Factor in the "code of silence" as well. . .<people include that in their "professions."
In most all "teamwork" environments where loyalty and truth matter, everyone has a line in the sand they will not cross. Fact. Even the "cheating" spouse situations, do I proactively rat the cheater out to the significant other. I mean. . .I "heard" <won't pull up any ChatGPT data to support a premise>, divorce rates amongst the aviation profession is high. Why? No clue. My point? We have standards of behavior in life. Step across those lines? Be prepared for the consequences.
I have to go back to the movie "Flight" with Denzel. That movie, for the non aviator, layperson types truly made the flight deck personalities more human. . .more empathetic about who is on the flight deck. Part 121 folks have families. They are real people. Seriously. . .
Strolling through the airport as crewmembers remnds me of New York city sidewalks fluidity. Quiet, stoic, determined, focus, serious. . .symbols of strength and professionalism. The movie portrayed 121 as one of us. . .most of us frankly. Yall are good. GREAT. However, it's not an absolute.
Part 121 folks? In and out the hotels. . .It's as if you're professional athletes leaving the hotel to head to their sporting arena. Not talkative to anyone. Close quarters. One or two
MIGHT interact outside the team, but. . .there's always one. If something is off-nominal, yall would know first and say something. . .right? Says the crew to Denzel before he walked onto the flight deck:
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