Now, Adam, it's completely accurate if you subscribe to their preconceived notions.AdamZ said:This is sooooo frustrating. Perhaps some of our members live in that area and can call the county exeuctive and set him straight. As for NPR what can I say. I rarely think their reporting is accurate. sigh!
4CornerFlyer said:. . . that the aircraft in question weighs less than a Honda Civic and is therefore no very useful to terrorists . . .
Actually, the comment was that fully loaded, the Cessna weighed more than an empty Honda Civic.Gary Sortor said:Perhaps, AOPA commented on the payload of small aircraft, but it didn't make the story.
AirBaker said:If someone wants to blow something up bad enough, they're probably going to figure out how. It's crazy how scared people get. Ignorance....
Don't bet on that one. Load up your C-150 with white talcum powder, disburse it visibly over some public place like the reservoir in Central Park, and the terror created would be mind boggling.4CornerFlyer said:1) that the aircraft in question weighs less than a Honda Civic and is therefore no very useful to terrorists,
Skip Miller said:Don't bet on that one. Load up your C-150 with white talcum powder, disburse it visibly over some public place like the reservoir in Central Park, and the terror created would be mind boggling.
-Skip
Why, style points, of course. I thought the question was "can a small plane be an effective terror weapon" not "is there an easier way to do it."Anthony said:Why go through all the trouble of getting a plane?
4CornerFlyer said:I thought the NPR piece wasn't all that bad. I mean, you have to expect a story about GA airport security when some drunken jackass steals a plane and flies it around for hours.
For those who didn't make it all the way through, they interviewed an AOPA staffer who made the most important points: 1) that the aircraft in question weighs less than a Honda Civic and is therefore no very useful to terrorists, and 2) that in the history of aviation there has never been a GA plane used in a terrorist attack. The mayor of Danbury was supportive of his airport; only politicians from neighboring towns, who have probably wished the airport ill for years were criticizing it.
They also pointed out that there were only eleven airplanes stolen in the entire US last year.
The reference to "more dangerous helicopters" was a bit over the top, but I think it was a reasonable and balanced story.
Jon
admitted NPR regular listener
Skip Miller said:Why, style points, of course. I thought the question was "can a small plane be an effective terror weapon" not "is there an easier way to do it."
-Skip
Skip Miller said:Why, style points, of course. I thought the question was "can a small plane be an effective terror weapon" not "is there an easier way to do it."
-Skip
Joe Williams said:Anything can be a terror weapon. I have the technical know how to blow your TV screen into your face or your bicycle seat up your butt, and to manufacture the explosives to do it with. It's not a matter of "can something be used as a weapon," it's a matter of whether or not we've got the courage to quit quivering in fear at every new shadow that appears.
AirBaker said:Think of the damage done by the McVey bombing years back. He didn't even need to know how to fly a plane, just where to rent a truck.
Besides.... If you're going to blow up a building, why hit the top?
Bob Bement said:Yes, and you can still rent a u-haul truck and it isn't hard at all. What kind of security do they have?
Anthony said:Why people can't (Or don't want to) put it in perspective is beyond me.
Anthony said:I tried to listen to it, but after 1/3 the way through I couldn't take it anymore.
Handsfield said:I'm not really proposing this position, just wondering what the best tactic is in dealing with the issue.
Hunter
Great, now I have to start checking my bicycle seat!Joe Williams said:I have the technical know how to blow your TV screen into your face or your bicycle seat up your butt, ...
Joe Williams said:.......It's not a matter of "can something be used as a weapon," it's a matter of whether or not we've got the courage to quit quivering in fear at every new shadow that appears.
The best solution, I believe, is to make Airspace Avoidance a mandatory security topic at every airman's BFR. Education as always is the best choice.You should have listened to the rest of the story; it ended with a pretty good case in favor of GA and airport security. I'm not really proposing this position, just wondering what the best tactic is in dealing with the issue.
Hunter
ejensen said:And you can still get the ammonium nitrate without too much trouble. Just wear you DeKalb hat and overalls.