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archman:I'd prefer the tricks that the agencies haven't figured out yet.![]()
diveasr:hey the ymca master program is nothing more than at least 25 dives w instructor, some deep dives and some theory
edit
to clarify, you dont need any dives other than the 3ow, 2ow2, 5aow, 5saow, 10gmd
so you can do them all together and come out as a msd with 25 dives, all supervised
fisheyeview:Once again another miss informed post. You might want to read my post before jumping to conclusions.
The only thing you did right.fisheyeview:I did take it up with the crew once I was back on the boat.
josh_ingu:You might like to look at it in terms of what position you would have been in if something had happened to that diver after you had "deliberately" lost her underwater. Say that diver had not surfaced? You might try to claim that the newbie was not your responsibility - good luck. You are supposed to be a *professional* level diver.
Tigerman:So in other words a doctor dont have any obligation to help you if you have a stroke next to him, if the doctor is not on duty? Ok...
Tigerman:So in other words a doctor dont have any obligation to help you if you have a stroke next to him, if the doctor is not on duty? Ok...
Legally, no duty in either case. Morality is a personal issue the Hippocratic Oath died long ago (or I'd go Med school and get care for free).Tigerman:So in other words a doctor dont have any obligation to help you if you have a stroke next to him, if the doctor is not on duty? Ok...
Well, you're welcome to your opinion ... but in terms of the "ethical behavior" argument, you are wrong. There was no prior knowledge, nor prior agreement, that this person join his dive team. He was not acting in a professional capacity, and had no obligation whatsoever to do so. His status as divemaster is irrelevent ... his responsibility is solely to the person or persons he agreed to dive with.josh_ingu:Read my posts, you will find I quoted you accurately and in context.
Last time I checked, Divemasters pay annual dues. Please show me *anything* that says you can pick and choose the times when you are a divemaster, or not a divemaster. As far as I recall a Divemaster is expected to display "Ethical role model behaviour", and I do not see any caveat that says "when it suits them".
Deliberately attempting to lose a tagging along diver can in no way be considered "Ethical role model behaviour". At the least, for the newbie diver, she will get the impresion that "Divemasters" are, well, you can work it out.
You might like to look at it in terms of what position you would have been in if something had happened to that diver after you had "deliberately" lost her underwater. Say that diver had not surfaced? You might try to claim that the newbie was not your responsibility - good luck. You are supposed to be a *professional* level diver.
The fact that you were not aware of the instructions that diver had before the dive to me makes no difference - its your in water actions that I find deplorable.
-j-