PositionandHold
Truthiness
- Joined
- May 17, 2006
- Posts
- 335
It was a very emotional time and great celebration seeing these two heroes come back home!
That's a bit overly sentimental considering they were involved in a crash that killed over 100 people.
"First please read the link below to the London Times Article about how they landed an airlplane that was literally coming apart on them with no where to land over a jungle with absolutly no help from ATC."
Losing a winglet isn't "literally coming apart on them." Unless I'm missing something. AL Haynes landed without hydraulics and an airplane turning in one direction. That's literally coming apart on you.
"and a very unfriendly country maybe you will rethink your statement."
Brazil isn't inherently unfriendly. They're much more friendly than a lot of my fellow countrymen. Can you imagine what we in the U.S. would have done had some Brazilian test pilots collided with a 737 on U.S. Soil? I'll tell you one thing, we wouldn't be keeping them at some beach resort. They'd be in guantanamo (well maybe not guantanamo, but you get the point).
Let's just be reasonable, that's all.
How about piloting a crippled a/c into the jungle, maintaining composure and finding an remote military airport in the nick of time? Saved not only their own lives but those of several of their passengers. Sounds heroic to me.
Finding a remote field? Luck. Landing an airplane without a winglet and maybe some odd handling characteristics so as to not kill themselves? Human nature.
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