Also, I have to comment on your bolded assertion above. If you really believe that your Cessna time alone made you "just as qualified" as military guys' flight experience, then you are either a liar, an idiot, or plain (or plane) deluding yourself. I'm pretty sure that you would be alone in the world, thinking that flying simple, fixed-gear, 120mph Cessnas around and around in a traffic pattern, and doing 50nm "cross-countries" is somehow equivalent to flying all complex, turbine and jet aircraft, from hour one, all over the world, following all manner of air traffic rules. At 200 military hours I was flying, and at 1000 military hours I was PIC, in a heavy Boeing 707, flying all over the country and the world. And you're really claiming that 1000 Cessna hours in 152s/172s is equivalent to that?
Like I said, I agree that when a civilian guy has the many hours of experience of flying turbines around the country in regional airlines, then we're talking parity, but until that point, the military guys' training and experience ARE better, and more desirable by anyone trying to hire quality pilots.
I'm sure you don't realize this, Wave, but you are EXACTLY as obstinate and tribalistic as the worst "kernal" in the company, with your incessant insistence that the civilian way is always the "better" way. How can you not see that? I'll bet that when you upgrade, you're going to be one of those captains who takes out your insecurities on a new, bright and shiny F/O, just because he happens to be military-trained. He'll show up for your pairing, eager and happy, and he'll leave thinking, "what a d1ck!" I was fortunate to fly with a few of those guys when I was an F/O.
Whoever it was on this board who said it was all about the attitude was right. If you have enough experience (civilian or military or combined) to get here, it's your attitude that's the only thing that matters. Guys who continue to insist that it's only the military way that's the "best," or guys like you who continue to insist that it's the civilian way that's the "best" (and especially those who like to whine about the military guys getting unfair breaks) are the ones who make our easy job harder. Who really gives a crap where you came from? If you have the experience and qualifications to be here, and you have a good attitude, that's really all that really matters.
Think about that for a while. Please.
Bubba[/]
Bubba
Please.
Save the hyperbole. As much as it makes me smile, that I easily turn you into a bigger troll than I am, you really don't get this subject from a civilian perspective anymore than I "get" the mil one.
It is not lost on me than ANY COMPETENT pilot will defend their background-
Yet here's the deal: Military pilots aren't the ones being discriminated by SWA in the hiring process. So your whole argument breaks down on that one fact.
So save it. It's not an insecurity when southwest ran a class with 26 ex mil guys in it.
Civilians aren't the ones showing up with a sense of superiority, nor a sense of entitlement. And you REALLY THINK ITS CIVILIANS MAKING THIS JOB HARD OUT ONLINE??
Dude, your head is in the sand, and frankly civilians at southwest have earned a better place at the table than they've gotten. Sorry that offends you, but the fact that it does is telling.
Btw, I will admit that cessnas are as qualified as a mil pilot. But also know that it just became illegal for a civilian pilot to fly any 121 airplane with less than 1500 hours, regardless of the quality of training. Another barrier that a civilian pilot has to march through before getting a chance to fly a turbine anything. So you had opportunities earlier in the flight time gig. I was a captain of a 1900 at 23 and a half. Doing the actual job in a variety of turboprops and jets, with 4 times the flight time of the average ex mil pilot at my first legacy.
My continual point is that the pilots actually doing the job effectively being required to have more flight time doing the job they're being hired to do, vs the pilots who are doing the least applicable flying is ridiculous. And why do you as a heavy crew pilot put up with this hookup of fighter pilots??
Fighter pilot time ought to be considered like helo time. Very respectable, often dangerous, but shouldn't count towards major airline mins at the full rate. How absurd is it that the least applicable type of flying is actually given extra credit ?
Again, for the 80% that are great- I apologize, but I firmly disagree with major airline traditional hiring practices and the good ole boy network that keeps giving them this leg up.
If you don't like it bubba, go find a restroom. Stare long and hard at the bottom of the toilet until you can see your reflection, and then realize that I do not care.
As proud as you are of your background, so are we of ours. Yet we have artificial barrier after artificial barrier put in our way between us and the truly valuable jobs. It's bullsh/t