"Chip Jones" wrote in message
And, for god knows how many times, nobody is advocating that addicts or
chronic abusers of anything be in a position to put others at risk.
Actually, you are indeed advocating a higher risk that addicts and chronic
abusers be in a position to put others at risk. Without drug testing,
there
is no way to weed drug users out of the commercial airman pool. Your
position is nothing but an increased risk to air safety. Your
justification
of that increased risk seems to be that the costs of drug testing are not
worth
the safety benefits of drug testing commercial airmen. You are mistaken.
So you keep saying over and over and over. But nobody's posted the evidence
that "addicts and chronic abusers" were a significant problem in aviation to
begin with. And, information has been posted stating that random testing is
being reduced. Why has nobody tried to make sense of this? If it's
beneficial, why reduce it? I think that it isn't beneficial but the FAA
doesn't want to eliminate it because it gives the public a false sense of
security. Whatever the reason, it makes no sense to scale back an effective
program that purports to solve a very serious issue. Can you explain it?
moo
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