People should be able to climb Mount Everest. Because there are many good reasons why it can help people or places. Here are some reasons why people should be allowed to climb Everest.
The first reason why should people be allowed to climb Everest. is that if people didn’t climb Everest, Nepal we’ll be losing some of its money. This is shown in the website “Adventure how stuff works” when they say that Nepal makes 500 million dollars from mountain climbers climbing Everest. This shows if people were not allowed to climb Everest, Nepal we’ll be losing a lot of money it gets from mountain climbers.
Another idea, why should people be allowed to climb Everest. Is that it can help people with a charity’s that climbs Everest. This is shown
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Is that they can accomplish life goals or goals that are really hard which can help them like being famous. This is shown in the book “Into Thin Air” by Jon Krakauer, a character in the book named Scott Fischer who accomplished a hard goal and became famous which is said in page 18, where the Author said “By the time Fischer left Nepal in the spring of 1996, he’d begun to garner more of the recognition that he thought was his due. Much of it came in the wake of his 1994 ascent of Everest , accomplished without supplemental oxygen.” This shows why it can help people accomplish goals and help them be famous for doing that thing. But some other people think that people should not be allowed to climb Everest for some reason like the they polluted the area and don’t clean it. But there are expedition teams that clean up the mountain. This is shown in the website “Saving Mount Everest” where they say “As per the latest updates from the Saving Mount Everest Project Clean-up expedition team, the team has collected approximately five tons of garbage abandoned by trekkers and mountaineers on the trekking trail and Mount Everest itself.” Which means there are expeditions teams that clean up the garbage which people leave which means it doesn’t affect the environment and people should allowed to climb
Ever since people knew it was possible to reach the summits of Mount Everest about 4,000 people have attempted to climb it and a one in four ratio of people have died from doing so. “Once Everest was determined to be the highest summit on earth, it was only a matter of time before people decided that Everest needed to be climbed” (Krakauer 13). The very first person to reach the summits of Mount Everest was in 1953 also ever since then about seven percent out of every 4,000
Climbing makes for a difficult expedition, you need to give up the wrappers when you was ascending. You need to give up the heavy things, you need to give up your wrappers, and you need to give yourselves. Sometimes we need to give up our lives to climb the mount Everest. According to snow storm, the energy, the oxygen and the people who desired prove themselves the spring’s 96s expedition to mountain Everest was destined to be the most tragic.
The first reason why Mt. Everest should be closed down is due to the nature being mistreated by the sport and it not being properly protected. For such an amazing landmark it should be prohibited to climb for conservation of the mountain. In “Time for a break on Everest” the author gave the example of mountains being prohibited to climb in Australia when they wrote, “In Australia, for example, tourists are urged not to climb the thousand-foot-high sandstone formation known as Uluru, or Ayers Rock, since it is spiritually significant to the Aboriginal Agangu,”(Source 2). This shows how important it is to preserve the natural aspect of Mt. Everest and not let something as silly as mountaineering get in the way of people in the future not being able to visit this landmark.
First of all, climbers should not be able to have rights to rescue services because, when the mountain rangers are saving others they are putting their own lives at risk. In a newspaper article it said,
Christopher McCandless’ long, fascinating, but an ultimately fatal journey into the wilderness of Alaska is depicted in the biography, Into the Wild, written by Jon Krakauer. Late in the of summer of 1990, a very young Christopher McCandless left his ordinary world in Annandale, Virginia to pursue a solitary life in the untamed wilds of Alaska. Many will insinuate that Christopher McCandless’ actions were childish and idiotic, but a stronger argument would be that his unconventional thinking and desire to live life on his own terms allowed him to reach self-actualization.
Mount Everest is known as a wrathful goddess who is being offended by the human’s traitorous actions like slighting its magnificence and underestimating her liberality. They have shown her an unlimited level of disrespect by trading her beauty for money, fame and publicity; and by devastating her attractiveness through publicizing, forcing the goddess to show her unprepossessing side for revenge. Even after facing the horrific disaster by the mountain, everyday people are still taking something beautiful and priceless like Mount Everest and putting a price on it, taking it’s true value away. For their selfish business, humans are letting about hundreds of people every year to climb Mount Everest and turn the beautiful the summit into a garbage
Mount Everest standing at 29,035 feet above sea level is one of the most beautiful creations of nature in our current lifetime. However...
Eggs came first. Millions of years before mammals, eggs existed, their hard shells unlike her mammalian sister who waddles around, heavily crippled with the burden of her womb. Eggs conferred evolutionary advantage.
I am adventurous. No I don't sky dive, wrestle crocodiles, or swim with sharks, but when asked by a group of friends to go cliff diving last summer, my best response was, “Sounds like fun!” I had never been afraid of heights yet have never experienced the thrill of cliff diving. All I could ask myself was, “What could go wrong?”
In the event of closing Mt. Everest for exploration, it would limit the seemingly limitless bounds of the curious mind. The human race is one of extreme chance-takers, and dreamers, so who is to say that they cannot do what they were designed to do? Imagine yourself in a situation of which you partake in a perilous expedition, risking your life to do what you love, only to be told that it is too dangerous, therefore it cannot be done. How would you feel? Think about this question as the argument progresses, and the reasons why these treacherous boundaries should be crossed.
Have you ever felt a rush of adrenaline or sense of achievement after doing something you know has consequences. That is what mountaineers feel after mountaineering, they know the risks and consequences that come with it but still do it for the rewarded. For example, Mount Everest is the biggest and one of the most fabled mountains in the world and people have been climbing to the top of it years. Despite it all it's still the biggest mountain in the world which makes it one of the most dangerous and many people have died trying to reach its summit. In 2014 an avalanche killed 16 Nepalese guides making it the greatest loss at Mt. Everest ever and since then it's been questioned if climbers should be allowed to climb Mt. Everest.
This time of the year, I get calls from many golfers who want to qualify for the US Open. Many of the golfers who reach out to me are club pros, teaching pros, college coaches and assistant professionals. For the most part, they are talented players, but only a few have the physical and the mental skills to succeed at this level. Remember,one bad shot or one bad hole can sometimes kill a great round.
Athletes at all levels put in hours and hours of their time whether in the weight room, in the gym, in the pool or on the field in order to be the best athletes within their specific sport. Often athletes push themselves near or around some of their physical limitations because they have such a high desire to succeed. Athletes can both benefit positively or negatively from training, it all comes down to one important factor which is how they recover from it. Recovery can be broken down into several different areas such as proper nutrition, supplementation and hydration, to getting eight to ten hours of sleep at night and waiting a sufficient amount of time for your specific muscle groups to recover prior to your next training session. Often
In 1996, three leaders attempted to climb Mt. Everest. Rob hall, Scott fischer and Makalu gau went on, separate, expeditions each with their own team of somewhat well known climbers, all 33 climbers in total. One day 19 climbers were on the mountain close to the summit when a frightful storm hit the “death zone”. 19 people trapped on top of the worlds biggest mountain, it wasn’t about climbing anymore it was about survival.
Climbing Everest is to dangerous to attempt. The consequences including the mental/body challenges, natural barriers, and Everest’s physical features are to deadly and outweigh the benefits of summiting. So, nobody should attempt to climb Everest, or they might just be another dead body left up high on