Re: What is really the best course of action against the NPS (or other such authorities)?
In reply to:
I personally don't think there are right or wrong answers to this.
There aren't. It's just a matter of considering consequences--which are not local, but global. Every time a bandit jump is made, it endangers legal sites. Everytime a new site becomes legal, the choice of how to jump that site becomes subject to someone else's rules. And eventually (perhaps sooner than you think) comes the quid pro quo, at which point you will all be turning on each other because the threat of losing those legal sites will make you believe you have no other choice but to turn in your brother.
I thought at first that year-round legal jumping at NRGB would be a plus. I no longer believe that, for reasons I don't feel like elucidating right now, although I will say that "sleeping with the enemy" is not high on my list of moral acts.
And about that, I will say this: I have always believed that a certain incident that occurred at a certain national park that resulted in the untimely death of a certain really nice guy is not, in fact, attributable to his own illegal actions, but rather to the rabid overzealousness of a certain law enforcement entity. For that reason alone, I think negotiation with that entity is unconscionable.
Nonetheless, my ethical position is my ethical position, not yours, and in the end, what you all will have to consider are the consequences awaiting you at the end of the road you choose.
rl