Your lanyard and you...

I need to get a lanyard with cakes on it. Cakes are the new fashion right?
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Lanyards are unprofessional.
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There sure are a lot of professional aviators out there who wear neck lanyards to secure their ID and credentials, so that's an odd statement if you're not being sarcastic. I did for most of my career in military flying, both in flight suits and in dress blues when that was the uniform of the day.
 
http://www.uvu.edu/profpages/profiles/show/user_id/1737

I wasn't meaning to imply that @ClarkGriswold was the same as Mr Green here, in that Mr Green appears on a certain list that is sometimes used to identify people who have been harmful to the profession in the past.
But what's so significant
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There sure are a lot of professional aviators out there who wear neck lanyards to secure their ID and credentials, so that's an odd statement if you're not being sarcastic. I did for most of my career in military flying, both in flight suits and in dress blues when that was the uniform of the day.

I'm serious, a id clip works just as well or a solid black lanyard.
 
I'm serious, a id clip works just as well or a solid black lanyard.

As mentioned previously, there are FOD or other issues with losing ID that is simply affixed with a clip. There are all kinds of things in and around an aircraft that can cause that clip to come loose enough to have the badge slip off -- and there is a high potential for that to occur without the owner even knowing it occurred.

Having a more secure means of retention is the entire point of a neck lanyard. On the flightline in the USAF, line badges have to be secured either with a lanyard or some other means of retention other than just the clip for this exact reason; many have been lost, and when they're lost they often go places on the airplane that can damage it.

Not agreeing with having colors or logos, etc, on a lanyard is a far cry from saying "lanyards are unprofessional." It isn't about flair, it is about security of an important credential in an area where free foreign objects can cause big safety problems.
 
Flying with an Eastern Striker as we speak. I asked him specifically about what happened. He wasn't aware of any court order. He said the deal was when they went on strike the other ALPA Carriers would hire them.

No spin from me. Just stating what I was told a few hours ago.
Just curious. What if a Lorenzo CO scab told you the same thing. "Wasn't aware of a strike, I was on leave. Came back to work and some people were protesting but hey, I went to work. ALPA let us back in the fold, so every ALPA pilot shouldn't need a scab list since we're all ALPA right?"

ALPA takes credit for raises and work rules when it works out? Then the they claim they have no control of "business practices" of airlines when things don't work out. Which they don't. So when they take credit for a pay raise or better work rules they shouldn't. Because again, they "don't have any control over an airlines business practices". Rinse repeat.
 
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