55+ wrote: ↑Fri Feb 21, 2025 9:42 pm
rookiepilot wrote: ↑Fri Feb 21, 2025 4:55 pm
55+ wrote: ↑Fri Feb 21, 2025 4:25 pm
I agree with you wholeheartedly(pax empathy) and I should have conflated both. Undoubtedly terrifying for those passengers hung upside down after witnessing a wing detaching followed by a fire. Truly horrific to say the least, they deserve full redress after going through that very unnerving event.
Regards
55+
The fear of fire, being burned alive would be quite traumatic. I’ve been there in a small aircraft myself, and I had my own door to get out.
Well despite that, certainly gratifying you are around to converse. Having said that I don’t always agree with your stance , that is when I take a look see. However it is a public forum and you have the right to pontificate on any subject here like the rest of us. Been pontificating myself as of late so time to step back to other things
Kindest regards
55+
Kindest regards back:
One thing I did not make clear. The news I referenced— as I see it its more the increasing likelihood this was yet another human error accident, as opposed to a catastrophic mechanical failure (the reason for my own light aircraft accident that inverted me)
Now the investigation will take its course and obviously a different conclusion may well be determined.
In any event I could care less about the gender or ethnicity of any pilot, posts on this thread referencing those are just ridiculous — at best.
Its the instant— and not by you, necessarily— focus on empathy for the flight crew over the passengers on all of these threads. Thank you for your comments expressing sympathy for the pax.
In my view, you put on the uniform, you are no longer a passenger, you want the bars, you accept full and complete responsibility, including when it goes ugly, up and to including firing for incompetence— something not popular these days to even mention, and doesn’t happen (look at the articles on 3 day suspensions for teachers caught in wilful misconduct). Yeah life sucks when one f—-s up but thats the price for a society with personal freedoms = personal accountability.
Hire and fire based on performance. I ask for Nothing more. Not probation. Not retraining. Because passengers are trusting their lives to us as pilots, and they deserve the best.
I am an amateur pilot and have been a professional trader for 28 years.
The verdict on my decisions in my chosen profession is instant, crystal clear and unforgiving, based on the ice cold calculating numbers on a screen. I have no where to look but in the mirror. I have gotten quite good at it, out of necessity, but I fear in our society I am in the minority, most want to point fingers elsewhere for their mistakes.
Best, Robert