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#1
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No big surprise here. The politically Correct destruction of once was a
proud professional organization is evident. Rather than Air Safety, Gay Pride celebrations and promoting unqualified minorities into management is the new priority of the "Politically Correct misaligned unsafe FAA" I trust my IFR skills but I am not so sure any longer of the organization that "supposedly" protects our nations air safety. I believe the FAA is a disaster waiting to happen. We have lost 2 out of 5 Space Shuttles I believe due to PC nonsense in NASA. You know, the demeaning and ambivalent treatment of the technical skills in favor of PC doctrine and feel good politics. The FAA is the same ticking time bomb Maybe a Mid-Air over Kansas between two "Heavys" with around 700 on board that drops body parts and flaming wreckage for 50 square miles will get someones attention and push the FAA back toward it's mission of Air Safety rather than Gay Pride Celebrations. NEW YORK — Federal Aviation Administration officials received 52 warnings prior to Sept. 11, 2001, from their own security experts about potential Al Qaeda attacks, including some that mentioned airline hijackings or suicide attacks, The New York Times reported. The Times said in Thursday editions that a previously undisclosed report by the 9/11 commission that investigated the hijack attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon detailed warnings given to FAA leaders from April to Sept. 10, 2001, about the radical Islamic terrorist group and its leader, Usama bin Laden . The commission report, written last August, said five security warnings mentioned Al Qaeda's training for hijackings and two reports concerned suicide operations not connected to aviation. The Times said that a classified version and a partially declassified version of the 120-page report were given to the National Archives (search) two weeks ago. The Times story cited the declassified version of the document. Al Felzenberg, former spokesman for the 9/11 commission, which went out of business last summer, said the government had not completed review of the report for declassification purposes until recently. He said the Justice Department delivered the two versions of the document to the Archives. An Archives spokeswoman said the unclassified version of the document was not yet available Wednesday night. The Times gave these highlights from the commission report: Aviation officials were "lulled into a false sense of security" and "intelligence that indicated a real and growing threat leading up to 9/11 did not stimulate significant increases in security procedures." It takes the FAA to task for not expanding the use of in-flight air marshals or tightening airport screening for weapons. It said FAA officials were more concerned with reducing airline congestion, lessening delays and easing air carriers' financial problems than thwarting a terrorist attack. Information in this report was available to members of the 9/11 commission when they issued their public report last summer. That report itself contained criticisms of FAA operations. |
#2
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In article ,
RAMButt wrote: No big surprise here. The politically Correct [ screed deleted ] I have no idea what you're talking about in the part of your post that you apparently wrote. The shuttles were lost because of gays in the FAA? Okay. We'll get right on that. Mike Beede |
#3
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On Fri, 11 Feb 2005 16:25:33 -0600, Mike Beede wrote:
In article , RAMButt wrote: No big surprise here. The politically Correct [ screed deleted ] I have no idea what you're talking about in the part of your post that you apparently wrote. The shuttles were lost because of gays in the FAA? Okay. We'll get right on that. Mike Beede And here's why Iraq is so screwed up: Fewer Gays Being Discharged Since 9/11 'Don't Ask' Ousters At Lowest Level Yet By Evelyn Nieves and Ann Scott Tyson Washington Post Staff Writers Saturday, February 12, 2005; Page A01 The number of gay and lesbian service members discharged under the military's "don't ask, don't tell" policy has dropped by almost half since the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks and is at its lowest level since the Defense Department began keeping such figures in 1997. Significant declines have occurred in every branch of the armed forces, according to statistics released yesterday by the Pentagon. The Marine Corps, Air Force and Navy discharged fewer gay men and lesbians in 2004 than in any year since the Pentagon began tallying the number of its "homosexual separations" eight years ago. The Army's discharges represented the lowest number of discharges in five years. etc, etc., etc... |
#4
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![]() "RAMButt" wrote in message RAMButt, You should read a book titled, "The Secret of Building 26". It has to do with the reasons we, the Americans, were able to break the German's codes during WWII. The breaking of this code was the largest single reason for our winning WWII. Had the codes not been broken it is very likely that RAMButt and the rest of us would now be speaking a mixture of German and Japanese. The primary architect of this effort was a single British Mathematician who after WWII was awarded the highest possible Civilian Metal of Honor. He was treated very shabbly in England and in the U.S. but without him we most likely would have lost the war. Even today his mathematical theories are making possible our scientific progress. He was a homosexual. Shame on you, RAMButt, have you no honor left? Gene Whitt |
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Hi Gene. You're right on, of course. This was a mathematician of the very
highest order; his name was Alan Turing. |
#6
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Had the FAA acted on the less than clear intelligence and raised
pre-board inspections to current levels, the American public would have been outraged by the invasion to their privacy. It took 9/11 to persuade EVERBODY that the terrorists were serious. |
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