neil_fahey wrote:If I was a tour guide, I'm not sure if I'd be recommending people take risks like that, but I don't think it's the guides fault. It's a bit too easy to blame the guide when an adult who is capable of making their own decisions and understanding risks decides to do something like this and dies. Naturally, we always look for someone to blame though.
neil_fahey wrote:All fair points. I think it definitely has to be considered that if the tour guide had said don't do it, there's a fair chance someone would do it anyway and then the guide would be slammed anyway for having not stopped them. Maybe the choice was made to attempt to minimise the chance of harm, by telling people the best way to go about it.
Kainas wrote:I am sure there must be some good psychological studies out there showing this as a phenomenon. I.e People taking greater risks around others than they would if left alone (I did find this https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Group_polarization.
neil_fahey wrote:All fair points. I think it definitely has to be considered that if the tour guide had said don't do it, there's a fair chance someone would do it anyway and then the guide would be slammed anyway for having not stopped them. Maybe the choice was made to attempt to minimise the chance of harm, by telling people the best way to go about it.
GPSGuided wrote:neil_fahey wrote:All fair points. I think it definitely has to be considered that if the tour guide had said don't do it, there's a fair chance someone would do it anyway and then the guide would be slammed anyway for having not stopped them. Maybe the choice was made to attempt to minimise the chance of harm, by telling people the best way to go about it.
Case in point not that far away... Climb or not climb Uluru. The message from the tour operators are pretty uniform these days yet people still climb it.
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