Ty Webb said:
Later, at a different company, when I was flying corporate jets, not only did we pitch all GIA resumes, but when we had guys come in from the street and offer to fly SIC in our jets "to get experience" the CP used to immediately escort them to the door, saying "Sorry, but we only hire professionals here, and if you are willing to fly for free, you're not a professional". We all got a kick out of that.
Yeah, I'll bet you kids got a kick out of that. Very professional. This just goes to show that it doesn't take much to amuse some people.
Tell me: Exactly how does flying for free make someone unprofessional? Because that behavior deprives another pilot
of a job? Well, that's exactly what happens when applicants compete for a job. One person wins, the others lose. There's nothing wrong with someone pricing himself competitively in order to attract job offers. You might call it "whoring" yourself out, but if that's the case, then doctors in residency are whores, consultants are whores, as is just about every intern in any industry out there (airlines, music, etc.).
If you were the CP, and you have two candidates, one who paid his dues like you did, and one who paid a bunch of money to get out of paying his dues, well, which one are you going to hire?
Right, and every pilot out there should pay his dues just like you did. Otherwise, he's not a professional. Give it a rest. Are you so naive as to expect every budding pilot out there to eat $hit just because you did? This sort of "logic" leads me to believe that you resent pilots who've had it easier than you.
Whatever happened to hiring the applicant who strikes a good balance between experience and wage? You can't immediately deny a PFT/PFJer on the basis of experience. They may pay for the job, but they receive multi/jet flying experience earlier in their career than most. If you deny them a job, it's for personal reasons. But that's professional, right?
You don't seem to be able to grasp the fundamental point here:
The FAA requires an FO in a B1900. The company would have to hire and train pilots anyway. If you idiots would simply put your checkbooks away, they would be hiring pilots to be FO's. You hurt your fellow pilots by paying the company instead of being a paid professional.
Well, guess who is hurt by "paying dues"? The person paying the dues. You expect newbie pilots to place themselves on the sacrificial altar in order for another pilot to earn a good wage. Isn't a little selfish to expect strangers to delay gratification just so you can get a job?
It strikes me that this sort of hiring discrimination is borderline illegal. You are essentially refusing employment to otherwise qualified (minimums according to the regs) on the basis of highly subjective personal beliefs: i.e. "They're whores because they are willing to work for so little". It's a fine line you're walking.