Ken Kurtis
Contributor
Here are a list of questions I want answered.
First of all . . . GREAT DISCUSSION. I am greatly impressed by how many people have posted since this went up relatively recently and how thoughtful and respectful the comments have been. Would that the actual thread comments could be the same . . .
1. I've always been interested in diving safety and the cause of accidents and this is a treasure trove of information (and sometimes mis-information).Why do you come here?
2. I try to tamp down wrong info and BS, especially when it applies to a SoCal diving accident. I'm a huge believer in open discussions but I'm also a huge believer in clearly labeling what is FACT and what is SPECULATION which is why I will (politely I hope) jump down someone's post when speculation is presented as fact.
3. Since I do expert witness work, if the thread involves a case I'm working on or something similar, it might provide good background or research.
4. FWIW, I look at this forum every day and I know others in the scuba defense arena as well as Coroner and law enforcement monitor it regularly (though likely not daily) as well.
I rarely start a thread and am usually only replying to comments already made. I don't have an issue with Don's frequent thread-starters. If they're not interesting or germane, they're easy enough to ignore.Why do you post accidents and incidents? (This is especially for you, @DandyDon!)
Top boldly speculate what no diver has speculated before.WHAT IS OUR MISSION? (in your words, please)
(OK, that's supposed to be a joke.)
I would put the mission statement in two ways:
FOR DIVERS - "To provide divers with information and opinions about an accident in a manner that can help learn and avoid the same situations/mistakes.
FOR NON-DIVERS - "To provide information and opinion in a simple, clear way to help non-divers affected by an accident understand what might have happened, why, and what could or could not have been done."
In general, yes.Are we meeting your and the community's needs?
I'm hearing this as "changes".What are we missing and why? How can we add that?
1. Everyone signs a real name to every post. Screen names can stay the same, but we should know that "Bubbles95" is an experienced instructor in Louisiana and that "Dives-All-Day16" just got certified last week. Doesn't meant they can't each express an opinion but it's helpful when reading what they say to have some perspective on the BG from whence it comes.
2. Perhaps limit the number of posts/day/thread. Hard to monitor perhaps and I know I'm certainly guilty of getting sucked into a meaningless back-and-forth that serves no real purpose.
3. Write your comments as if you'll only get one chance and as if they'll be read by someone who hasn't necessarily read every word of every other post in the thread. In other words, be extremely clear. (That's why a lot of mine are wordy. I want to make sure it's absolutely clear what I'm saying and why.)
Unlabeled speculation and wild-ass guesses. Just call it what it is. Also, unsourced information. "I heard that" . . . from whom and why is this likely to be true or accurate?What needs to be eliminated and why?
Before you hit POST REPLY, put yourself in their shoes and ask how you'd feel about reading the words you're about to share if it was your loved one who was dead? Also, write your post but then walk away from the computer before you hit POST REPLY. Think about it for a while. THEN post it.How can we be more respectful to friends and survivors?
Yes.Can we be more respectful without harming our mission?
Yes, yes, no. I've been involved in notification before. You definitely don't want to be the one who tells someone their friend/partner/relative is dead. Drains you emotionally. And the reality is that, unless it's someone we who post or lurk here regularly know (like when it was Lynne), what difference does the name make? It's likely not someone who know and knowing the name or not doesn't change the facts of the accident.Currently, we don't allow names to be used unless released publicly first. Is this fair for the family? Is it fair for us? Is a change needed?
I think the greatest disservice we, as an industry, do to ourselves is NOT to have these kinds of discussions. makes it look like we're trying to hide something to those already suspicious of us, and holds back valuable info from others who could use it to improve their own diving habits.Some hate SB because we have the temerity to discuss the undiscussible.
Thanks again for the great responses all the way around. Keep it up!!!!
- Ken