StSomewhere:Look, I'm not trying to belabor the point here. But that is EXACTLY the issue.
There comes a time where fraud and/or perjury seems to be a lesser problem, and can even seem to be a way out, to a defendant facing pending liability issues. Those are the times when documentation tends to get faked. Truckers, safety studies, etc. once again its not a problem exclusive to the scuba industry but the scuba industry isn't immune to it, either.
SM, I'm sure your scruples are impeccable. But I play enough golf to know that its also the people you least expect who can be the biggest cheaters. Color me skeptical when it comes to the overall honesty of the human race. :frown:
I understand your point. However, as a dive professional, working with students, I do feel that it's my responsibility to keep my dive log current and accurate in the event of an incident. Color me overzealous. Color me naive. Color me a newbie DM (which would be pretty much accurate). Color me overly scrupulous in my recordkeeping.
But even if I didn't log my dives for my own personal reasons, I'd keep do it for those reasons. You're welcome to be skeptical about anyone's honesty you want - but I know the level of mine.