Hey maddy, speaking ONLY for myself, it's not about being "entitled" to a service - I don't expect SAR to be free. In fact, the service NEVER HAS BEEN free. It seems like you're forgetting that fact. The problem I have currently is with who pays, and how that is assessed. I feel strongly that some kind of cost sharing is far more appropriate than sending Scott Mason's family a $25,000 bill.
To your second point, Yes, asking me to follow an arbitrary set of rules while hiking is, to me, unreasonable. Hiking means different things to different people. When I was little, one of the first tastes of freedom that my parents ever gave me was to allow me to walk or cross country ski out the back door of our house into the woods that surrounded us, and to allow my legs to take me where they would. I learned quickly how to take care of myself, and how to get myself back home for dinner, warm and in one piece. That freedom and the requisite learning are, to me, important to this very day. No one WANTS to be rescued. But personally, I think it should be ok for people to make mistakes once in a while without being saddled with an extended financial burden or, worse, choosing not to call for help when one should. I've said before on this board, I'm happy to chip in a few bucks every year so that even the dude who rolls into the Presi-range in jean shorts and a tee shirt gets out in one piece. Having lived in NH the majority of my years on this earth, in fact I've already chipped in quite a few dollars for the state's coffers. And don't even get me started on the I-95 toll heading to Maine. Finally, let's not forget that F&G is there because we pay them to be, and because that is the career they have chosen. Saying they're "at our beck and woof" strikes me as slightly disingenuous.