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#51
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#52
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Well, you hold those opinions so strongly that you're willing to cast
off my experience as suited to the moment. (There is a whole subculture of aging, ailing pilots flying motorgliders to circumvent medical certification.) But you are right, this argument is degenerating. Let's save it for sometime when we're in the same room and can put on the beer goggles and so pursue it to its ineluctable anticlimax. Cheers, Chris |
#53
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Chris,
Anyone who can use ineluctable correctly in a sentence can't be all bad. Maybe I'll see you in Ontario at the next convention. Cheers yourself, Allan "Chris OCallaghan" wrote in message om... Well, you hold those opinions so strongly that you're willing to cast off my experience as suited to the moment. (There is a whole subculture of aging, ailing pilots flying motorgliders to circumvent medical certification.) But you are right, this argument is degenerating. Let's save it for sometime when we're in the same room and can put on the beer goggles and so pursue it to its ineluctable anticlimax. Cheers, Chris |
#54
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At 17:18 17 June 2004, Tony Verhulst wrote:
Nyal Williams wrote: I will not fly a glider while using medication that the FAA finds deleterious to the operation of a C-172. It is just common sense. It's not common sense bcause, as Rich pointed out, the decision as to what medication is 'deleterious to the operation of a C-172' is sometimes more political than medical. Tony V. Tony, I never meant to say the medical decision was common sense; as was correctly pointed out, regulations can never keep up with medical research. The common sense part is not to accept a risk that some attorney will read the PDR to an ignorant jury and persuade the jury to convict me of gross negligence. Have an accident and let the NTSB find traces of medication in your blood that are not proscribed for gliders, but are so for C-172s, and that jury will nail you. Because of the PDR and the disclaimers and side effects descriptions that come with all medications -- OTC or otherwise. 'You should have known, you with your expensive toys, flaunting them over a poor, unsuspecting public.' |
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