it’s the one kid on the playground who ruins it for everyone. Now the FAA takes its ball and goes home.
^this.
Maybe it’s just me and I view things through the lends of my ASD.
But I was struck with what Denver said, particularly “Normalization of deviance”.
Was listening to a radio show while driving the other day listing off all the societal dangers of legalizing marijuana.
Host didn’t get it when someone called in and said alcohol was orders of magnitudes worse.
Host even said he didn’t consider two glasses of wine a night any problem.
Sat there in traffic thinking about “Normalization of deviance”...
Ultimately at the end of the day, regardless if you or I think it’s appropriate, society views certain things as acceptable risks.
We allow 16 year olds behind the wheel after what is essentially maybe 20 hours of teaching, a dozen or so hours with practicing driving with their parents, along with a written test and a final road test.
Yet for all of that, car accident are among the top killers in that age bracket.
We know kid’s brains aren’t fully developed particularly in the risk taking department until the early to mid 20s. (One of my close friends was in a car with her friends late at night on an interstate, a heated conversation came up and the driver inadvertently put more pressure on the pedal to the point that there were nearly at 90 mph. The driver somehow loss control and side scraped a lane barrier and they spun out. Everyone escaped with minor injuries).
There is a reason car insurance is more expensive for men under 25 than it is for women.
Or hell even the elderly, I’d bet money everyone here has known atleast on person of advanced age who still stubbornly drove beyond what was probably safe. (Which also adversely effects the safety of everyone else on the road).
My point is those acceptable risks we take as a society inevitably turn into
acceptable losses.
And that is my issue with the FAA’s take on this. They pursue a noble goal, to basically keep the skies, passengers, and crew safe by attempting to eliminate as many points of failure as possible before they happen.
However their policy of risk mitigation above all else, has blocked many people who otherwise would’ve likely been fine airmen/women from skies.
There should be a balance, between risk mitigation and not flatly denying people who genuinely enjoy aviation.
Sport Pilot cert seems to have not been the accident prone disaster it’s critics made it out to be. Only if it covered sr22s...