Lebowski
Don't f*** with the Jesus
- Joined
- Dec 11, 2004
- Posts
- 130
WillowRunVortex said:Oh jeez.
Now you went and done it. Pilotyip will be along shortly to give us his spiel on how being a pilot has nothing to do with being educated.
Uh oh. Am I gonna "get schooled" about how we don't need no stinkin' school?
Oh well. Bring it on, FlightInfo Ho's. I expect most pilots without a degree to flame me and tell me that a degree is not required to be a pilot. That's clearly true, which is part of my point: It's not a requirement--but if it were, and if we had an over-arching professional standards group, like the AMA or ABA, it obviously would be harder for people to become pilots, which means there would be fewer of us available, which means we would be getting paid more and treated better.
That's a big part of what the AMA and ABA do--they keep the bar high so salaries stay high. I bet a lot of people could do surgery or make good legal arguments without having a degree or going to med school or law school. But the AMA and ABA ensure that only the people who have an education and then some can become doctors and lawyers. And that keeps salaries high.
It's hard to argue with all the statistics that link higher education to higher income. Yeah, I know there are the exceptions like Bill Gates and other college dropouts who made it big.
I'm not knocking people who don't have degrees. And no, I don't think having a degree necessarily makes you smarter or a better pilot. But can someone tell me how it would hurt our profession to have some higher standards for entry?
I'm strictly talking about how education relates to our profession and why our career seems to be on the downward slide, particularly in relation to other careers that demand a higher education. Why should we as pilots expect anything different if we don't demand a higher standard for ourselves and our peers?
Okay...school me. : )
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