When a boat goes down, should women and children be able to jump to the front of the lifeboat queue?

The death toll from the Costa Concordia tragedy has reached five, and more stories are emerging about the chaos inside the luxury cruise liner as it started to go down.
Melbourne mother Michelle Barraclough told the Herald Sun that she had to fight hysterical adults to hold on to her 12-year-old daughter, and that the men were the worst.
“Everybody just shoved and screamed in 15 different languages,” she said.
“The people that pushed their way on to the boat were then trying to tell them to shut the door, not to let any more people on the boat after they had pushed their way on.
“We just couldn’t believe it - especially the men, they were worse than the women.”
The ‘women and children first’ protocol came about after the sinking of the British troopship Birkenhead, when chivalrous soldiers put others’ lives ahead of their own. The ship had only enough lifeboat spots for half the people on board; senior officer Lieutenant Colonel Alexander Seton mustered the soldiers on the deck, and – according to The Age:
Fearing they would swamp the lifeboat carrying the women and children, he put his hands above his head and beseeched them not to “do this thing. I urge you all to stand fast”. It is said that only three men moved.
That was in 1852. Obviously the captain of the Costa Concordia did no such thing. But should he have? Should weaker people get preferential treatment in such a chaotic and dangerous situation?
Personally, I would hope that the stronger people would look after the weaker. That a man or a strong woman would help a child to safety before saving themselves. That a swimmer would help a non-swimmer. That somehow, in the anarchy, there would be heroes.
Unlike an aeroplane, cruise ship passengers are not seated in orderly rows, with neat lights pointing the way to the nearest exit. But you would hope there was some sort of plan, something better than everyone for themselves. Maybe the lifeboats could be built with designated seats for the weak, the young, the sick. Maybe they could be designed so there are enough readily accessible seats for everyone; although it’s hard to see how that would be possible when half the boat is under water.
Maybe the boat’s designers didn’t think about it hard enough.
Is it time for a new rule? What would you do if your life was at risk?
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