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I'll have to confess to being mystified the overwhelming appeal among pilots
of a jet jockey who hid out in the National Guard over a GA pilot like us who had the conviction to put his ass in the line of fire. I think it has a lot to do with response to emergencies and, boy, are the Republicans ever beating that drum. If you watched the convention coverage without knowing the background, you would think they knocked those towers down themselves and were proud of it. No wonder many Arabs think that is what happened. We train for instinctive reactions to emergencies. If an engine fails on takeoff, we admire the pilot who, almost without thought, can pull the throttle, feather the engine, put the proper rudder pedal in, and set the proper airspeed while chewing gum and telling the tower he needs to come around for an emergency landing. Bush projects exactly that kind of smoothness, assurance, and decisive response. It comforts the voters and makes pilots, especially those who do a lot of emergency drilling, say, "My kind of guy." I read a profile of Scott Crossfield recently. It described the thoroughness of his preparations for flying the X-15 to the edge of space for the first time, the questions, the double checking, the consideration of possible failures. Above all, he was aware that things could happen that he would have to improvise and think his way through instead of producing a drilled and rehearsed reaction. If a pilot had approached Crossfield's flights as if they were flying a commuter twin from A to B, Crossfield and most of the rest of us would have considered him a fool. If a commuter pilot approached each flight like it was an X-15, he would be looking for a job after the first one (which he delayed three days to have the cable tensions checked again). Let's face it. This election is about handling terrorism. The major philosophical divide is not liberal vs. conservative but whether dealing with this new evil in the world is like flying the twin commuter or the X-15. It was "Ho, hum, we trained, fighting the last war, We're ready for anything.", thinking that let 911 happen. The blame there is bi-partisan. The response however, has been like a commuter twin pilot hopping in the X-15 saying, "No problem, I spent two weeks at Flight Safety." Right now, it looks like it's zooming up great and everyone's cheering but the guys on the ground know that it's way out of it's flight envelop and the problems just haven't shown up yet. (Did you watch 60 minutes last night?) I'm pretty sure we are all riding in an X-15 right now. Nothing is certain but I'd rather switch to a new pilot who at least has the potential and has declared the policy approaches to conduct the flight Crossfield style than one who has proven himself a cocky an arrogant cowboy with a propensity to take the easy way out of every situation. -- Roger Long |
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