So a man survives nearly a week on Everest with nothing but chocolate and chewed ice. And we are meant to celebrate this as a triumph of the human spirit. We are meant to marvel at his tenacity, his will to live.
But let us not be so easily distracted by the dramatic. Let us ask instead: how did he come to be abandoned in the death zone in the first place? The answer, as always, is the rot of modern commercial mountaineering.
Everest is no longer a mountain; it is a theme park for wealthy dilettantes, staffed by native porters and guided by men who charge fortunes for a false promise of safety. Our survivor is not a hero from a Boy's Own adventure. He is a victim of a system that treats the mountain as a business and human life as an acceptable loss.
His survival is luck, not skill. The chocolate was not a symbol of ingenuity; it was a sign of how utterly unprepared he was. In the Victorian era, explorers like Mallory and Irvine studied the mountain for years.
They carried scientific instruments and a proper sense of dread. Today's climbers carry GoPros and a credit card. And when the oxygen runs out, they chew ice.
This is not the conquest of nature. This is the decadence of the human will. We have traded respect for a selfie.
And we applaud the survivors because we cannot bear to look at the corpses.








