Show me a pilot who has never flown un-airworthy aircraft and I'll show you a pilot who has never flown for a living.
I'm right here, I am a professional pilot AND I fly for a living.
If that's true (and I have my doubts) the you are clearly the exception, not the rule. Almost none of the planes I flew for pay would have made it through a ramp check.
OK you flew for pay intentionally in aircraft that were not airworthy...so you are one of the guys willing to do that
:hiya:
I haven't ever left the field with an un-airworthy aircraft...and I fly for a living.
If you are a professional pilot you DO NOT fly an un-airworthy aircraft...if you just fly for a living you may, I guess.
Lowing the bar? I was just trying to work my way up the ladder and keep a roof over my head. If that was lowering the bar, well then I guess we'll just have to blame the entire state of the industry on me and guys like me.
I think that any one who does this does bear part of the blame. IMO
Professionals get paid to fly. Hard to do that when you're on the street without a job.
no...commercial pilots get paid to fly, professionals do it correctly.
And there always will be someone else who is willing to do so. Pretending otherwise is to live with your head up your anus IMO. Look down your nose at the situation and cast blame where you will, but it won't change anything. Ever.
I'm not saying that there isn't some pilot out there willing to fly equipment that is not airworthy, I am saying that it isn't professional, that is the distinction.
You say derogatory things like I have my head up my gahooya, which even proves the point further. I am aware that there are people willing to intentionally break the rules, but a professional will not.
You say you flew airplanes that were not airworthy, and then you held yourself out to be a professional. By your own admission you have proven your intentional lack of professionalism.
I am not looking down my nose at you, I am saying, however, that you did in fact lower the bar for those of us (the vast majority) who are trying to do things the right way.
You can get mad, cast aspersions, try to deflect the truth and not take responsibility, that is fine, but the facts are the facts.
The other thing you can do is to learn from your mistakes (as I and all of us have) and try to raise your game. That is what I hope for.
Even more, I hope that a brand new pilot like the OP reads this and determines that he will not intentionally violate the FAR's for a paycheck and think it's OK.