Also I heard stories about your B727s (K2- still Connie) where the rust is the only factor keeping the plane's parts together.
Apparently any insight you think you might have is both outdated and wildly inaccurate regarding both the condition of those aircraft, and the ownership. Clearly you don't really know what you think you know.
I claimed and I still claim someone should take a better look at Connie’s way of doing business.
So you claimed. What way is that, exactly?
With no facts in evidence presently, you are very quick to jump on the bandwagon and suggest that this event might be the owner's fault or the cause of his practices, whatever they may be. Based on your own comments, however, you don't appear to have much of an idea about who is doing what business, or how they're doing it. You merely believe you do.
Anyway I know Connie’s past, and my life and aviation experience tells me what’s coming out of cat mice will eat.
I've seen a lot of mice myself, including unbelievable infestations. I've even seen mice eat one another, but I don't believe I've ever seen a mouse eat cat feces. You post to rally against language you perceive as uncouth, yet now you suggest that employees of the company you attack are the mice, feeding on feces...is that your analogy? Seems you could use some reserve, yourself.
Also can you explain us how you guys lost an engine on take off from ORD?
The engine wasn't "lost on takeoff," but torn free from the aircraft due to an internal wheel failure and imbalance during the climb. The information is available on the web, you can look it up yourself. In fact, full documentation is available in some detail regarding the history of the engine and exactly what occured, including photographs of the parts.
You are bringing that up to tie it to this mishap in brussels exactly WHY?
And to finish I still believe the accident look like a structural failure. What causes that? Age and luck of good and reliable maintenance. Maybe loading? Remember the engine lost in take off ?
That would be wild speculation without a leg to stand on now, wouldn't it? (It would, and is). Hardly professional. Speculation, as you know, is guesswork. Hardly the hallmark of a thinking professional. Patience is a virtue, mate. Give it a try.