Soverytired
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jan 30, 2006
- Posts
- 1,572
A semantic discussion, that's all. I think you're forgetting that there are numerous highly trained, very skilled, hard working and technically proficient blue collar workers out there who need to know as much or more than your average pilot. They certainly don't really obsess about "blue collar vs. professional". There are certainly ways pilots qualify as "professionals", but in the strictest sense, a "white collar professional" doesn't really apply. My opinion, of course.
Frankly, the technical aspects of being a pilot "profession" are getting easier by the year .. . automation, aircraft reliability, ATC assistance, better weather radar/forecasts, etc. I think the whole ego driven "we pilots are gods of the sky" is sounding increasingly hollow to management, stockholders, and the general public.
The only intrinsic quality an aviator needs is GOOD JUDGMENT. Not really "teachable", difficult to define, and is more a factor of age, experience and internal temperament than anything else.
On this point, more than anything, unions shoot themselves in the foot big time on this, because in any union, you are a replaceable cog, exactly equal in all respects to every other pilot in the union. Everyone gets treated 100% the same, whether they are the world's most colossal f-up or Space Shuttle material . . it doesn't matter.
Unions are just terrible at self-policing. Only one crime is unforgivable . . "crossing the union", which is surely an offense, but it's not the only thing they need to address. True "professionals" are very strict on professional standards and will self-police. Poor performing lawyers and doctors routinely face peer boards of inquiry in which they have to defend their right to continue having a license to practice.
Pilot unions, to my knowledge, have no such boards or self-policing powers, to the ultimate detriment of the entire group.
Frankly, the technical aspects of being a pilot "profession" are getting easier by the year .. . automation, aircraft reliability, ATC assistance, better weather radar/forecasts, etc. I think the whole ego driven "we pilots are gods of the sky" is sounding increasingly hollow to management, stockholders, and the general public.
The only intrinsic quality an aviator needs is GOOD JUDGMENT. Not really "teachable", difficult to define, and is more a factor of age, experience and internal temperament than anything else.
On this point, more than anything, unions shoot themselves in the foot big time on this, because in any union, you are a replaceable cog, exactly equal in all respects to every other pilot in the union. Everyone gets treated 100% the same, whether they are the world's most colossal f-up or Space Shuttle material . . it doesn't matter.
Unions are just terrible at self-policing. Only one crime is unforgivable . . "crossing the union", which is surely an offense, but it's not the only thing they need to address. True "professionals" are very strict on professional standards and will self-police. Poor performing lawyers and doctors routinely face peer boards of inquiry in which they have to defend their right to continue having a license to practice.
Pilot unions, to my knowledge, have no such boards or self-policing powers, to the ultimate detriment of the entire group.
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