Pick the next career progression you have in your dreams. Now, close the door on that dream for 5 extra years. But that's o.k., you love flying, right?
Hey man, I love your optimism - this ain't gonna hurt much, and besides, I love my job. That's great. You'd better.....
I'm not worried about the career progression I have in my dreams, I'm worried about the one I'm really going to have. You know, the one where I work my way up and join "The Best Airline in the World" until they go through furloughs or bankruptcy. That's when they drop me on my ass, and I start over with "Plan B" Airways. Since you're laboring under the assumption that you'll spend your entire "established" career with a single airline, I guess you haven't considered what will happen in the
extremely likely event that you're not that lucky. Did you read the middle of my post, where I talked about all of the guys who had that same confidence until they had to start over with a new airline in their forties?
Those guys make up the majority of the 59-year-olds you're trying so desperately to remove from your left seat. They're not $300K-a-year senior captains. They never will be, and there's a good chance neither of us will be. You shouldn't spend your career racing to a fictional job.
What are you fighting to protect, anyway? Your five-year delay argument assumes two things: That every pilot who can work to 65 actually will, and that the only reason airlines hire new pilots is due to retirement. Attrition will change at many levels in the airlines, but it won't stop. I won't spent five years flying left seat on the 1900 - I'll probably fly an extra year on the 1900, an extra year at the next job, and so on.
Age 65 will not completely freeze the industry for five years - the feds coudn't do that if they tried. And I would
love the chance to spend an extra five years flying, even if I spend more time in the regionals. The fact that the overwhelming majority of the old crowd wants to keep flying should give you pause about what
you'll want to do when you're one of them. What terrible things have happened to you in your career that make you so eager for retirement? I'd take a jet over a golf course any day, even in the right seat.