AV8OR said:
Fair is in the eye of the beholder my friend. It would be fair if it only affected those pilots hired after the rule change.
Oakie dokie.
Example A) Johnny PFT is 23 and gets hired next year at Mesa. 37 years from now, some rule (you don't specify what it will be) will apply to him.
Example B) Mike Military is 48 and just retired from the US Air Force. He gets hired by SWA and in 12 years, some rule will apply to him.
Example C) Aviator Crybaby is 40 and was hired 3 years ago at UPS. The rule will never apply to him.
That's fair?
Av8or, trust me. If I were launcing personal insults your way, they wouldn't be thinly veiled. My lunatic-in-the-head comment (ever listen to Pink Floyd?) is a sideways way of saying we both know you don't believe any of the absurd, sarcastic answers you flip in response to what I believe is a viable solution. If I thought you really believed that ridiculous drivel about sims twice per year, reassigning seniority twice per year based on a test score, etc., you'd hear a real insult. If I find that sort of defensiveness thin-skinned, is that also an insult?
My argument was actually one of the 5 or so options that ALPA offered as a change to the system in that survey. I believe it to be fair to everyone because it would apply to everyone at the same time. If you are on the lower rung, fine, you fly for as many years as you are fit to do so. If you want to fly longer, so be it. If for some reason, it took you an extra year or two to upgrade because of the change, BFD. If you are so worried about getting yours, then you ALSO have the option of sticking around a little longer....if you are fit.
As I pointed out. I agree with you about ALPAs motives being shaky, but I don't care, so long as something good comes out of this. To hope like hell that nothing changes just to spite ALPA is like drinking poison and hoping someone else dies.