There are risks in all areas of life. The only way to avoid them is to stay in bed, in which case we risk bedsores. That is especially true in diving, and if you really look, you can find a case where someone had an incident in every kind of dive imaginable. The only way to prevent them all is to prohibit all diving.
The worst mistake we can make is to try to make absolute rules that try to eliminate all judgment. A person would be a fool to try to walk across a multiple lane freeway in a city in the middle of rush hour, but walking across a one lane dirt path in the middle of a field in Oklahoma is as safe as it gets. Should we have a rule stating that no one should ever cross any kind of road without a crossing signal because of the danger of that rush hour freeway?
In a thread on this very topic back when I was having my discussion with PADI, one SB participant said that "the list of people who have died while going through simple swim-throughs is long indeed." I asked him for a link to that list. He said that, well, there is no link, because it is a list he made himself. Well, could he put it on the Internet? No, he couldn't--too much work. Well, could he provide one example from his list? He did not reply. (I have never heard of such a case myself.)
In a later thread, I posted a video in which two divers swim a total of maybe 15 feet through a brightly lit, wide open wheelhouse, exit the door at the other side and continue on their way around the wreck. I asked the same person mentioned in the previous paragraph, a technical diving instructor, if he would do what they did. No, he responded, he would lay line for those 15 feet, turn around, retrieve the line, and continue around the wreck while avoiding that dangerous wheelhouse swim-through. Sorry, but I call BS on that. I don't think anyone in his right mind would do that, and I have certainly never seen it done.
Making an absolute rule saying common diving practices are forbidden in all cases is just an invitation for people to ignore the rule in some cases. Yes, there is a chance that someone crossing a one lane dirt road in Oklahoma could get hit by a runaway tractor, but most people assume that the odds of that happening are slim enough that they are willing to take that risk. Those people are using judgment, and judgment is a part of every dive as well.
The worst mistake we can make is to try to make absolute rules that try to eliminate all judgment. A person would be a fool to try to walk across a multiple lane freeway in a city in the middle of rush hour, but walking across a one lane dirt path in the middle of a field in Oklahoma is as safe as it gets. Should we have a rule stating that no one should ever cross any kind of road without a crossing signal because of the danger of that rush hour freeway?
In a thread on this very topic back when I was having my discussion with PADI, one SB participant said that "the list of people who have died while going through simple swim-throughs is long indeed." I asked him for a link to that list. He said that, well, there is no link, because it is a list he made himself. Well, could he put it on the Internet? No, he couldn't--too much work. Well, could he provide one example from his list? He did not reply. (I have never heard of such a case myself.)
In a later thread, I posted a video in which two divers swim a total of maybe 15 feet through a brightly lit, wide open wheelhouse, exit the door at the other side and continue on their way around the wreck. I asked the same person mentioned in the previous paragraph, a technical diving instructor, if he would do what they did. No, he responded, he would lay line for those 15 feet, turn around, retrieve the line, and continue around the wreck while avoiding that dangerous wheelhouse swim-through. Sorry, but I call BS on that. I don't think anyone in his right mind would do that, and I have certainly never seen it done.
Making an absolute rule saying common diving practices are forbidden in all cases is just an invitation for people to ignore the rule in some cases. Yes, there is a chance that someone crossing a one lane dirt road in Oklahoma could get hit by a runaway tractor, but most people assume that the odds of that happening are slim enough that they are willing to take that risk. Those people are using judgment, and judgment is a part of every dive as well.