I know a CFI who drives a porsche, but he used to work in QA for nokia.
I know a flight instructor who drives a Porsche, as his second car.
I know a CFI who drives a porsche, but he used to work in QA for nokia.
If I wanted a trade I would have become a welder or mechanic and been on my way a long time ago, but I chose something that requires much more skill and commitment.
OK, I will go one further. Is flying even a white collar job anymore? I don't think the vast majority of military aviation is, we are much more of a blue collar type of worker. How many people working white collar jobs have to be on a strict budget in order to survive or spend a great deal of time sharing a bedroom with several other guys (AKA stateroom on USS Boat).
Dictionary.com said:–noun
10.
a person who belongs to one of the professions, especially one of the learned professions.
11.
a person who earns a living in a sport or other occupation frequently engaged in by amateurs: a golf professional.
12.
an expert player, as of golf or tennis, serving as a teacher, consultant, performer, or contestant; pro.
13.
a person who is expert at his or her work: You can tell by her comments that this editor is a real professional.
It's a profession. As long as I've got to maintain some sort of a minimal standard, medically tested, continuing education, etc...
I'm not sure the military comparison works. What about military doctors and lawyers at your same rank - wouldn't they be similarly struggling on the pay, for doctors wouldn't they be bunking with other guys in the stateroom of USS Boat?
As to your original question, under the definition pilots getting paid are professional. A couple of things that are telling however are that a group of doctors, CPA's or attorneys would never ask the question. They wouldn't even conceive of the question. Also, probably pre-1985 no pilot would have asked themselves or others the question - it was simply understood and accepted.
I saw an article in the KC Star once that asked "Is KC a major-league city" - not as in baseball, but as in general. My response was "No, of course not...because if you have to ask it is obviously not readily apparent and you are grasping.
So, the question is, what has degraded the profession to the point where those within it even have to ask the question? Once that is identified and rectified you can start about changing/improving it.
I would like to spark a debate about whether being a pilot is really a profession. Historically, the three professions have been the clergy, medicine, and law, but today almost everyone who gets paid to do their job considers themself a “professional”. Some would argue that to be a profession, you must be self regulating, have a high standard of ethics, have power over its members, and that the field carry a level of status or prestige.
So, are commercial pilots really professionals? If so, is the guy flying fish spotting missions a professional, or a blue color worker who drives an airplane rather than a dump truck? What about a jump pilot, a SCUBA instructor, a truck driver, a tandem master, or a police officer? All get special certificates to do their job and get paid to do it. Is a military officer a professional? Again, if so, at what level does he become one? The day he pins on gold bars and really knows nothing about his line of work, or when he is a Flag or General officer and is responsible for thousands of people’s live under his charge.
I do not think there is a right or wrong answer, but many different opinions on the subject. It may just be semantics since you can look up anything on the internet to support your own opinion, just look at “professional” athletes. Maybe in the past I would have gone the route of yes, pilots are professionals, but today I do not think that is the case.
What do you think about engineers? I suppose they aren't real proffesionals either... Stop living in the past dude
I just think it's funny that members of clergy make the "professional" list, but apparently pilots don't. So, the people who stand at the pulpit talking about god and sprinkling people with holy water are professionals, but I'm not a professional even though I'm paid to fly a quarter-million pound jet over large sections of the ocean. Makes sense.
If I'm merely a blue-collared laborer, well, I'd like to see someone from off the street come and do it. That's why the "flying bus driver" statement doesn't hold any water, either.
Flying itself is pretty easy. I fly a 50k pound single seat jet over open ocean, drop bombs, study tactics, land on a moving runway and still think of it as blue collar labor.
Flying itself is pretty easy. I fly a 50k pound single seat jet over open ocean, drop bombs, study tactics, land on a moving runway and still think of it as blue collar labor.
The way I see it you can either pound your face in at a "normal" job for the rest of your life, or your office can be at 35,000 feet and 300 KIAS with 90,000 horses behind your seat. I dunno the career sells itself if you ask me. BTW .....what were your initial expectations upon embarking on a career as a flight officer?
True you don't need a degree to fly an airplane, but some sort of college degree has become accepted as the norm for pretty much any field beyond working at starbucks. That doesn't have much to do with professionalism, but rather what is the accepted "cultural norm" here in America. Most of the JAA instructors I work with don't have a degree and have no intentions of getting one. In fact one of my Swedish coworkers has a class date with Ryan Air flying the 737 and guess what...no degree.