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#21
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"Marco Leon" mmleon(at)yahoo.com wrote:
Acording to the news reports, he cancelled IFR and/or squawked VFR before this happened. Where have you seen this? I looked around this morning, and didn't find anything at that level of detail. - Andrew |
#22
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![]() wrote in message ups.com... wrote: The recent spate of private pilots violating restricted airspace over Washington raises the thought that some lawmaker is going to decide that general aviation is a threat to national security. It's only a matter of time. I've taken some comfort in the fact that this latest incident dropped off the news almost as quickly as it arrived. After the incursion in May, posters were predicting all sorts of dire consequences for the next one.... and I predicted: "Icebound" wrote in message ... (on May 17, 2005 ) wrote in message ups.com... With all the reports now coming out about how close that Cessna came to getting smoked over Washington, it got me thinking. When the governor of Kentucky flew into D.C. in his King Air with a dead transponder, it caused all kinds of panic. Then the Cessna incident happened. If something like that occurred again, what are the chances that the next aircraft would be fired upon? The more often these occur without anybody seriously hurt, the less likely there will be a shoot-down because the previous experiences will suggest "low danger probability". ... and also the more likely that the media will go away because they want to be chasing real blood, not another ho-hum ADIZ penetration. -- *** A great civilization is not conquered from without until it has destroyed itself from within. *** - Ariel Durant 1898-1981 |
#23
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Peter R. wrote:
Marco Leon mmleonyahoo.com wrote: If it was for weather, it would seem kind of odd for him to do that. Usually an aircraft with weather issues is left in the IFR system. Assuming the conditions allow, the pilot(s) can have much greater flexibility to deviate around thunderstorms when VFR. There was definitely a line of severe storms oriented east-west and moving south through the ADIZ at around the time he busted it. I suspect he got caught between the storm and the ADIZ boundary and clipped the edge while avoiding the storm. --- Jay -- __!__ Jay and Teresa Masino ___(_)___ http://www2.ari.net/jmasino ! ! ! http://www.OceanCityAirport.com http://www.oc-Adolfos.com |
#24
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Larry Dighera wrote:
AndÂ*ourÂ*governmentÂ*shootingÂ*downÂ*innocentÂ*ci tizensÂ*forÂ*no crime is tyranny if the first degree. As awful as that would be, it might wake up the sheep. - Andrew |
#25
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Excellent post. I generally agree that monied lobbies (such as the AOPA)
generally win out over loosely (or non-) organized citizens. However, the internet is enabling groups that are seeking to change the FAA culture and limit GA to come together. You are absolutely right to fear the Kelo decision. This will be another quiver in the anti-GA arsenal, especially for publicly owned GA airports that pay no taxes. The strings on the FAA grants will make it a difficult, but interesting battle. I expect local groups to begin eminent domain proceedings against private and public GA airports. |
#26
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I will be the judge of whom I choose for representation. You, sir,
impress me as an arrogant troll. |
#27
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You can get YOUR reality check by looking at the OSHA statistics of the
most dangerous occupations. Pilots and flight engineers came in third, behind loggers and commercial fishermen. And we know that the amateur pilots crash more often. As they say, you can look it up... Hey, if not for the noise and taxpayer subsidies, I could really care less. And I'm not worried about a small plane crashing into my house or business. No more than I won't swim in the ocean for fear of sharks. But do you really think that if a family gets killed, or a school or business gets hit, that won't generate calls for better regulation?? Cavalier attitudes (and simple name-calling) such as yours are our allies. So thank you. |
#28
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Skylune wrote:
You can get YOUR reality check by looking at the OSHA statistics of the most dangerous occupations. Pilots and flight engineers came in third, behind loggers and commercial fishermen. And we know that the amateur pilots crash more often. As they say, you can look it up... Crashes actually have little to do with it. According to USA Today, the high casualty rate in professional pilots is due to diseases associated with the high level of stress that comes with the job. Amateur pilots are not exposed to this. George Patterson Why do men's hearts beat faster, knees get weak, throats become dry, and they think irrationally when a woman wears leather clothing? Because she smells like a new truck. |
#29
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Andrew Gideon wrote:
And our government shooting down innocent citizens for no crime is tyranny if the first degree. As awful as that would be, it might wake up the sheep. Did Waco or Ruby Ridge "wake the sheep?" George Patterson Why do men's hearts beat faster, knees get weak, throats become dry, and they think irrationally when a woman wears leather clothing? Because she smells like a new truck. |
#30
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"George Patterson" wrote in message
news:2XXwe.5724$Bn6.2402@trndny08... Skylune wrote: You can get YOUR reality check by looking at the OSHA statistics of the most dangerous occupations. Pilots and flight engineers came in third, behind loggers and commercial fishermen. And we know that the amateur pilots crash more often. As they say, you can look it up... Crashes actually have little to do with it. According to USA Today, the high casualty rate in professional pilots is due to diseases associated with the high level of stress that comes with the job. Huh? The BLS Census of Fatal Occupational Injuries lists "aircraft pilots and flight engineers" as having the third-highest rate of "fatal WORK INJURY rates" (http://stats.bls.gov/news.release/cfoi.nr0.htm). (The BLS tracks occupational *illnesses* in a separate set of statistics.) So if USA Today claimed otherwise (do you have a reference, please?) then they must not have read the most basic information available on the subject. --Gary |
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