OhioStatePilot
Well-Known Member
Sad... but way too true.
Sully is not the last of his kind. We really need to stop putting this guy up on a pedestal in terms of what an exceptional captain or 'hero' he is. From the amount of attention he's received, it seems like a lot of you guys see yourselves as being unable to accomplish such a save if power loss ever happened to you. If you seriously doubt your ability to save an airplane that's lost power, then you shouldn't be a captain.
The reason we SHOULD be giving him all this attention is the fact that he is trying to get the word out to everyone that pilots are in desperate need of increased job security and compensation. He is hitting the nail on the head as to why this trend in pilot compensation will impact a whole variety of issues including safety and manpower availability.
Sullenberger made as effective use of his moment in the spotlight as can be expected and we should be grateful to him for his effort on behalf of the profession at a time of great stress in his own life.
However, the "public" couldn't possibly have any interest in the points he tried to make. And I can't think of any reason why they should.
Problems of airline pilots are problems of airline pilots, not the public.....If Sullenberger can make a few bucks, more power to him. However, because he's a great example of what we respect from inside the profession, it'd be a shame to see him outright used by the media and those worthless sacks of protoplasm in Congress for their own self-serving purposes.
That's pretty much what has happened by now. Time to move on; the "public" already has.
Of course the public has interest in the plight of pilots. Who do you think fills those seats?? But will Sully want to do it?? Will he have time??? Or will the writing of his "memoir"be too time consuming??
Huh?? Grateful for what?? All Sully's done during this "time of great stress in his own life" is hire an agent and ca$h in.
Huh?? Grateful for what?? All Sully's done during this "time of great stress in his own life" is hire an agent and ca$h in.
If I remember correctly after the 1989 UA 811 incident (Captain Cronin) or another similar incident, there was an article about losing all the old WWII and Korean pilots, and how the new pilots werent up to snuff. Now it is 20 yrs later and it is Vietnam pilots.Summary: If you're not an ex-military pilot, the author doesn't trust your abilities to handle emergencies.
To paraphrase the Book of Ecclesiates "There is nothing new under the sun." Or more secular: The more things change the more they stay the same.