In 2011, more than two thousand people were saved by military rescuers. It’s a good thing we have people who are able to save us when we are in danger even when we put ourselves at risk. If we’re able to rescue someone than we should take that opportunity to save them instead of letting people die. I think people should be able to have access to rescue services even if they are the ones putting themselves in danger or at risk of dying or getting injured. Climbing season for Mt. Everest only last for two months, that isn’t a large amount of time. Although there are more places in the world who also need rescuing at least they spend less time in Nepal in order to save people around the world. Rescue services are trained for any situation a person …show more content…
Over 230 deaths have been caused just by Mt. Everest. There are more people who do extreme sports who die. In an article I had read, It had listed the chances of dying in extreme sports. 1 in 2.2 million people die every year from snowboarding, 1 in 1,750 people die from mountain climbing, 1 in 2,200 million deaths from boxing and 1 in 1,000 deaths from motorcycle racing. Of course there are so many more ways you could die from extreme sports. Why should we increase the deaths every year instead of keeping the numbers the same or under? If we have resources to rescue service such as helicopters or trained sherpas then we should be able to use them. People shouldn’t have to pay for these resources. There are rescue services all around the world including the …show more content…
Although they sometimes have not asked to to get hurt and were not aware of the risk and danger but people need to be able to realize the danger they’re in and find a way out of their situation with some help. Buildings collapse, natural causes happen that are negative, there are risks in everything we do. Whether it’s playing a harmless joke on someone or having a building catch on fire, it’s hard to predict if something will go right or wrong. When you’re going to do something new, you know there are many risks but you also expect to have rescue services if you’re in danger. Some people don’t ask to be in danger or at risk but some people want to have fun and be in the thrill. In an article I read called “Extreme sport growing in popularity,” it explains that people are getting less interested in regular sports with lower levels of risk and going for extreme sports that have high levels of danger in them. As baseball, football, soccer, and other sports children play are decreasing snowboarders, mountain bikers, skateboarders and other sports people play are increasing. People will take risks and they will fail, that doesn’t mean people shouldn’t get rescued when they do fail. People who get rescued by the military because of natural causes had put themselves in risk when they had moved to that house or apartment. They put themselves at risk and even though it wasn’t in their best interest they still should
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
Everest in 1996. This became the deadliest expedition to ever climb with 15 people losing their lives. Krakauer explains his intrinsic motivations to accept this challenge and many of the mistakes that helped lead to the disasters of that day. He includes himself, and explicitly blames himself for at least one person's death. The experience affects him profoundly, and in addition to telling the story, the book focuses on how Krakauer is forever changed as a result of what happened. All of the clients have difficulty adjusting to the altitude, tiring easily, losing weight and moving slowly. The climbers' experience in mountain climbing and at high altitudes varies some of them are quite qualified, others very inexperienced and highly reliant on the
Everest is an unbelievable mountain that has taken the lives of a number of the greatest climbers in history. It was my job to ensure that clients make it up that treacherous mountain safely. My name is Rob Hall. I was the main guide and cofounder of a climbing company called Adventure Consultants. My friend, Gary Ball, and I used to be professional climbers. Together we succeeded in climbing to the highest summit on each of the seven continents in seven months. This was our greatest achievement. After this, we decided to start our own company guiding clients up large mountains. In May 1992, we successfully led six clients to the summit of Everest. Unfortunately, Gary died of cerebral edema in October 1993 during an attempt on the world’s sixth-tallest mountain. He died in my arms and the next day I buried him in a crevasse. Despite the pain that his death had caused me, I continued guiding for our company and eventually led thirty-nine climbers to the summit of Everest.
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.
Climbing Mount Everest is a horrific and thrilling experience that 290 people have died attempting to complete. In the novel “Into Thin Air” written by Jon Krakauer, Krakauer goes through his own journey of climbing Mount Everest and how commercialized the climbing of Everest had really become. In his journey he explains how climbers have paid as much as $65,000 to join a guided group that would lead them to the summit. The author bluntly states that some of the novices were not qualified to climb Mount Everest. With this amateurity it only made the journey twice as much difficult and dangerous. Unfortunately, a terrible blizzard struck Mount Everest within minutes of them reaching the top. For all of the climbers on the mountain, the blizzard turned what was to be a successful climb for all concerned into a nightmare. Because of poor planning, several of the climbers found themselves in a desperate situation that they had no
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.
Helen Keller once said “Life is either a daring adventure or nothing at all”. Chris McCandless believed in this thought. However, Chris’s “daring adventure” also cuased his quick demise. People risk their lives for many reasons. Perhaps a person is suicidal or maybe they are foolish and ill prepared. I believe many people, including Chris McCandless, risk their lives for an adventure because life is short, and why not take risks while a person still can. Or on the contrary, a person could be seeking a thrill, or attempting to test their worth, or simply trying to decide who they really are.
For every year, there will be six mountain climbers who will succumb to the harsh climb of Everest, and that’s about seventeen times the rate of death caused by skiing and snowboarding accidents together all around the world. Mountain climbing, skiing, and snowboarding are all adventurous and hard-to-participate sports. But why are there so many deaths created by mountain climbing? And in all of those deaths there are about fifteen guides, and mountain rangers, most of them died to help the injured climbers. However, there are more than four thousands successful climbs made by varieties of people from young to old. So should people have the right to rescue services when they put themselves at risk? To me, people absolutely do have the right to rescue services when they put themselves at risk because that is what rescue services are for, to help people when they need it. And it also depends on their current situation, which may affect their abilities to make a decision.
Why should we risk the lives of innocent mountain rangers to save those who put themselves in a life or death situation? Many mountain rangers risk their lives every day to rescue, mountain climbers who chose to put their lives in danger. This is very serious because, there have been many deaths of both mountain rangers and climbers during these rescue missions. That’s why mountain climbers shouldn’t be able to demand rescue services. The main reasons for this are because, it would involve putting more than one live in danger, the mountain climbers are the ones who took the risk, and with so many people climbing mountains a helicopter could easily crash.
Have you ever wanted to prove to everyone that you are a hard worker that is willing to give up everything to go on an adventure? If this is you than Everest is the perfect place for you. A great deal of Everest’s dangers are expressed in his book which should either inspire you to try this journey or sway you away from the treacherous mountain. In the story, “ Into Thin Air,” by Jon Krakauer a true story is told of a dangerous voyage up and down Everest. The climb up was arduous and long according to Jon, but the climbers sacrificed everything to get to the top, which most of the climbers achieved. However, emotions shifted when a storm swooped in and killed many of the climbers that were stuck on the summit, around 12-19 in total. The devices
In conclusion, I believe people should not have the right to get rescued when they put themselves at risk. Rescuers end up dying in an attempt to save people since they didn’t make a smart move. Traffic jams delay climbers, causing them to die, and inexperienced climbers are given a false sense of security from helicopters. Therefore, I believe that individuals should not have the privilege to call for a rescuer, in their time
A special few believe that conquering the world's highest mountain produces more rewards than risks. Behavioral neuroscience and sociology account for the behaviors that influence professional climbers. Risk takers are essentially motivated by social pressures and self-satisfaction. Psychological phenomenons such as self-efficacy, risk and reward, and cultural values push individuals on the path to extreme risks like climbing Everest. Everest acts as a platform for climbers who desire stronger sense of self.
Nearly four-thousand people have scaled Mt. Everest, but about 240 people have died trying. Even though people put themselves at risk, society should pay. Society should pay because many people can’t afford to pay the rescue bills and it is the right thing to do.
These experienced climbers have the worst job of all, with an astonishing “annual fatality rate of 4,035 per 100,000 full-time” over these past ten years(Morrow 2). Apart from having to guide tourist climbers many times during the season, they have to carrying necessary equipment for them making the trip even more hazardous. For example, they drag across the ice large “loads of fuel, food, ropes, oxygen and tents for clients”(Morrow 3}. That’s not all, the Everest climbing company and the Nepalese government make a fortune each year with their tourist attraction, and give Sherpa a pity amount of their earnings; and these climbers put themselves at risk each time. To prove it, “Hardly any this money is received by the Sherpa themselves”, even though their lives are in danger; if anything happened to a Sherpa they will leave “their family in economic crisis”(Morrow 3). The Sherpas have little to no life insurance benefits, they can be killed and their families would barely be taken care of. This can seen when an avalanche cost the lives of 13, and in response to a strike it “would only provide a pittance of 40,000 rupees, or $US410”(Morrow 1). Moreover since tourists are the ones paying and Sherpas, they are better suited and occupied while
On May 10th 1996, 23 climbers from 5 different expeditions were surprised by a fierce storm on the South Col of Mount Everest. 24 hours later eight of them were dead. Jon Krakauer was part of a group led by experienced climbers Rob Hall, Mike Groom and Andy Harris. Fellow climbers Doug Hansen, Beck Weathers, Yasuko Namba, Frank Fishbeck, Lou Kasischke, John Taske and Stuart Hutchinson had paid up to £42,000 each to be taken to the summit. By the morning of May 11th Harris, Hansen, Namba and Weathers were all unaccounted for. Krakauer, back at Camp Four after a terrifying night battling the elements, takes up the story on that fateful morning…