dbulmer:
All4scuba05,
Soggy has not disrespected anyone - what he states is that to get to the point of having to do a CESA you have gone through a sequence of events that could have been nipped in the bud earlier through appropriate action from both the potential casualty and his/her buddy. The ole adage Prevention is better than cure has been advocated by many a diver on Scubaboard and elsewhere. The CESA is an option but as NWG has already pointed out it's the last option for reasons NWG has already stated.
What I am reading from Soggy is that CESA is NOT an option that should be considered, and prevention is a foolproof way to avoid it. This doesn't make CESA a last option. It makes CESA an unpracticed option.
One doesn't need to be a scholar in game theory (though it does help

) to know that you should be aware of all strategies and options, so when the situation arises, you can choose the one best suited to the circumstances. If an O-ring can fail on a dive, they tell me why two can't fail on the same dive? Add to that hose failure, first-stage freezes, diaphragm explosion....it is unlikely that any of these will happen. It is very unlikely that multiple occurrences will happen to the same diver on the same dive. But unlikely doesn't mean impossible. Having an option in the arsenal that does not rely on equipment is useful, even if it is extremely unlikely ever to be used.
I would never want to practice a CESA from deeper than 60. That is not to say that if everything went to crap on a 110 foot dive, that I would just say, "Well, I'm screwed..." and sit on the bottom waiting for my lungs to fill. In such a situation, I would much prefer to know the CESA procedure from 60 and attempt it from 120 than rely on instinct, let panic take over, and bolt for the surface on a held breath at the fastest rate my fins will swim me there.
Just a quick word on some of the responses I have read on a few of the first-hand accounds posted here. For anyone who has missed the subtlety, the guys who have mentioned J-valve failures are talking about dives that happened a LONG time ago, when the only way you had an SPG is if you INVENTED one, and when the J-valve was the only indication you had that you were running low. If it weren't for these folks, we wouldn't even be diving today, let alone with ponies, SPGs, Octos....