I agree that he shouldn't be charged with anything, but to play devil's advocate, why is it we charge drivers when there is a legitimate accident?
What do you mean by legitimate if they were texting in driving then they should be charged because if they weren't charged people would text and drive more but I don't see a situation where someone is in a legitimate accident where no one was at fault, someone is always at fault.
That said, we are a nation of laws. I believe that the crew was reckless and the law has something to say in these matters.
Bad situational awareness explains why or how you failed to observe something. I think that bad situational awareness can reach the threshold of recklessness. In the bus driver example, if the bus driver becomes so concerned about the engine warning light that he ignores multiple road signs and eventually ends up going the wrong way on the Interstate and kills all of his passengers, he has exhibited bad SA....and recklessness. If we want to play semantic games, I guess we can all agree that bus drivers and pilots can never be reckless, only subject to varying degrees of situational awareness.
Yes.Out of curiosity, did you ever taxi out and take off at LEX in the early morning before they "fixed" (and I use the term loosely) the runways?
Here is the KRS definition:It is an argument of semantics, of course. When I think "reckless" I think of some a hole who downed 2 cases of beer, snorted some lines, and then went ahead and flew his Seminole and family into a smoking hole in the ground (as an aviation example). A scenario where a logical person could have only predicted failure and/or disaster. I don't disagree that lining up on the wrong runway, one that is 4k feet short of what you need or expected, is a monumental error of awareness or judgement, but I also would be willing to bet my next paycheck that neither him nor the CA meant to take off on that runway. For me, that is the difference between a serious pilot error, and recklessness or negligence.
Whether it is or was confusing is a matter of opinion. Whether the taxiways and runways were correctly marked is not a matter of opinion.I flew out of there for the first time ever on a clear and a million day in the middle of the afternoon about a year or two and found it somewhat confusing. This was AFTER they "fixed" the airport/runway layout.
I think that was one of the more ra-tarded layouts I've seen. Still pretty confusing.Out of curiosity, did you ever taxi out and take off at LEX in the early morning before they "fixed" (and I use the term loosely) the runways?
Question. Has a retarded layout ever resulted in you not knowing what runway you were on?I think that was one of the more ra-tarded layouts I've seen. Still pretty confusing.
Question. Has a retarded layout ever resulted in you not knowing what runway you were on?
Here is the KRS definition:
(4) "Recklessly" -- A person acts recklessly with respect to a result or to a circumstance described by a statute defining an offense when he fails to perceive a substantial and unjustifiable risk that the result will occur or that the circumstance exists. The risk must be of such nature and degree that failure to perceive it constitutes a gross deviation from the standard of care that a reasonable person would observe in the situation.
Nope. You never know when you might be "that guy" who makes a really bad mistake you'd swear you'd never make.Question. Has a retarded layout ever resulted in you not knowing what runway you were on?
People land at wrong airports more often than you would think. CAL landed on a taxiway and asked if they could cross the runway they were supposed to land on. Do you really think lining up on a wrong runway is really that much of a stretch?Question. Has a retarded layout ever resulted in you not knowing what runway you were on?
What do you mean by legitimate if they were texting in driving then they should be charged because if they weren't charged people would text and drive more but I don't see a situation where someone is in a legitimate accident where no one was at fault, someone is always at fault.
Fair enough. You seemed to be hung up on intent, which need not be a component of negligence or recklessness.Fair enough. But now consider the things that get a guy slapped with a reckless driving charge. I think most of those could be described by being fully able to "perceive a substantial and unjustifiable risk...." at least an intelligent person should be able to. In those cases, people are fueled by alcohol and impaired judgement, or just a desire to be cool/prove themselves/etc. I think in this specific incident, the guy just didn't taxi far enough around the apron and failed to notice the obvious runway marking in front of him. Motivations? I would guess just simply trying to get the aircraft off the ground in an efficient manner. Not being intentionally careless and knowingly exposing the flight to danger. There would be no benefit to taxiing a few hundred feet less and taking a runway that any jet pilot knows, without ever consulting a manual, that they couldn't safely depart from. Just my thoughts......maybe we should just agree to disagree![]()
No. I didn't say or suggest this in any way. Earlier in this thread I stated that few fatal accidents are the result of recklessness.So when someone isn't paying attention to something they should be paying attention to, should they be prosecuted if an accident results?