I think that is what I want to understand better; that sentence reflects what drives the FAA to their 'zero accident' goals, and it is tied into the emotional response we see from the public when it comes to aviation accidents.
(not pickin on anyone, most of us have come to accept the current legal burden as the price of admission)
Here are some questions that come to mind:
Is it reasonable to have a goal of zero accidents or injuries in aviation? (we lose a driver or a pedestrian - many of them completely innocent bystanders -
every 15 minutes* in this country, every day, all year long. Why aren't the transportation lawmakers all over that, on the basis of quantity of death alone?!)
Is the cost (financial cost, cost of overregulation, cost of reducing aviation availability to many folks) worth the seemingly burdensome set of regulations we now have?
We have a reg. that permanently strips away a person's approval to fly when no one was either physically injured or arguably posed a true physical threat.......do we have similar regs in other modes of transportation? If you buzz your boat at high speed, past a group of swimmers, will people call 911, and will you never drive a boat again as a result?
Are our aviation rules driven by emotion instead of logic and fact unlike other legal areas of our lives
?
I again remind that I am not 'in favor of more aviation fatalities'. However, I marvel at the disparity of response our legal system has between an aviation incident or fatality - and that of other activities.
And I do have concern that we are overregulated. And it concerns me that as a group we sheepishly might accept without complaint an unfair regulatory burden.
*
http://www-nrd.nhtsa.dot.gov/Pubs/810791.PDF