oldharry
Well-Known Member
Much feeling both ways on this. IMHO there is a time and place for everything, and its down to me to decide whether I need the added insurance of my LJ.
But surely there is a wider issue behind this? The RNLI's stated puprose is the saving of life at sea. Does that give it a 'policing' role over other sea users. Past threads have raised the spectre of 'compulsory rescue' - how much should the RNLI's role be seen as preventitive, trying to stop accidents before they happen rather than being a marine AA, sorting out problemns as they arise.
I would certainly resent my competence as a yachtsman being questioned by some busybody telling me how to organise my boating.
On the other hand, it is would be the lifeboats rather grisly role to retrieve my body and return it to my family if the worst did happen. It is the same for the police having to deal with the fatal results of bad driving, and I do understand the frustration of those who have the highly unpleasant 'hands on' task of clearing up the mess whether on the roads or at sea when they then see yet another prat taking exactly the same risks.
But on the whole I really dont want to see RNLI become a sort of marine policing body telling us what we can and cannot do.
But surely there is a wider issue behind this? The RNLI's stated puprose is the saving of life at sea. Does that give it a 'policing' role over other sea users. Past threads have raised the spectre of 'compulsory rescue' - how much should the RNLI's role be seen as preventitive, trying to stop accidents before they happen rather than being a marine AA, sorting out problemns as they arise.
I would certainly resent my competence as a yachtsman being questioned by some busybody telling me how to organise my boating.
On the other hand, it is would be the lifeboats rather grisly role to retrieve my body and return it to my family if the worst did happen. It is the same for the police having to deal with the fatal results of bad driving, and I do understand the frustration of those who have the highly unpleasant 'hands on' task of clearing up the mess whether on the roads or at sea when they then see yet another prat taking exactly the same risks.
But on the whole I really dont want to see RNLI become a sort of marine policing body telling us what we can and cannot do.