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"John Mazor" wrote in message ...
So do you stand by, or now reject, your hypothesis that your observations about accidents support a conclusion that because of PC, there are proportionately more incompetent women pilots than men pilots? From http://www.airlinesafety.com/faq/faq7.htm (The author on the Web page, a 747-400 captain, after first making the required "cover my butt" statements so the PC police wouldn't come after him, revealed some of the sobering facts): -----begin paste----- But that is the problem. I am aware of some cases where less than competent female and/or minority pilots have been hired. In other words, the standards were lowered to meet the numbers requirements imposed by consent decrees with the EEOC. In one case, a minority female was given almost 3 times the simulator hours to pass her DC-10 S/O checkride, but couldn't do it (just about the easiest position in any airline cockpit). Yet the airline was terrified at the thought of firing her. Her boyfriend was an employee of EEOC. She was still in her first (probation) year so union protection wasn't a factor. So what did the airline do? They mounted an intensive investigation into her background (a tactic that could have gotten the airline into big trouble if they had done it before they hired her), and discovered she had been fired from 3 other airlines, but failed to reveal that on her employment application. That was the ammunition needed to justify her dismissal. There are other stories, including the letter to AirlineSafety.Com, by ATC controller John Dill and other letters published in AWST, by controllers who believe diversity goals have harmed the competency level of controllers. I see the EEOC decrees to be the biggest threat against pilot competency today, not because there aren't competent minority/female pilots out there to be hired, but because quotas are imposed and airlines sometimes have to lower their normal standards to achieve those mandated numbers. If they don't, the EEOC sues them, costing them many millions of dollars and it will result in the imposition of even harsher mandates in the future to "remedy their past discrimination." ----end paste--- And here's more on the subject. Please read it well as I want your comments. -------begin paste---------- If the airline has good simulators and good training programs, then the biggest threat to competency is not in how much time various pilots get during transition courses, but in how competent they were when the airline first hired them. Very selective hiring (including detailed background investigation) is the most effective tool to heading off pilot competency problems in the future, yet that is the tool that is called into question the most in "discrimination" allegations against the airlines. And, the libel law has its effect too. Previous airlines are afraid to disclose any negative information about a discharged pilot, because lawyers make hay out of it and sue the hell out of the employer that dares give a negative reference. Some years ago, a female pilot alleged a constant pattern of sexual harassment in the cockpit, naming numerous male pilots as defendants in a Title Seven Civil Rights lawsuit. Her attorney was a rather famous female rights specialist who makes extensive use of the media to win her cases. The female pilot was exposed in the deposition process when many contradictions were revealed. She finally confessed; she made the whole thing up. She was a "weak sister" pilot, who had competency problems and was afraid the airline might try to fire her. Someone advised her that they wouldn't dare fire her if she made a sexual harassment/civil rights claim. Of course, once the truth was disclosed, she was fired. I have been told she now works as a pilot for another major airline. Want to bet on, whether or not the previous airline gave her a negative reference? ----end paste---- Well, so much for your PC claims.... ------------------- |
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