You give yourself too much credit. Pilots are simply part of the complexity of the industry. Flight attendents and from my perspectives, labor - as in mechanics also believe they play as integral a role in the industry as you do. They suffer the same financial issues and deal with just as many stresses as pilots, and the lives of passengers depends upon nuts and bolts they turn on a regular basis.
		
		
	 
And you're obviously not a pilot.
And you're incredibly incorrect. Pilots and mechanics make the machine run, and without those two groups, airlines come to halt. Everybody else is replaceable.
You can train somebody to be a flight attendant in six weeks. Anybody. Pick somebody off the street, give them the training and six weeks later they're FAA legal. It's not easy training, and the safety training is INCREDIBLY important, but I'd surmise most average people can hack it.
Throwing bags? Not hard! It's not like the average idiot will be the most efficient with it, but if all your baggage handlers walked off the job your luggage would still get on the plane. Heck, have the pilots and FA's do it.
CSR's? Again, less than six weeks training and they're doing their job and it could probably be reduced and they could be replaced with kiosks that the managers could manage. Problem solved.
But pilots and mechanics? These companies DO NOT OPERATE WITHOUT US. It takes a minimum of what? 2 years to get an A&P? And that's to satisfy FAA requirements. After that they might want to learn a thing or two about the specific airplanes they'll be wrenching on. Pilots? It takes a minimum of 150 days if you were to go through the ATP program (including private) to make a pilot to the FAA's minimum stndards, and then you have to go through another eight weeks of type specific training, and after that you've gotta go through IOE.
Everybody except for the pilots and mechanics could walk off the job tomorrow and the airlines would continue to operate. Sure there might be a few weeks waiting for the FA's to get up to speed, no other labor groups require extensive additional outside training.
 
Further sir, do you realize how much money a pilot can cost or save his company? What's a barrel of oil cost these days? What's the difference between being conservative and making it to a crossing restriction 10 miles early (which is safe) and hitting it dead on? The computers don't do it in my airplane, my brain does. What about the APU? When do you run it? When do you turn it off? What's that costing the company? We affect the bottom line and I for one am smart enough to realize just that. Call me arrogant if you will, that's fine. I'd say that I fully understand my intrinsic worth to my company, and to be real honest my company treats me pretty well for the most part and I've got tons of reasons to save them as much money as possible. Other pilots are not in the same situation.
 
	
	
		
		
			Now here. . .I'm going to have to defer to CAs and F/Os from the legacy airlines who've earned their dues/respect flying for significant periods of time to gain their persepctive before I offer any perspective of my own. I say this because most I hear crying/complaining are those right seaters flying regional jets with less hours. Is his perspective true? Are pilots with six years + complaining about significantly low wages?
 
Everyone took a significant cut after 9/11. That was years ago. My perspective is the swing is starting to go up, and furloughed pilots are back making more money. Is that true for those furloughed after 9/11 that are back to flying regularly? I've not heard much, so I am curious.
		
		
	 
What up swing are you talking about? Contracts are negotiated for YEARS and the only people currently in talks are American as I understand it (for the legacies). Air Train is also in talks right now and I hope they get a great contract. Delta locked in those 50% pay cuts while maintaining their work rules and scope as I understand it. Anybody from Delta feel free to chime in here.