If you donate (
http://www.rmru.org/donate.htm ) a little money to Riverside Mountain Rescue Unit (which handles the San Jacintos and the rock climbing areas near Idyllwild), they'll send you their newsletter, with extremely interesting writeups on every mission.
I don't think it's helpful to generalize about people who need to be rescued. Some are doing inherently dangerous stuff, some are not. Some have made bad decisions, some haven't. Some lack the skills and experience for what they're attempting, some don't.
But we should also keep in mind that search and rescue work can be dangerous , and that helicopter rescues are inherently very expensive.
whatmeworry wrote:
> Define extreme vs. non-extreme.
Yeah, a good example is trad climbing (a type of rock climbing). It's not inherently an unreasonably dangerous sport, but there is some risk that can't be eliminated, no matter how skilled and experienced you are. For instance, people get killed by rock fall sometimes, and there can be situations where you simply can't protect yourself against that.
Rudy Rodriguez wrote:
> As an under the poverty line backpacker I would seriously risk my life to avoid paying $10000. Many people would. So hikers would be dying just cuz of financial status.
You make a good point, but one could also argue that poor and working-class people who don't go to the mountains should not have to pay through their taxes for a $10k helicopter rescue for someone who's affluent and could afford to pay. The whole question of what government activities should be tax-subsidized is a classic political debate in left versus right economic policy, and the answers are inherently subjective.