Well Flopgut, I'm certainly not anymore deserving than anybody else, and I've got seven years to go under the present rules and if it doesn't change in this country I can always look for a flying job overseas and fly til I'm 65 if I want.
ALPA changed their stance against age 60 in 1980 under the pretense of safety but their wording was all about how everyone has a nice pension and everyone was hired with an expectation of retiring at 60 etc. I'm glad your father did well--although he probably did not enjoy his new career as much as flying, but your point also drives home the fact that there really is no unity in ALPA--only 40 or so seperate unions with very divergent interests. If you work for a carrier with a defined benefit plan you probably are more interested in retiring as early as possible before the plan goes tango uniform--if you work for a carrier that has a defined contribution plan you probably would like to be able to work longer to fund your plan more. Maybe just maybe you actually like your job and don't see why you should be arbitraily kicked out at a certain birthday.
Airlines didn't go out of business in the past-the Civil aeronautics board found a stronger airline for them to merge with-now it is dog eat dog- and the leanest, strongest, meanest, most innovative dog is going to win. I've flown with many pilots from Branniff 1 and 2, old Frontier, Eastern, old Continental, Transamerica, Capitol, etc etc etc at my airline that had to start over and I would not begrudge them the chance to work a few more years to be able to afford a better retirement.
Also, since foreign airlines are flying in our airspace, and since ALPA represents Canadian airlines and has signed contracts that have age 65 as a retirement age for them-they cannot claim that age 60 is a bona fide occupational qualification anymore--ALPA is breaking the law in discriminating against its most senior members- the Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967 forbids labor organizations from discriminating against their members because of age.
I don't quite understand your statement about this profession being one for everyone to take an equal turn at--its always been feast or famine-airlines hired pilots with 100 hours or less in the mid 60's and in the mid 70's you could have been #1 in your class in flight school, have 10 mig kills over Viet Nam, been a former Blue Angel, and have every rating in the book and never get an interview with anybody--its all timing--but that doesn't mean that since some airlines have done much better than others since 9-11 that continuing to institutionalize discrimnation is right.
Airfogey