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Bart wrote:
What I am really surprised about is how many pussy pilots there are out there. I mean if there's 300,000 ish AOPA members out there, then that's an important block of votes. That's got to be one of the biggest PAC's next to AARP. My reasoning about why our community is so tolerant of this flagrant abuse is that we are all so used to being afraid of the FAA and what they may do to our our pilots licenses, that we've forgotten what it REALLY means to be a citizen of the United States. I guess if we want to have our society digress to some lame hybrid of a communist monarchy then we can all just do what we're doing now; nothing. I for one am ****ed, and I don't really care who knows. Bart, I think the root of the problem (as far as pilots go) is this: Taken as a whole, I think it's fair to say that the pilot demographic probably tends to be politically pretty conservative. We tend to be mostly white, male, upper income, with a median age 40- or 50-something. Lots of ex-military and law-enforcement veterans. Plenty of gun owners. Rugged individualists. Generally speaking, this is a solidly Republican demographic. I would venture to guess that pilots probably voted overwhelmingly for this president in 2000, and the idea of voting for another political party is anathema to most. Yet now it seems that all of aviation, and general aviation especially, is under attack and more restricted and more threatened than it has ever been. The administration has given us TFRs, ADIZs, and other restrictions with no end in sight, plus an apparent unwillingness to even respond to basic questions about when these restrictions might ever be lifted. And an unprecedented, very clear push to privatize ATC services. The dilemma, of course, is that the president who is presiding over this sorry state of affairs is a Republican. I guess the question comes down to this: at what point do pilots say enough is enough, even if they supported this president last time around, that they cannot in good conscience vote again for this president, given his record on aviation issues? Most of the pilots I know bitch about the administration's policies and agree that they are doing serious damage to aviation, but just can't bring themselves to consider voting for somebody else next time around. When I remind them that the definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting a different result, they just give me a dirty look. Most of these guys could never vote against Bush, no matter what his administration does. I will be watching AOPA carefully when they do their candidate endorsement for the next presidential election. Given his record, I cannot imagine them endorsing Bush again, but I bet they would take an incredible amount of heat from the membership if they don't. David H Boeing Field (BFI), Seattle, WA |
#2
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If the aviation community want's the administration to change the
policy, do what every other big group in the country is doing; buy the prostitutes.. ahem I mean buy politicians, woops, ahem, I mean dontate, donate to politicians. Yea. |
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