My condolences to the family of this surfer.
Anytime some one dies during the course of engaging in a sporting activity they love, whether it is scuba diving, sky diving, surfing, bungie jumping, etc., a shadow is casted on that sport, mostly out of spite, or out of stupidity, which then incites an idiotic response (i.e. avenge the death!!!). As scubadivers we take into consideration the inherent risk scuba diving involves, and we deal with it. In legal terms, we assume the risk.
The South Florida diving community recently lost a very dear member, and you can bet your last dollar that even those who didn't know this man personally were affected by his death. But, did we go looking for someone to kill over it, despite that his death didn't involve a shark attack? The death of this surfer was a tragedy no different than Eric's death. I applaud the position they have taken about the shark(s). Killing the shark(s) would accomplish nothing more than to disrupt the ocean's ecosystem, which in the long run, would be worse.
Anytime some one dies during the course of engaging in a sporting activity they love, whether it is scuba diving, sky diving, surfing, bungie jumping, etc., a shadow is casted on that sport, mostly out of spite, or out of stupidity, which then incites an idiotic response (i.e. avenge the death!!!). As scubadivers we take into consideration the inherent risk scuba diving involves, and we deal with it. In legal terms, we assume the risk.
The South Florida diving community recently lost a very dear member, and you can bet your last dollar that even those who didn't know this man personally were affected by his death. But, did we go looking for someone to kill over it, despite that his death didn't involve a shark attack? The death of this surfer was a tragedy no different than Eric's death. I applaud the position they have taken about the shark(s). Killing the shark(s) would accomplish nothing more than to disrupt the ocean's ecosystem, which in the long run, would be worse.