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No, no it does not. It is the ultimate in short-haul repetitve (read: boring) flying. Once the novelity of it wore off (3 to 5 days) where would you be?Pugh said:Seems like it'd be a cool job.
User997 said:Is EG&G a private contractor to the government, or is it ran by the military or federal government directly?
Anyone have any idea how many planes and pilots they have?
Groom Lake? Why you must be mistaken. There's no such place as Groom Lake.garf12 said:what exactly goes on at groom lake? And who are these workers that need to be flown out there every day?
garf12 said:what exactly goes on at groom lake? And who are these workers that need to be flown out there every day?
garf12 said:what exactly goes on at groom lake?
Your just not looking in the "right place"avbug said:I've been all over that area, many times, on medical flights, mostly on overflights, in the past, at night and during daylight.
There's nothing there to see. Don't believe everything you read in National Enquirer.
Daveman said:Since you edited your original post, I'll edit this! -User997
That and the apparent horrid acts of pollution that are alleged to have gone on there, someday we'll have to clean it all up.
avbug said:"We" are never going in there, so that's not an issue. Do you really think a few buried drums of Skydrol and a few covered aircraft and some dumped fuel in the middle of the Nevada desert is apparently all that horrid? You don't suppose the thirty or so craters just south of there where strategic nuclear weapons and devices were detonated, where the desert is melted to glass and still lethally radioactively hot, might be a bigger consideration? Or the large nuclear waste repository that's still being pushed in the same area?
You're worried about cleaning up a little poloution in the middle of the Tonophah Test Range, in a secure facility, in a place that has no ground water table, in the center of the high desert? That should be the least of your worries, and seeing as you'll never see the inside of that place in your lifetime or the next or the next...I wouldn't get too worked up about it.
avbug said:Aah, the Republik of Kalifornia, land where the EPA is worshipped and where man and womankind sincerely believe they are the trend setters and saviors of a dying country...and who move out in droves into the surrounding states to spread their poison and change the communities...always trying to make everybody like California...and never understanding why everybody always says, "go back home."
Do you know that in Wyoming years ago we talked about issuing hunting tags not just for deer, antelope, and elk, but for Kalifornians, too? Problem was, we finally settled on classifying them as pests and predators, and they didn't need tags. No limit, like prarie dogs or coyotes.
Lots of settlements around Tonopah Test Range, huh?
You're not by chance the 2005 EPA Superfund Poster Child, are you? Or one of those guys that chains himself to trees so they won't be cut down?
I can see your concern. You might want to build a summer home out there one day. Next to the glowing desert and melted glass. I wish you well.
TrafficInSight said:That and the apparent horrid acts of pollution that are alleged to have gone on there, someday we'll have to clean it all up.
Keep creating the green-house gasses dude, at least I'll be riding my bike to get around.
.....Know what, I wouldn't mind succession!