Pilots & Alcohol
#2
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Watch out, your local AOPA (Airplane Owners and Pilots Association) representatives will be at your backdoor with cudgels -- or at the very least I GUARANTEE you will all start seeing letters to the editors in a campaign to persuade us what upstanding good guys all pilots are and how we shouldn't take this incident as anything other than a dreadful exception.<BR><BR>But I'm here to tell you that while I doubt that there are many occasions on which commercial airline pilots would take this kind of risk, the number of occasions is not 0 -- as a passenger, I have had at least 2 trips where I had reason to wonder. <BR><BR>Moreover, I have known a number of pilots in general aviation who joked with others about the condition in which they flew a plane after a football game or similar event. AOPA will officially deplore and condemn such things and deny that their members behave that way. But every pilot knows of at least one other pilot who pushed the envelope with alcohol or drugs.
#3
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Perhaps you'd be interested in a program begun 15 years ago to bring the driving records of pilots into their periodic reviews. Pilots' DWI violations were deemed relevant to their flying status. A number of pilots were found to have DWI convictions.
#6
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You idiots have nothing better to do than troll this pathetic site, bashing pilots who are 99.9999999% perfect. First, if your goal is to chip away at their confidence and make air travel less safe, then I spit on you. Second, you have a much greater chance of being killed in a fiery car wreck driving by the corner pub of your pathetic country-ass one horse town on any given day of the week by the town drunk. So get a freaking grip.
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#9
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Please, let me apologize for over-reacting. My comments were ill-advised and far out of proportion to the issue at hand.<BR>It's just that ever since I was a kid, I've always loved flying and airplanes, and I've always wanted to be a pilot. I've always thought of them as pure, clean, and above reproach.<BR>I guess I was lashing out because part of my idealized world came crashing down on me when I read the report os those 2 men.<BR>I'm just so disappointed. I....I...I can't go on. My eyes are filled with tears and I can't see the keys anymore.<BR>I'm so sorry if I hurt any of you with my comments.
#10
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Your chances of getting killed in a plane crash with impaired pilots are considerably higher than if the pilots had stayed straight and clean. <BR><BR>The chances of being in a plane crash are, PER FLIGHT HOUR, much higher than your chances of being in a car crash, PER ROAD HOUR. There are fewer planes and fewer people-hours in the air than on the ground. Moreover, while the 3000 crashes per year of general and civil aviation may "only" include about 1600 fatalities (see 2001 NTSB stats), the far-fewer number of commercial airline crashes are almost always fatal to everyone. <BR><BR>There's a reason that pilots pay very high premiums for their life insurance. On the other hand, those two will probably never get their pilot's license back, anyway. Even if the heavy-handed AOPA behaves as if the air and the airports belonged to them exclusively (they are currently fighting all attempts to improve screening of pilots and security at small airports), they have all had to meet very stringent requirements to get and keep their licenses, and substance abuse is at the top of the "NO NO NO not now not EVER" list.
#16
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Frankly, I am glad they tossed the woman off the plane. The last thing I want when I am flying is to hear some lame passenger who wrongly thinks they are funny make a "joke" about the condition of the people who I am about to entrust my life to. The worst part is that this pathetic woman cum comedian passenger will probably sue and win, thereby driving the cost of MY airline ticket up.
#19
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I think that it is reasonable to assume that some pilots, like members of the general public, have addiction problems whether it be drugs or alcohol. To assume something else would be questionable. This issue exists in the transportation industry as a whole-rail, road, and sea. The real issue is what do the carriers do to identify potential problems and resolve them and what penalites do they impose on other crew members for failure to report any suspect behaviour. Collegues who enable this behaviour by covering up or failing to report are also a significant challenge to the industry.

