I intentionally left the beach saturday because I didn't want to drown/get in trouble saving the nearby idiots. Obviously I wouldn't be able to just stand idly by while they drowned, so I simply removed myself from the situation for MY safety.
Unless the rescuer drowns saving the first victim, as what usually happens. That's when bystanders become victims because of selfless thinking people.
My point is that if you are speeding, you can lose control and hit someone else. You run the risk of having an accident that injures or kills someone who had no part in your decision to drive too fast. If you choose to swim in dangerous water, you aren't going to run off the road and kill someone who was just passing by on the way to Sunday School.
In the water, the rescuer endangers himself, albeit willingly and unselfishly, when he enters the water to rescue someone. Maybe he didn't get up that morning with plans to pull someone out of the water, but at some point he made a conscious decision to put himself in harm's way.
Most people I know will not stand by and watch someone drown, they wouldn't be able to live with themselves.....so yes....the person in the water during a double red flag is endangering the public, which is well documented in Walton Co. by the amount of rescuers/civilians who drown trying to help.
Are any of us REALLY sure we would go in (excluding lifeguards and LEO's who may be reading this)?