[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help] 

Status: Not Logged In; Sign In

Rep. Anna Paulina Luna Introduces Bill to REPEAL the USA PATRIOT Act Declares War on Surveillance State

Car Followed Home. Quick Thinking Driver Saved Himself

Woody Harrelson Couldn't Hold Back

Burkina Faso leaders visit to Moscow for Victory Day carries HUGE strategic significance: heres why

Pope Francis Donated Funds for Drones for the Armed Forces of Ukraine - Historian Zinchenko

President Trump Signs Executive Order to Establish National Center for Homeless Veterans

Report:: Trump plans to announce US recognition of Palestinian state at upcoming Middle East conference

With US mediation, POTUS DJT announces that India and Pakistan have agreed to a ceasefire

Expert's urgent warning over sweetener in thousands of food linked to BRAIN DAMAGE

Here's What The World's Paying For Eggs

Richard Gage 9-11-2001 and Otober 7, 2024

"America is great because America is good, and if America ever ceases to be good, America will cease to be great"

Warsaw Ghetto Uprising compared to Gaza

Mainstream Media Blacks Out ICJ Hearings on Israeli Genocide

Pakistani air victory raises alarms for Taiwan’s defense strategy

NIH and CMS To Study Autism Using Medicare And Medicaid Data

Dr Rhonda Patrick: Recommended Breakfast

$373M In DEI Funding At US Universities In Four Years

To Judea’s Rage, Trump orders humanitarian aid to be brought into Gaza ‘as soon as possible’

Democrats Join with GOP to Overturn Gov Newsoms Ban on Gas Powered Cars

US Trade War With China

ICE Cockfighting Bust Reveals the Dark Underbelly of Bidens Border Crisis

Air Traffic Control Overhaul Announced By Trump Administration Here's What We Know

Huge win for Trump as world's second biggest carmaker relocates manufacturing to US

Rep Anna Paulina Luna Proposes to Strip Deep State Surveillance Tools by Repealing PATRIOT Act

125 Jets Clash in One of Largest Dogfights in Recent History | India Vs Pakistan

Pakistan's Chinese-made J-10 jet brought down two Indian fighter aircraft: US officials

One in 8 Israeli Soldiers Who Fought in Gaza Is Mentally Unfit to Return for Duty

Brussels Sues Five EU Countries For Failing To Enforce Digital Censorship

Trump Taps Former DA And Fox News Host For Acting D.C. U.S. Attorney: Jeanine Pirro


Business/Finance
See other Business/Finance Articles

Title: Fear of Flying
Source: [None]
URL Source: https://www.lewrockwell.com/2019/03/eric-margolis/fear-of-flying/
Published: Mar 17, 2019
Author: Eric S. Margolis
Post Date: 2019-03-17 10:22:08 by Ada
Keywords: None
Views: 81

I don’t like flying. I consider it unnatural, unhealthy and fraught with peril. But I do it all the time. For me, it’s either fly or take an ox cart.

In fact, I’ve been flying since I was six years old – from New York to Paris on a lumbering Boeing Stratocruiser, a converted, double-decker WWII B-29 heavy bomber. I even had a sleeping berth. So much for progress.

Lots can go wrong in the air. Modern aircraft have thousands of obscure parts. If any one of them malfunctions, the aircraft can be crippled or crash. Add pilot error, dangerous weather, air traffic control mistakes, mountains where they are not supposed to be, air to air collisions, sabotage and hijacking.

I vividly recall flying over the snow-capped Alps in the late 1940’s aboard an old Italian three-motor airliner with its port engine burning, and the Italian crew panicking and crossing themselves.

Some years ago, I was on my way to Egypt when we were hijacked by a demented Ethiopian. A three day ordeal ensued that included a return flight to New York City from Germany, with the gunman threatening to crash the A-310 jumbo jet into Wall Street – a grim precursor of 9/11. My father, Henry Margolis, got off a British Comet airliner just before it blew up due to faulty windows.

Which brings me to the current Boeing crisis. After a brand new Boeing 737 Max crashed in Indonesia it seemed highly likely that there was a major problem in its new, invisible autopilot system, known as MCAS. All 737 Max’s flying around the world should have been grounded as a precaution. But America’s aviation authority, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), allowed the Max to keep flying. The FAA is half regulator and half aviation business promoter, a clear conflict of interest.

The crash of a new Ethiopian 737 Max outside Addis Ababa under very similar circumstances to the Lion Air accident set off alarm bells around the globe. Scores of airlines rightly grounded their new Max’s. But the US and Canada did not. The FAA continued to insist the aircraft was sound. The problem, it was hinted between the lines, was incompetent third world pilots.

It now appears that America’s would-be emperor, Pilot-in–Chief Donald Trump, may have pressed the FAA to keep the 737 Max’s in the air. Canada, always shy when it comes to disagreeing with Washington, kept the 737 Max’s flying until there was a lot of evidence linking the Indonesia and Ethiopian crashes.

Trump finally ordered the suspect aircraft grounded. But doing so was not his business. That’s the job of the FAA. But Trump, as usual, wanted to hog the limelight.

By now, the 737 Max ban is just about universal.

Interestingly, Ethiopia refused to hand over the crashed 737’s black boxes (actually they are red) to the FAA, as is normal with US-built aircraft. Instead, Addis Ababa sent the data boxes for analysis to BEA, France’s well-regarded aviation accident investigator. Clearly, Ethiopia lacks confidence in the veracity and impartiality of the FAA and the White House.

Today, Trump professes vivid interest in Boeing’s well-being. Last May, however, Trump cancelled an Iranian order to Boeing for $20 billion in airliners which had originally been signed under the Obama administration. Israel’s fingerprints were all over this cancellation. Iran desperately needs new aircraft to replace its fleet of decaying, 1960’s passenger aircraft that have become flying coffins.

Boeing (I am a shareholder) will recover from this disaster unless the 737 Max’s center of gravity is dangerously unstable. The mystery autopilot system will be reconfigured and pilots properly trained to use it. Air France had a similar problem when it introduced the new A320. But Boeing, not third world pilots, is at fault.

There’s another key factor. I’ve been writing for decades that passenger aircraft should return to the three-man crew they had 40-50 years ago. The position of flight engineer was supposedly eliminated by cockpit automation. Today, aircraft are so electronically complex they need a specialist on board who can deal with problems. Pilots should not be expected to be masters of computer technology. A third crew member is essential when things go wrong. But employing one costs money. It seems rock-bottom fares remain more important than safety.

Post Comment   Private Reply   Ignore Thread  



[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help]