I think you are right, SDF2BUF2MCO, to a degree.
Remember that quote from the sixties, "most men lead lives of quiet desperation"? For most people, any job is just work.
What most people miss is the possibility of SELF satisfaction gained from a job well done, the pursuit of excellence. Ever since I started to apply this principle in my own life, I have become much happier about anything I do, no matter the task.
As "major" flying shrinks while smaller jet flying grows (see the WSJ article on the front page of the Tuesday edition) we can expect a proportionately smaller group of young people to enter aviation as a profession, making pilots a somewhat more "scarce" commodity. For pilots who are already in the system, this is a good thing.
Some who have never flown will be dissuaded by those who had aiplanes stuck under enhanced class B, some will be frightened by the spectre of terroroism, and others will be lured to more lucrative professions.
Those of us who love to fly won't be stopped by anything. We are the core group that will define aviation for the next thirty years.
Yes, Bobby, that was me!! We were called "gophers" because we would "go fer" coffee, cigarettes, teletype, (remember teletype????) and what ever the Most High Boss Jock would require. Of course, some "gopher" functions were left to the nubile female intern......
I don't think there is such a mad rush to radio anymore, though. With the most popular shows coming from sattelite feeds, there is only a local board op and MAYBE a guy who reads three minutes of news and a sponsor bilboard. Gone are the days....