likely reason for the 1972 suggestion. That was back in the days of the US Navy tables, which had huge surface intervals to begin with. If you do the deeper dives after the first dives using tables, the surface intervals are even longer--much longer. The typical 2-tank dive we know today would be impossible.
I was quite surprised on my recent trip on the T&C Aggressor to hear the DMs making a big deal about avoiding reverse profiles. I didn't think that was a thing anymore.
I dived the Spirit of Freedom liveaboard in Australia a few years ago, and the guy in charge of the diving told us that they had no choice but to follow the PADI rules requiring that deepest dives be done first. I challenged the guy about it privately, and he admitted that he knew there was no such PADI rule--it was just company policy. On the trip, each day the captain always selected a first site with a a relatively shallow bottom, and we were thus forced to do all the rest of the dives even shallower. The reason was obvious. They wanted to keep everyone as shallow as possible so they didn't have to deal with potential DCS issues, and they wanted people to blame someone else (PADI) for that requirement.
I have seen more and more and more of this as the years go by. Dive operators are getting more and more cautious in what they allow their divers to do, and it is really beginning to frustrate the heck out of me.