FAA Hazardous Attitude #1: "Antiauthority"
Like 90% of the pilots I've met are antiauthority. Also, always be suspicious when the authority is telling you that being antiauthority is hazardous...
FAA Hazardous Attitude #1: "Antiauthority"
Yep. I’m consulting with some official folks now per some recs. Probably will call in some favors as ducks lined up. Gonna kill the scripts now and just go in and disqualify these diagnosis one by one. Will take a few years and testing and sobriety tests I’m sure but that’s fine I’m patient no rush. I have accepted it now.Yes, but that doesn’t undo the diagnosis. The doc made a diagnosis as a basis for the prescription. The FAA will assume a diagnosis is correct until proven otherwise. That proof is often time-consuming and co$tly.
Yes sir thank you I’m working on the consult now. I see others have done this. I will conquer this tooThe AME decision considerations for ADD/ADHD can be found here:
https://www.faa.gov/ame_guide/dec_cons/disease_prot/adhd
And the SSRI info can be found at:
https://www.faa.gov/ame_guide/app_process/exam_tech/item47/amd/antidepressants
As mentioned elsewhere, don’t turn a medical certification issue into a legal problem. Also, consult with an experienced HIMS AME on the path forward. Do not submit an application without knowing what is needed for success; this is not a DIY effort.
Agreed and this is just not worth it. That would be the worst, 10 years later there is an issue and then boom busted. No need to expose myself to this just to fly that would be silly.To sell.
The answer to the OP's original question is that the chances of getting caught are currently very low. But maybe someday the FAA starts combing through your records, and then you do get caught. The consequences will be severe. Many, many pilots lie on Medxpress, often about things that wouldn't make a difference. But here we have someone intentionally lying about multiple disqualifying conditions and possibly dealing drugs. It wouldn't just be the medical revoked.
Yeah agreed doing this. No way to prove it that I wasn’t taking especially an x-drunk lol! No one will believe me on that. It’s a moot point and just gonna go in with “stopping” now and disqualify those conditions I’m realizing this is a long road however it will be a sweet sweet victory when I get itHaving the untaken medication is a good way to document that it was, well, untaken. If you have prescriptions on record, but you don't have the meds, either (1) you took them (2) you trashed them or (3) you passed them along to someone else. How is the AME to know? I think if you continue to fill prescriptions for a med you are not taking you should carefully keep the untaken meds to prove your point. But really, if you aren't taking them, stop the scripts. That's the best way to show you aren't taking meds.
Actually, if you're most people, that's exactly what you do.You don't get to decide when the rules apply to you, or ignore them when they are inconvenient or seem unfair.
Virtually everyone in the USA does this because the rule is inconvenient and we take a calculated risk in breaking the law.
Actually, if you're most people, that's exactly what you do.
When we're driving we see the unambiguous sign on the highway that says 55mph speed limit, we know it's there for our safety and for the safety of others, but we just can't resist going 75mph because we feel "the speed limit should be higher".
Virtually everyone in the USA does this because the rule is inconvenient and we take a calculated risk in breaking the law.
I don't know how accurate this last statement is. I know people who have lost their pilot's certificates for covering medical conditions, and later got them back. It's work, but I think that's the rule more than the exception.The risk calculation is completely different. If you're busted for speeding you pay a fine and keep driving.
If you're busted for falsifying your medical application regarding mental health and medication prescribed for it, you lose your pilot certificate along with your medical certificate, with little likelihood of EVER getting them back, and you risk going to jail as well.
I don't know how accurate this last statement is. I know people who have lost their pilot's certificates for covering medical conditions, and later got them back. It's work, but I think that's the rule more than the exception.
Honestly, I don't. Well, I'm in Canada and you said "everyone in the USA", but I don't do it here or in the US. In fact, I get pretty ****ed when I see people going 20 mph (or up here kph) over the speed limit. Do I speed occasionally? Sure do, but it's because I missed a speed limit sign and the car's GPS doesn't display the speed limit on that particular road. As soon as I notice, I slow down. Got caught three times so far. Paid the fine twice (wasn't much over) and once the cop (in Texas actually) just gave me a warning.
Edit: But don't get me wrong, this is not a "holier than thou" post. It's just that particular thing, speeding (especially in bad conditions) that gets my blood boiling for some reason. There are plenty of very stupid and unnecessary gov't imposed rules I disagree with and wouldn't judge anyone for not complying with them lol.
Those conditions have big hurdles if you tell the truth about your condition as well. My point is that lying about it and getting caught doesn't mean you won't later be able to go through the process. I don't condone lying on the application, but we should be honest about the likely consequences.Some medical conditions are easier to get over than others with respect to re-certification. Mental health diagnosis, long term medication, probably mis-use of the medication, etc. etc., all add up to a big hurdle for any reinstatement, and the process can certainly be prohibitively expensive.
Do you know there is only one scientific study that has linked speed to mishap RATE. And it found that it is a difference in speed that increases the mishap rate. So if you are doing the speed limit, and everyone else is doing 20 over, YOU are the problem, not them.
The US Interstates were designed for 1960 era cars with 1960 tires to run 70s MPH. So with all the increase in technology, we now need to run at 55????
The 55 MPH speed limit came about not for safety, but to save gas.
With MUCH inferior cars.
Another advantage to a consultation is if the AME says there’s no way you’ll ever pass, you haven’t failed a medical so you’re still good for Sport Pilot. Once you fail a medical you’re done as far as Sport Pilot goes until you pass a medical.Thank you very much I’m going to do this. I assume it’s all off the record which is perfect. This is great plan and gets me moving. Slowly but surely
Maybe so but years ago the Kansas turnpike had an 80 MPH speed limit. Every Monday the radio would talk about all the people who were killed on the turnpike the previous weekend. The death toll went way down when the 55 MPH speed limit went into effect. I think the limit is now 70 MPH.Do you know there is only one scientific study that has linked speed to mishap RATE. And it found that it is a difference in speed that increases the mishap rate. So if you are doing the speed limit, and everyone else is doing 20 over, YOU are the problem, not them.
The US Interstates were designed for 1960 era cars with 1960 tires to run 70s MPH. So with all the increase in technology, we now need to run at 55????
The 55 MPH speed limit came about not for safety, but to save gas.
Maybe so but years ago the Kansas turnpike had an 80 MPH speed limit. Every Monday the radio would talk about all the people who were killed on the turnpike the previous weekend. The death toll went way down when the 55 MPH speed limit went into effect. I think the limit is now 70 MPH.
Years ago motor vehicles did not nearly offer the protection of current vehicles. Severe injury and deaths per mile driven are much improved compared to the past.
The death toll went down because people were driving less.Maybe so but years ago the Kansas turnpike had an 80 MPH speed limit. Every Monday the radio would talk about all the people who were killed on the turnpike the previous weekend. The death toll went way down when the 55 MPH speed limit went into effect. I think the limit is now 70 MPH.
Yes. Higher speed means bigger crash.You two are talking different things, accident rate and death rate. It is possible that dropping the speeds from 80 to 55 had only a slight effect of the accident rate but a significantly greater effect on the death rate. Lower speed accidents are less likely to be fatal.
We all make stupid choices but that doesn't make these rules fair or reasonable. I think you're hatefulness probably stretches to your whole life and I'm sorry for the people in it because of it.I really hope this is a troll, because it reeks of attitudes that will be very dangerous going forward.
If it's not a troll, and you really are as good, ethical and moral as you claim to be, your conscience will eat you alive every time you get in that pilot's seat and start her up. You will always be looking over your shoulder and be pushed into making possibly stupid decisions in order to avoid detection. It's your life and your decision, but I would not take lying on a federal form lightly. I also hope that you confide to your wife that you are planning on committing a crime that could ultimately lead to financial straits, a criminal conviction, and you being jailed for some time if anything happens. This isn't just about you if you have a family.
Personally, I would recommend taking all those pills back to the doctor or pharmacy (I hope you weren't flushing them or selling them), and getting a signed and dated statement of how many you brought back. I would get letters proving sobriety/you "crushing it in life". And then I would suck it up and get a good AME and get it done. The right way.
Or I would go fly sport pilot and understand that my own stupid choices are what kept me from being able to follow through on my dream of flying the country with the family in the back. Actions have consequences, some more far-reaching than others. Lying doesn't make them go away. It may postpone the reckoning, but it doesn't erase them.
ETA: I just saw that you were not holding on to them. That will be a problem. There will be no way to prove that you were not actually taking them.
I think you're hatefulness probably stretches to your whole life and I'm sorry for the people in it because of it.
and I'm sorry for the people in it because of it.
Reality has a way of seeming hateful to those who don't like the consequences of their decisions.We all make stupid choices but that doesn't make these rules fair or reasonable. I think you're hatefulness probably stretches to your whole life and I'm sorry for the people in it because of it.
Wow! Rather presumptuous.We all make stupid choices but that doesn't make these rules fair or reasonable. I think you're hatefulness probably stretches to your whole life and I'm sorry for the people in it because of it.
These rules are written in blood. As archaic as they may seem to you, innocent people are dead because pilots had these drugs in their system...or just needed them to begin with and weren't taking them.We all make stupid choices but that doesn't make these rules fair or reasonable.
absurd. popping xanax/adderal speedballs and he wants to fly. with his family . . .The assumption by any authority will be that if he didn't use them, he sold them. If some compulsive behavior was so strong he filled them and flushed them, over and over, that'll be another issue.
Sport. Pilot.