Nothing at stake here, but I'll share something I've learned in 25 years of corporate life that you guys can forward on at will.
Whenever sending an email (or speaking at a meeting) I have a filter that I run with. Think of it as corporate ADM:
"Does this need to be said?"
"Does this need to be said right now?"
"Does this need to be said right now by me?"
If the answer to any of those is "no" then the idea is filed away for future use.
I've stayed out of trouble for years with that advice.
So, I might be showing my age here, but this e-mail might fulfill all of these requirements.
Whether folks like what this chief pilot said or not, she didn't threaten discipline. If anything, she was telling one of her colleagues that he was being a buddy •er, and that he should reconsider doing so in the future because it's rude.
In the world I grew up in, this was a laudable goal. And in the grand scheme of things a supervisor can do to an employee where is concerns violating terms of employment, this is pretty benign.
But let's step through this:
Does this need to be said?
Yes, the pilot who did this is screwing his bros.
Does this need to be said
right now? Yes, without a timely reply, the issue is lost.
Does this need to be said right now
by me?
Yes, the person sending the e-mail is their supervisor and has a requirement to counsel those who fall under their supervisory structure. If anything, this is a friendly warning by a colleague to stop • around before they find out.
It always blows my mind that pilots act like children, and then are surprised when they get treated like children. Any rational adult could see this kind of response as being a likely outcome. What's worse is that any rational adult would give their supervisor a heads up that this was, in fact, the only appointment they could get and that they're not acting maliciously.
In the end, I don't know about the rest of y'all, but I can't stand buddy •ers. They're commonly bad pilots, and even worse people. Whatever ills they invite upon themselves always seems to be well deserved in retrospect.