RotorAndWing
Final Approach
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Rotor&Wing
Garbage argument. it costs me about $1.75 to take a bus across town...
Edit: and the bus driver drives the whole time too
Garbage argument. it costs me about $1.75 to take a bus across town...
Edit: and the bus driver drives the whole time too
The experience argument is a useful one for the pilot labor industry in their attempts to artificially constrain the labor pool, thereby driving up the cost of labor. If we can get some mandates in there to benefit the higher education industry while we're "solving" the problem, all the better.
With regard to mental health issues, they should largely be disqualifying, as should all psych meds.
JKG
If we can get some mandates in there to benefit the higher education industry while we're "solving" the problem, all the better.
So you're saying experience is not important for air carrier pilot applicants ?
what mandates do you propose ?
paid pilots will continue to actively manage ways to avoid the disclosure of medical ailments as a function of the wear and tear we call living and aging.
Not too many years ago, most airline pilots had been trained in the military. This fellow who crashed the plane never would have made it thru military training.
I guarantee there are hobby pilots here that actively avoid seeking treatment.
I guarantee there are hobby pilots here that actively avoid seeking treatment.
The lapse in his training is the key. They should have picked this up as he demonstrated that he was unstable at this early point. The company was aware of this and let him continue. I believe The military would have thrown him out as they would have the buffalo pilot also who failed check rides and had a dismal record. Please let us see the figures on ex military verses non military pilots accidents records. I think it's interesting! I don't think there's any question that the military training is superior. I also think there are many GA pilots flying with bad medical problems .Not sure where you get your information from.
For the past 30 or so years, civilian vs military background in aviation has remained about the same, with only in the past few years it leaning more civilian only for the reason that the military isn't putting out as many pilots as in previous times.
As far as the accident FO, your statement doesn't hold water as you don't have any knowledge of whether he would have got through military training. FWIW, Lufthansa has a fairly rigorous evaluation process, so if he got through that chances are he would have got through the military as well. One thing for sure, we'll never know.
And before we get into this asinine argument of who's better (military or civilian) the military background guys have crashed as many planes as their counterparts.
The lapse in his training is the key. They should have picked this up as he demonstrated that he was unstable at this early point. The company was aware of this and let him continue.
I believe The military would have thrown him out as they would have the buffalo pilot also who failed check rides and had a dismal record.
Please let us see the figures on ex military verses non military pilots accidents records. I think it's interesting!
I don't think there's any question that the military training is superior.
I also think there are many GA pilots flying with bad medical problems .
Not too many years ago, most airline pilots had been trained in the military. This fellow who crashed the plane never would have made it thru military training. Slowly but surely the requirements became lax and we arrived at accidents like the buffalo N.Y. Disaster. The U.S. Taxpayers have bailed out the airlines several times so the bus arguement seems null and void. Taxpayers money has played a big role in our airlines since their inception.
Yeah, a couple ideas here - for one thing the military even at their height of cranking out pilots cannot possibly produce the required amount. Furthermore now and going forward they will be making less and less and less. They will however be making lots of UAV controllers (notice I didn't say pilots). So why that sounds like a solution it is not.
Secondly I'm not too sure about your assertion that the airlines get taxpayer bailouts. If you're referring to the monies received after 9/11 I would hardly call that a bailout. If you rolled up on your place of business one morning and the U.S. Military was preventing you from opening your doors to conduct business it wouldn't be beyond reason to expect some form of remedy for lost revenue.
But even if you want to go with this illusion of the assertion of subsidies to airlines it does not even come close to what the USDA GIVES AWAY for farmers not to grow crops and other manipulations of our agro economy and yet the public seems to be pretty blissfully ok with all of that.
There were multiple rounds of guaranteed loans that no bank would guarantee before the 9/11 ones.
Comparing one boondoggle to another probably isn't a great argument, either. Ha. Two wrongs not making a right, and all... Farm bill, indeed. Ha.
A number of airlines should be dead and gone if they had to get loans at the bank. That's irrefutable. Some cleaned up the books and started the M&A game to survive.
Technically Boeing wouldn't be doing too well without the not-quite-government-but-kinda, Import-Export Bank, too. But we seem to recognize that it's impossible for them to compete against Airbus' quasi-government funded model and kinda do the same for Boeing in a stranger way.
No good solution for any of it.
But even if you want to go with this illusion of the assertion of subsidies to airlines it does not even come close to what the USDA GIVES AWAY for farmers not to grow crops and other manipulations of our agro economy and yet the public seems to be pretty blissfully ok with all of that.
What's the spraying for?
Yeah, a couple ideas here - for one thing the military even at their height of cranking out pilots cannot possibly produce the required amount. Furthermore now and going forward they will be making less and less and less. They will however be making lots of UAV controllers (notice I didn't say pilots). So why that sounds like a solution it is not.
Secondly I'm not too sure about your assertion that the airlines get taxpayer bailouts. If you're referring to the monies received after 9/11 I would hardly call that a bailout. If you rolled up on your place of business one morning and the U.S. Military was preventing you from opening your doors to conduct business it wouldn't be beyond reason to expect some form of remedy for lost revenue.
But even if you want to go with this illusion of the assertion of subsidies to airlines it does not even come close to what the USDA GIVES AWAY for farmers not to grow crops and other manipulations of our agro economy and yet the public seems to be pretty blissfully ok with all of that.
Where Middle Eastern airlines are succeeding, and blowing away the US carriers, is in customer service. The US carriers have thrown customer service out the window and have adopted a "take it or leave it" mentality. Filthy airplanes, cattle car seating, charge for anything and everything, ****ed off employees makes for a lousy customer experience.
Upper management of the US carriers view them as a huge piggy bank ripe for raiding and bleeding dry.
Please read about the taxpayers bailing out the airlines. It's easy to look up. As I recall ,for starters, the lawyers involved in United airlines bailout received 400 million ! . It was mail contracts that got the airlines started in the first place, again, taxpayers money, air mail contracts, tremendous investment in airports, etc. As for farmers, H.L. Mencken reported on them fifty years ago as the biggest whiners on earth. Nothing has changed. The public is oblivious to them and to the dept. of defense. I never maintained there are enough military pilots to go around,I said , as a rule, they are better trained than most but of course there are always exceptions. I'm under no illusions, I've spoken to and known both quite well for fifty years. I'll go with a military pilot any day.
Yes, it would be easy to be just as customer focused as they are when they have twice and in some instances three times the number of frontline employees. Just look at the number of flight attendants alone they can afford to put on the same size plane. Their planes go out half full yet by some magic they make a profit without any help ???? RIGHT
The ones I"m around always seem to be full. And since they are customer focused they are also carrying record amounts of cargo below.
The American (failed) model says we need more employees to be customer focused. American management says we can't afford employees since they are too expensive (i.e. eating into our profits).
Last I checked their airplanes are flying with the same number of crew members as their US counterparts. At least they have enough pride to wash the planes and clean the inside, often. And the cabin crews actually focus on customer service. What a concept.
We don't pack in the seats just to purposely make people uncomfortable. Even though I certain people prefer to think that.