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Uh - NO!
You have completely misunderstood my inquiry. All I was asking was "did he ditch"? Man, talk about moral high ground dude... Ease up a bit. I myself am NOT a pilot, and, would not judge a person for an honest mistake, aviation related or not. Of course, your reply opens the floodgates about human mistakes, and that we all need to take into consideration that we are not perfect. We also make various mistakes, and hopefully, they are "honest" ones, just like your reading WAY too much into my simple question. I sure hope you do not fly the way you reply.... -- "Ted Huffmire" wrote in message m... Will it make you feel better about yourself and your piloting skills to know that somebody *else* made a mistake? It seems that some pilots have a perverse feeling of satisfaction when they find out another pilot's operational misfortunes. Why is it necessary to dig it in? Are you on a moral highground because you have never had an operational mistake or violation? There are thousands of ways to run afoul of the FARs. Does it comfort you to know that one of the fathers of Silicon Valley, Steve Wozniak, was at the controls of an aircraft for which he was not rated, when the aircraft rotated prematurely and crashed on takeoff, critically injuring himself and his three passengers? Why does it seem that some in the general aviation community have such a "good old boy" mentality? I am sure that those people who are the loudest and most outspoken about "violators" probably have quite a few skeletons in their closet to hide from public view. It seems to me, after reading an excellent book by Keith Bumsted titled "Please Call the Tower," that if the FAA is determined to ground somebody, there is nothing to stop them. They can ground you for any reason -- look at the Bob Hoover example. Even student pilots who inadvertently deviate from the FARs very early in their careers can be subject to vigorous enforcement actions by the FAA. For example, a misunderstanding between the pilot and the tower at an unfamiliar airport could result in severe sanctions for improper taxi violations. Who has never been lost at a big airfield? Let him cast the first stone. Even someone as experienced as General Chuck Yeager can make mistakes. He recently had a fender-bender in one of the vintage aircraft he was flying. --Ted "TheShootingSports" james-No wrote in message .com... Hi all, I had once heard that John Travolta once ditched an aircraft. I have never heard this, but to settle a "discussion" could someone tell me if he did in fact successfully ditch an aircraft ever in his years of flying? Supposedly, he was all alone when this occurred. Your help is appreciated! -- Jim PS - reply to james-No (remove -No spa*M and ^ ) -- |
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