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![]() UAV Hunting License Applications Mount http://www.avweb.com/eletter/archive...9a:&st=ema il Colorado town that will vote in October on a controversial ordinance to issue hunting licenses to shoot down unmanned aircraft over the town has been flooded with applications already and prompted the town to put a whimsical spin on the plan. More than 1,000 people have sent Deer Trail Town Clerk Kim Oldfield $25 for the license, which, if legalized in a referendum by the 380 registered voters in the town of 600, would give them the right to bring down a UAV over the town. |
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One could treat this as a humorous hahaha story. But at $25 per license,
clearly people are taking it seriously and will want to exercise their new right to shoot at things zooming through the air. I doubt too many will take much care between a manned and un-manned airplane. Never-mind what the town is doing violates Federal law, the yahoos who have already sent in their money now feel they literally have a license to kill. The FAA should put a TFR around this entire town. -- Under capitalism, man exploits man. Under communism, it's just the opposite. ~ John Kenneth Galbraith |
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![]() Dear Bug, Given my mounting disillusionment with the mental capacity of my fellow man, I'm inclined to agree that your fears are probably well founded. That said, I must confess my observation of the powerful UAV industry lobbies' attempts to force the FAA to integrate UAVs/UASs into the National Airspace System despite their inability to comply with the see-and-avoid regulation smacks of arrogant hubris indeed. This is just what the airline flying public needs, a blind aerial hazard exempt from FAA regulations. :-( The latest proposed immigration reform bill mandates the purchase of eighteen MQ-9 Reaper drones at $20-million each, not to mention the cost of operating them with multi-man crews, satellite communications links, ground support trailers, ... It seems to me, that we could put a lot of airmen to work flying boarder patrol for a lot less expense and less impact on safety. Additionally, a Texas professor has publicly demonstrated recently how a drone can be commandeered, and "piloted" by anyone with a small radio transmitter capable of overriding weak satellite based GPS signals, and spoofing a bogus location. Think terrorists who don't need to die for the cause... In any event, drones are a big issue, that needs some light shed on it pronto, IMNSHO. Best regards, Larry On Mon, 09 Sep 2013 09:09:44 -0700, Bug Dout wrote: One could treat this as a humorous hahaha story. But at $25 per license, clearly people are taking it seriously and will want to exercise their new right to shoot at things zooming through the air. I doubt too many will take much care between a manned and un-manned airplane. Never-mind what the town is doing violates Federal law, the yahoos who have already sent in their money now feel they literally have a license to kill. The FAA should put a TFR around this entire town. |
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On 10/09/13 03:17, Larry Dighera wrote:
UAV Hunting License Applications Mount http://www.avweb.com/eletter/archive...9a:&st=ema il Colorado town that will vote in October on a controversial ordinance to issue hunting licenses to shoot down unmanned aircraft over the town has been flooded with applications already and prompted the town to put a whimsical spin on the plan. More than 1,000 people have sent Deer Trail Town Clerk Kim Oldfield $25 for the license, which, if legalized in a referendum by the 380 registered voters in the town of 600, would give them the right to bring down a UAV over the town. And the UAV's are going to come armed. There are a number of videos on the Net I suggest you watch |
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On 9/9/2013 10:17 AM, Larry Dighera wrote:
UAV Hunting License Applications Mount http://www.avweb.com/eletter/archive...9a:&st=ema il Colorado town that will vote in October on a controversial ordinance to issue hunting licenses to shoot down unmanned aircraft over the town has been flooded with applications already and prompted the town to put a whimsical spin on the plan. More than 1,000 people have sent Deer Trail Town Clerk Kim Oldfield $25 for the license, which, if legalized in a referendum by the 380 registered voters in the town of 600, would give them the right to bring down a UAV over the town. Can we hunt them from the air also? The government has no business spying on its own citizens with the UAVs, besides, they are a hazard to air navigation. I don't want anything in the air with me that doesn't also have a chance of dying if it collides with me. Just seems kind of fair, doesn't it? |
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