First, how come water patrol seemed totally unprepared and unequipped to resolve the situation? I mean, isn't that why you have water patrol at the contest? There had to have been a better way to resolve it then sending someone to beat the guy up.
I also think that everyone lost in that situation. I would be totally ashamed if someone caught me on tape standing and watching or videotaping someone else getting beaten up. Comedian Bobcat Gothwait used to say, "If you ever see me getting beaten up, please put down your video camera and help me!"
If the haole guy WAS mentally ill, he definitely did not "learn a good lesson" by getting his butt handed to him. And even if he was just a jerk, there had to be a better way.
I am not saying that people should not stand up for what is right, or call people on their transgressions. But violence should be a last resort.
I thought David Rastovich made a good point about this in a recent Surfer Magazine interview. If we are in a confrontation, I think we need to ask ourselves, "What are we defending?" -- is it worth it?
http://surfermag.com/features/onlineexclusives/rastaintrvu/index3.html
SURFERMAG.COM: Have you ever been in a fight in the water?
RASTA: Never in the water. I've seen a lot. I've definitely seen a lot at Burleigh, but no. I think I've thrown one punch my whole life and that was just as a young punk kid, 14. I've never been in that situation really, but when it's kinda going that way, the first thing that always pops into my head is, "What are you defending? What are you defending to get you into this situation?" Nearly a hundred percent it's always your ego thinking, "Oh no, my pride’s been snatched, ooh, ooh," just petty, just crap, worthless, just absolute crap. And that's always a reaction for me, like you get puffed up, you get in some kind of verbal thing, where you’re really trying to defend a point or something and you're thinking, "Okay, what am I trying to defend here?" It's always some kind of mental concept or a picture of yourself as a very intelligent person, or very skilled surfer, or "I live here," that kinda stuff. It's always jealous kind of stuff, so I've never even gotten in that situation in the water. I never will. . . .
Thanks for reading.