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#1
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![]() Here is the email address of the CBS Evening News, in case you want to air your feelings about their program on general aviation: If you watched the program (I didn't) and remember any of the advertisers, you could do even bettering by emailing the advertiser and c-c-ing CBS. There is nothing like a pinch in the pocketbook! all the best -- Dan Ford email: see the Warbird's Forum at www.warbirdforum.com and the Piper Cub Forum at www.pipercubforum.com |
#2
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Dear CBS News,
Has the National Enquirerer taken over CBS news in a hostile takeover? I would have expected to hear about it in the financial news. Your piece sensationalizing the potential for a General Aviation aircraft being used as a weapon which aired on 1/14/2004 is the kind of attention grabbing tripe that I would expect from the National Enquirer, not a mainstream television news agency. Apparently your reporters lack the skills and education to apply critical thinking to their reporting. Ground-based transportation systems have less security than GA aircraft, are easier to obtain, require less skill to operate, and can carry significantly higher payloads than the majority of GA aircraft. They are also capable of delivering payloads to almost any location in America. The ease with which car bombs are delivered to targets in Baghdad Iraq despite the presence of armed U.S. soldiers should clearly illustrate that ground vehicles are an equal or greater threat when compared to light aircraft. Is your objective to shut down General Aviation by encouraging the imposition of onerous restrictions and expenses on a struggling industry? Will your next target be small boats, personal automobiles, and light rental trucks? Should Americans be required to show their "papers" to pass armed checkpoints on every major highway in America? Just exactly where is CBS news trying to lead the American public with their propaganda? Enquiring minds would like to know... Dean Wilkinson |
#3
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I just had to write them also. What trash--anything to stir up the unknowing
American public----Mac |
#4
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I Tivo'd the program and will compile and post a list of all the
advertisers this weekend... First time I used the Tivo to SEE the commercials instead of skip 'em! ![]() Cub Driver wrote in : Here is the email address of the CBS Evening News, in case you want to air your feelings about their program on general aviation: If you watched the program (I didn't) and remember any of the advertisers, you could do even bettering by emailing the advertiser and c-c-ing CBS. There is nothing like a pinch in the pocketbook! all the best -- Dan Ford email: see the Warbird's Forum at www.warbirdforum.com and the Piper Cub Forum at www.pipercubforum.com |
#5
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Dear Mr. Orr and others,
Last night's piece on general aviation was one of the finest examples of Yellow Journalism since Hearst himself! Apparently, background research is no longer practiced at CBS News. One of the most popular rental (and GA) aircraft is the Cessna 172. According to Cessna's own estimates (http://skyhawk.cessna.com/spec_gen.chtml), this plane has a maximum useful load of up to 837 pounds. Subtracting a pilot and fuel leaves only a few hundred pounds of capacity. Let's compare this to vehicles available from Ryder, the proven vehicle of choice for delivering explosives (1993, WTC and 1995, OKC). According to Ryder (http://www.ryder.com/images/vr_straight.jpg), without a commercial driver's license you can rent a truck with a capacity of up to 26,000 pounds! While I am not an explosive's expert, further complicating your paranoia about small planes as a terror weapon is how would one trigger the explosives? Fire? How ironic it was for you to use Charles Bishop's 2002 flight into a Tampa office building to make this point - there was no post crash fire. Timer? Too much risk of damage in the crash or premature detonation from flight delays. A manual trigger? Do you really think someone could trigger an explosion after penetrating a building but before their own death from the collision? You conclude your piece by stating, "...vulnerability will be the price for general aviations (sic) freedom" (http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2004/...ain593216.shtm l). To use a tired but true cliche, freedom isn't free. People have died and continue to die for our freedoms, including a free press. Along with many of our freedoms comes some responsibility. While I realize that responsibility and credibility are distant memories for most television "journalists" these days, when you sensationalize a percieved threat while ignoring proven threats, you have done yourself and the free press a diservice. |
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