Didn't really understand the first half of your post so sure....
Labor should consider contributing to fixing the problem because they are the ones so concerned about it. If the flying public was so scared to fly because of fatigued pilots they would push to pay more to the airlines to pay for more pilots.
They obviously don't care that much.
I hope you all know I'm on the same side as you guys. I'd love to see work regulations that prevented long duty days. I'm just asking questions and point out flaws in the arguments to prevent the one line emotional appeals that profits>safety. It's not that simple.
You are correct, sir. This is not a simple issue.
Let's examine this aspect: We all know via scientific study that at certain points of the day, a person has functional abilities in line with someone who has consumed too much alcohol to legally operate an aircraft.
Yet, we require pilots and other crewmembers to operates in this situation every day, AND we require them to self assess and make determination of their fitness to fly in a suitable state of awareness.
On top of this, because of the nature of compensation, work rules, corporate culture, etc, there may be additional factors that apply to the decision of the pilot on whether or not they're fit to continue.
We all recognize that aviation accidents are the result of a chain link of errors where if one of the errors were correct the accident would be prevented.
The safety protocol we use to ensure multi-layered protection applies to nearly all areas. Two sets of eyes. Redundant systems.
When it comes to self-assessment at a point where science has proven that judgment is impaired, why are we placing nearly exclusive oversight of the issue on the person with impaired judgment?
This seems contradictory. We seem to make the assumption that because most rise above the challenge (or at least haven't been forced to rely too heavily on their decision) that there is no problem. If we fail to account for the lowest common denominator in human factors just as we do in terms of aircraft design, maintenance, etc, are we not asking for someone to fail eventually?