However, I believe that you are blinded from my words by a hatred for me.
That's a bit strong, and incorrect, and a fairly mindless thing to say, but it would be a good enough reason. When you awaken from your persecution complex long enough to realize that most of the time you come off sounding like an idiot (particularly defending deeply flawed points of view)...you might realize the world isn't out to get you so much as you're out to get yourself. Don't do that.
I did not realize that ...
Far from the first time, won't be the last. The first step is admitting it. For example...
...on another thread we discussed a situation with a pilot who had an issue with a controller identifying his position. The controller confused his aircraft with another that violated controlled airspace. The controller stated the he was "unsure" which aircraft was the one that made the deviation. The pilot informed the controller that he did not believe it was him.
At that time the pilot became frightened that certificate action may be sought against him. The pilot then filed the report based on his aircraft possibly deviation into controlled airspace. The pilot should have filed the report under a controller error citing an inability of the controlling agency to indentify aircraft in and around their airspace.
You never did get that one right. In fact, the pilot who initiated that thread never made any statement about wrong doing, nor would it have made any difference. The only issue was an accusation regarding a potential violation. The poster was well advised by all, except you, to file the ASRS report...and the poster did so. You advised him not to do so, and continued beating that bloody pulp for days...bad advice, dangerous to his career, and you've perpetuated it in this thread...in the thread to which you refer, you stated that you've started this thread to carry on the discussion...and here we are. It's worth noting that your tune then was a bit different. You incorrectly advised the poster not to file because you suggested the report could be used agaisnt him, and went on to bring up imaginary cases in which the FAA got pilots fired, and violated pilots based on what they'd said in their ASRS report. In fact, you had no concerns about the sanctity or purity of the database...your position was that the poster shouldn't be file because you stipulated it would be used against him.
Why don't we see what the original poster really said, then?
So I was cruising around under the PHX class B hopping from airport to airport and when I return to my airport ground tells me to call this number for a possible pilot deviation. Im dumbfounded and dont have a clue as to what I did....so I call. They asked if I was aware that I had busted the class B north of PHX, I said no I was not aware and was not sure how I had done it since I stayed far east in a VFR transition route and kept my altitude low. Anyways we came to the conclusion that he was not sure if it was me or not and said he was not going to pursue this any further and that it happens all the time. Should I fill out a NASA report? It was impossible that it was me but they somehow got my tail number out of the ordeal....suggestions advice?
...I was following the Canal transition, well east of bravo airspace...they said they had me painted on radar north of phx. I was at 2500 MSL so I had to of been extremely close to sky harbor to even violate the bravo. I already sent in a NASA report and explained that I was only questioned as being an airspace violator and that it could have POSSIBLY been me but I did not believe it was.
Now Babushka, you've just told us "
The pilot then filed the report based on his aircraft possibly deviation into controlled airspace," but we've just read his own follow-up stating that he said no such thing...which somewhat destroys your credibility on the topic.
You're making two arguements. On the one hand in the other thread, which you've just resurrected, you argued regarding the pilot protecting himself, but here you argue for the purity of the program. Perhaps you just don't like the program, but your agenda is disjointed and nonsensical. In this thread you tell us that the ASRS program is deeply contaminated by reports motivated by pilots seeking legal protections, and tell us that this simply should not be.
Once more, of course, you argue your point based on a report we cannot read, by a man who addressed a group ten years ago on the topic, yet we see the program has not been changed in ten years. Perhaps the expert oversight of the program sees benifit that you do not. Perhaps you need to take over the program and administer it as you see fit, though I strongly suggest you learn what the program is, before you try.
Once again, pilots participate in the program because of the protections it offers. Their reasoning isn't nearly as important as the fact that contributions would not be forthcoming if the protections were not in place. Therefore, the fact that most of the contributions are made is largely owing to the legal protections offered by the use of the program...those very protections are what keeps it alive. You now contend that pilots shouldn't submit for this reason...but if indeed it's the primary reason for the program, then suggesting that pilots no longer do this would be a very stupid thing. You understand this, right?
The motivation for submitting a report is irrelevant. The submitter isn't Mother Theresa blessing the poor. The submitter may be a pilot who has made a mistake, seen a mistake, dreamed of a mistake, written a novel about a mistake, or painted a picture on a McDonalds napkin about a mistake, and has elected to make a contribution. Why he or she elects to do so isn't nearly as relevant as the contribution itself. Perhaps it may be used, perhaps not. The fact is, if the pilot has made a mistake and the pilot has violated a regulation, then the pilot has also a safety issue to report. Regulatory issues are tied to safety; it's the reason we have regulation. This much may not be clear to you...but it's the reason we have regulation.
As regulation exists for safety, violation of regulation is also an issue of safety, and therefore merits reporting in a safety program. Evidently the FAA feels this to be the case also, and has honored this fact by protecting the pilot and recognizing that submission as an act of a compliant attitude toward safety by refusing to prosecute based on the ASRS report, and in waiving the penalty for any enforcement action if the pilot has demonstrated such compliance. Perhaps you're just a little smarter than everybody else, and the world has yet to figure it out.
Keep beating your chest (with your good hand), and sooner or later everyone will come flocking to your aid. You should probably run for FAA Administrator. You're a shoe-in for an appointment, don't you think?