I'll take that bet!
He's a pilot for ASA!
How much you wanna bet this guy is actually a closet gay. Banging chicks and all that ok, Personal conversation or not, he crossed the line with the slurs..
Hell the dudes nonsense didn't bother me in the least..what are the words of one idiot...I think he's gonna get all the punishment he deserves from his co-workers. Lawsuits, suspensions, man..this freakin country has lost it's mind..It's called freedom, and particularly freedom of speech..The unlucky bastard wasn't transmitting on purpose, he didn't write down his commentary and post it out there for the world to see..he was having a private conversation and got fracked by ye ole stuck mike...What is shameful about all this is how the media has handled it..We all want to be free, but no one wants to accept the price for freedom, which is..living side by side with idiots, bigots and morons...Ya can't have it both ways people...
Agreed. Missed you too RSG.RSG - missed ya' - where have you been? agree with you too Mike, bad luck for him, but I am sure I have said worse at some point.
Oh and this would have been the time to break out your british accent when answering the frequency change.
I'm of the school of thought that you can talk about what you want, but realize that if you're not very VERY careful, you're going to end up in a Jay Leno monologue.
Flying back from where ever in hell I was last week (don't laugh), a flight attendant calls the cockpit and the captain says "Wazaaaaaaaa! Hello? Hello?". I look down and he's broadcasting over Gander Center. I deselect him from COM1 gave him the "cease fire" signal and kept doing what I was doing.
See, I didn't laugh at him because there are those that have and those that will again!
My freshman year at Southernjets, we jumped onto a 727 and I was testing the oxygen mask microphone. I tested the oxygen and then the mic by saying "POOOOSH Luke... I am your far tha!" over the PA.
Little did I realize that it was a "through flight" and there were about 30 passengers onboard. Most laughed, but a little old lady looked like she was about to have a myocardial infarction.
It's a tightrope. Talk about what you want to talk about but a lot of corporations are exceptionally protective of their brands.
Spark up the beer bong and going dwarf-tossing on your off days is fully acceptable.
Doing the same and wearing a Continental Airlines shirt is something else.
Though I would agree that there is a mentality among some corporations that someone "wearing" their brand is subject to that corporations ethical standards and subsequent codes of conduct, I disagree that such a mentality should be enforced to an absolute degree. In uniform, in streets, on duty or off duty, no corporation has any "right" to dictate subject matter of private conversations between it's employees...period. Employees are obligated to conduct themselves appropriate to their position, to that point I side with corporate America, but that concession still does not warrant control or constraint in any official capacity regarding interpersonal communication (the one exception being if that communication is via electronic means owned by your employer). It's a self policing system that preserves both corporate interests and personal liberty when it's left to it's own devices and most of the time it works well. Any employee that cannot keep one's "controversial" opinions out of unwelcome and inappropriate forums will pay for that lack of judgment in many possible ways up to and including job loss or even civil suit.
To believe that a private conversation in a cockpit in cruise flight is the rightful domain of corporate scrutiny by default is a mistake. And it opens the door towards a dangerous precedent. Now, if on the other hand the other pilot in that cockpit who was on the receiving end of that rant was offended, then that pilot had a responsibility to state his/her offense and communicate that the subject matter was inappropriate. If it continued regardless, then a proper complaint to the HR people should have bee levied.
In short, my wearing the uniform or brand of my employer regardless of that employer's ethical or moral standards has no right to tell me how to think and who I am allowed to share my thoughts with, or when I share them. But it is my responsibility to use sound judgment as to when topics of a controversial nature should or should not be shared. And I also must understand what could result if I say something to the wrong person at the wrong time. We all do have to take responsibility for our words both the good and the bad. But, this all really comes down to knowing who you are talking to. The type of rant recorded would be pretty brazen if laid down on someone you barely knew. But flying with someone who you know either agreed with your nonsense or at least wasn't offended by it..well..the company can bite me in that case...
There is no grounds for lawsuits and this pilot should not have faced any discipline in the least. People can be bigots and idiots and still maintain "good moral character" provided they never act on their position beyond a private rant that we all were accidentally witnessed to.
Well at least he didn't go on about 'the blacks'. We've come a long way baby!
Big jets don't have that....
I think we've all had conversations on the flight deck that had they been transmitted, would have left us big-time embarrassed.
I think pilots should go around and bug water coolers at local offices. Then once they get something juicy, go strait to the nearest talk radio station and let them play it over their airways. It'll be funny!
As long as he's not offending anyone in his own cockpit, who cares what he says. So he has an opinion, whether we agree with it or not, he has a right to it. It was just his bad luck that the transmitter was keyed.
no corporation has any "right" to dictate subject matter of private conversations between it's employees...period.
There is no grounds for lawsuits and this pilot should not have faced any discipline in the least. People can be bigots and idiots and still maintain "good moral character" provided they never act on their position beyond a private rant that we all were accidentally witnessed to.
"Freedom of speech" is a much ballyhooed, little understood issue.