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Nothing the scuba community could have said or done would have deterred him. As already mentioned, only someone with a close personal relationship whose opinion he valued (above his own) may have persuaded him to stop and reconsider.
The people with the very best chance of stopping him were his family, and they were apparently "on board" with the record attempt.
Best wishes.
Unfortunately when you ask the question on a public forum, some people assume exactly what Jax suggested.....and we all need to remember that search engines like Google open this forum to a lot of people who have absolutely no clue at all about scuba diving, but have heard about Doc Deep.
"Scuba Diving magazine recognizes this historic attempt for the technical diving community, and sends condolences to his family and friends."
..................oh man
The people with the very best chance of stopping him were his family, and they were apparently "on board" with the record attempt.
Same question: Could the [BASE Jumping/Wing Suit Flying Community] have done something to prevent these deaths? It's a moot question and answer especially in extreme sports. . .These activities are extremely dangerous, it is inevitable that people will get killed, but that doesnt make them any less valid as activities, said Nancy Bouchard, spokeswoman for sponsor Five Ten footwear. In the back of our minds, we always know something terrible could happen, but that didnt and doesnt diminish our feelings for Dean.. . .
. . .Dean Potter lived on the outer edge of extreme sports and died Saturday pushing the envelope in his beloved Yosemite National Park when he and a friend leaped off Taft Point, some 3,500 feet above the valley floor and crashed into rocks during a dusk flight in bat-like [wing]suits. . .
The deaths of Potter, 43, and Graham Hunt, 29, were a stunning loss and another reminder of the narrow margin for error in the death-defying pursuit of wingsuit flying, a more dangerous offshoot of BASE jumping parachuting off buildings, antennas, spans (such as bridges) and Earth.
Wingsuit flier thought he could manage the risk, avoid death
Although I agree, I'm inclined to give the family a pass. They surely underestimated the risk, but may not have been in any position to know better.
I'm trying to imagine what I would do if my wife were trying to set a record that was dangerous in some way. I'd at least find out whether (and how often) other people died in such attempts, and why. But if there were other people around me who seemed to be experts in the subject, and they were telling me this was different, and the reasons were complex... well, I'd like to think that I'd still be able to judge for myself, but I don't expect the same of everyone.
And if you found out there was a danger as real and probable as HPNS at 350m?I'm trying to imagine what I would do if my wife were trying to set a record that was dangerous in some way. I'd at least find out whether (and how often) other people died in such attempts, and why.
And if you found out there was a danger as real and probable as HPNS at 350m?