Name the other stuff. It gets specific.
Most of that political ideology is mired in hubris-
How only the best of the best deserve the wealth of their efforts- and of course as major airline pilots we are in the room with them. We apologize for executives nationwide an empower their greed - until our CEO gets a pay raise while wanting us to stay flat - or in other's case redistributes wealth by extracting cuts from pilots and giving it to management
We don't view ourselves as middle class labor so we don't vote for that.
Pilots: Stupid smart people
The other stuff? This will rapidly devolve into a left vs. right political discussion. However your comment above basically boils down to, if a pilot is not as left as you, then he is an idiot, an elitist, or supports the "1%" (or CEOs, or however you term it) taking all the money from the poor little guy. Well, it's not that simple, Wave.
You said two things that belie your bias: that we "
don't view ourselves as middle class labor," and "
so we don't vote for that." Personally I do view myself as middle class, albeit upper middle class. And right now, due to my hard efforts, I am at the pinnacle of my middle-class working life. I started off in the military as an E-1 making diddly crap, and have worked my entire life to get where I am. Secondly, I soundly reject the notion that voting for
other than leftists amounts to voting "against" the middle class. In 1980, the first presidential election that I was living on my own and old enough to vote, I grossed just under $7,000 for the year (I just looked it up), and I voted for Ronald Reagan. I voted to better myself, and I did. Sorry, but just because it's the left's current tagline doesn't make it true: the left does not own the middle class, Wave.
However, the most important thing you said in your post that shows how little you understand people that don't agree with you is:
"Most of that political ideology is mired in hubris-How only the best of the best deserve the wealth of their efforts..."
How dare you.
Most airline pilots are somewhere to the right of center (some more than others, obviously); that's undeniable. However, it does not come from hubris, but rather the idea that we worked hard to get where we are, and to earn the good living that we generally do today.
And the belief that anyone in this country with appropriate smarts, dedication/discipline, and hard work, can or could have gotten where we are today. Obviously, I can only speak for myself, but I suspect the majority of airline pilots agree with this sentiment--I
don't think that only the "best of the best" deserve the wealth of their efforts; hell, I think that
everyone deserves the wealth of their efforts. But here's where you and I differ, Wave: more importantly than that, I also think that
nobody else deserves the wealth of MY efforts. That's why people like me won't vote for a President whose stated goal is to redistribute
my hard-earned wealth to others who don't or won't work as hard in their life.
Somehow I suspect that you still won't get this, because it undercuts your rationalization if everyone doesn't agree with you. However, there it is: pilots who completely disagree with you politically, but
aren't stupid, full of hubris, or morally bankrupt as you may want to believe.
Bubba