seaducer
Contributor
Stevead said it better than I ever could...
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Kingpatzer: With regard to not endangering additional lives and resources in a rescue operation, the human race in general and the US military in particular have a Proud Tradition of doing just that. The best publicized such event being the "Blackhawk Down" incident, where the better part of a battalion was sent out to recover the crew of a single helicopter and took additional casualties in the process, but they upheld the creed of No One Gets Left Behind.
Talking about diminishing the Coast Guards air rescue capability is just ridiculous. That capabilty does not exist to sit on the pad and "be available". The capability exists so that it can be used to save lives.
Somebody commented a while back that PBs posts had been deleted from this thread. All of his posts have been deleted from the whole board. I think either his feelings were hurt, or he was IDd as a troll and banished.
How does that saying go? I'll get bent for you, but I won't die for you.I hope I never get there.
I think the last few posts probably summarized PB's intentions accurately enough. I just find it somewhat amusing that the discussion has taken a much more measured and reasoned tone AFTER PB stopped posting.
I don't think he was trying to troll, but I can honestly say that the way he presented himself and talked to people did not make it easier to understand his position.
I voted yes for basically the same reasoning. When I'm diving with people I still consider that I am on my own. I may indicate a need to share air if for some reason I am the OOA diver. If I get the air share fine, if not then its time to head up. Not every person one dives with will be comfortable or even skilled at sharing air. This may lead to a refusal or a further escalation of problems now involving two divers instead of one.