... Well, glad to know where I stand with you.
I think you’d better read the rest of it, because the context
really matters for the remainder of that post:
But, as per above, this is A) publicizing the thing, B) the entire point OF the thing, and, most damning, C) either terrorizing randos or pretending to terrorize pretend randos, neither of which is cool or funny. It's "humor" for unusually dim 12 year olds. Which would be dumb but expected and I guess fine (or at least not something to be Outraged about) if they were using a skateboard, but uh they're not.
There was (and still should be, IMO) a lot more room for that wonderful conduct at the intersection of "harmless" and "youthful jackassery," which was a lot more practical before 1) everything was being recorded by everyone, all the time, 2) everything was simultaneously very stupid and yet somehow very important and 3) social media enabled a degree of industrial and aeronautical narcissism not hitherto experienced, or at least, not as trivially available.
However, I don't consider this conduct to be at that intersection.
Turning now to the related but different topic of doing stupid stuff
in airplanes (emphasis added) there's not a pilot who's done this long enough who hasn't, at some point, pulled a really bonehead play and then had to improvise their way out of it, possibly with less than spectacular results. Perhaps it was a stunt, perhaps it was launching into conditions one shouldn't have, or taking an airplane flying that one shouldn't have, and so on. I draw a stark contrast from
stupid-willful versus just
stupid; just culture does not and has not ever implied a lack of direct individual responsibility and accountability, particularly for
stupid-willful.
Mr. Jacob's stunt was stupid, it was willful, and it deserves to be punished. (Probably more than the plea agreement handed out, tbhwy. He's doing some really "client" things here.)