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Cliff, not sure who your anger is directed at. Let me just say that the
SSA-OLC Committee is trying to provide an outlet for resolving disputes, without making a public circus of it on r.a.s. Unfortunately, some people just cant accept this. I think your MPD on this pretty well sums up the two sides of the debate. Most of the posters fall into two main groups: A) Let pilots do what they want, and post any flight, as long as they live to tell about it. B) Hold pilots to some kind of reasonable standards to keep the competition as fair as possible, and keep the feds as far away as possible. There are variations of this, for example letting people do A until they get caught, then make them do B, or trying to make the standards in B some kind of absolute, or parse them down to the sub-atomic particle level. Another variation says that since we can't do B 100%, we should do 0% and default to A. One of the things we have been doing is trying to continue to grow the OLC user base. And as the user base grows, the population will naturally have to include a wider range of opinions and behavior. That means we will also have to deal with more people holding extreme views, who won't accept the consensus norms. The main thing to emphasize is personal responsibility. You hit on that when you talked about not posting flights that most reasonable people would find questionable. I think most people get that intuitively. I think almost everyone can grasp this with a little peer pressure. But then there are a few people.... Unfortunately, that's just life in the big city. But we don't have to let them spoil the fun. Cliff Hilty wrote: At 13:24 11 September 2006, Kirk.Stant wrote: I find it absolutely fascinating that pilots that will cheerfully exceed the posted speed limit (along with just about everybody else, of course) during the drive to the gliderport will then pontificate about minuscule infringements of vertical and lateral airspace bounderies. Uh, guys, these are regulations, not laws of physics! You are safer at 18,300' looking out the window than at 17,700' staring at the altimeter! Of course, I now fully expect to be viciously flamed, but what the hell, it's monday and it's raining.... Kirk 66 I have pondered over this in detail after having read most of the threads in RAS and here. And I am still undecided. When OLC started it was purely fun and easy, now it has become 'the' entity for showing not only the world but even more importantly your local flying buddies your acheivements. For years I flew in relative obscurity with only a few people knowing what I did, where and how fast I went. Now with posting to OLC everyone with any interest in soaring knows. The question for me now becomes; Do I have a responsibility to my flying buddies to protect their right to fly and not bring unwanted attention of allegded violations of the FAR's to our club and local flying area. To that question I have to say yes. On the other hand it makes me angry that a once fun and purely innocent OLC (after all we are in it for the money and chics) has been takin over by the aviation's version of the 'Moral Majority' and turned into the McCarthyism of everybody looking suspicously at each others flights and airing those suspiscions publicly in the name of protecting their right to fly. It just smacks of Orwell's 1984 'big brother is watching'. Read Soarpoint's post on RAS. Then again we don't have to post our flights that violate the FAR's! So now you see why I am so undecided ![]() |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Commercial - StrePla Update | Paul Remde | Soaring | 0 | May 19th 04 02:52 PM |