RickMasters wrote:
The only thing worse than bad things happening is the government getting involved to fix it.
Hang gliding was supposed to police itself.
That was before paragliding.
Rick,
Should I assume that you hold an anti-government position? Perhaps it's more of an anti-
bad government position.
I myself have doubts about many of the individuals elected to political positions. We may be on the same side of the issue on this one.
From my point of view I would modify your first sentence in the following way -
The only thing worse than bad things happening is when bad and/or incompetent government (or a similar politician) attempts to fix it. Lots of good things happen when competent government agencies/departments do their job. Where I live, the streets are paved, the highways maintained, there are short lines at the DMV, the electricity stays on (99.9% of the time). Water flows from the faucets and the sewers work. Fracing was outlawed statewide. Many things could be better, but the world isn't perfect - particularly the human world.
Regarding your other comments -
I agree completely that the original idea was that hang gliding was intended to keep an eye on itself. That doesn't seem to be working as well these days.
Very honestly, I believe that money and politics have corrupted the U$hPa. That process began with the possible admission of powered ultralights (which didn't end up happening) then the actual admission of the faltering US paragliding (only) association back in ~ 1989 or 1990.
That move was meant to "bolster" declining membership numbers. That membership decline, however, resulted from the absence of the USHGA maintaining any kind of positive self promotion in the media. Such positive promotion was needed in order to counter the years of bad press the sport had faced beginning in the mid 1970s and on through the early 1980s. The USHGA should have invested in a professionally made documentary on the tremendous safety improvements in HG technology which began in the early 1980s. Instead of doing something positive like that, the USHGA took the easy way out and was propped back up by a bunch of collapsible canopy members.
And I'll say this, collapsible canopies were dying off in the US, until the USHGA effectively endorsed and supported them by including them in their one time HG only association. As a result of USHGA's support, paragliding marketing in the US gained strength and also tended to rob members who were (once upon a time) more likely to have taken up hang gliding.
So money, in the form of collapsible canopy member dollar$, helped corrupt USHGA's "mission". And as the collapsible canopy contingent grew, its political power also grew, at the very least,
influencing how the now U$hPa approached its (altered) goals.
After writing all the above, I would completely agree that, with the U$hPa identified as gliding sport aviation's "governing" body, things only get worse when they get involved. That's why I didn't call them to fix the problem of Max Marien taking children on dangerous, high risk tandem rides within the PGDMC above Torrey Pines City Park.