Sunday, June 30, 2024

MORE AIRCRAFT WOES FOR BOEING

 

MORE AIRCRAFT WOES FOR BOEING

Regular readers here know my attitude toward flying: I do not do it, and won't do it, ever again. When I returned from Oxford to America in 1987, that was my last flight on an airplane. I simply will not fly, anywhere, ever. Period. My reasons for that are personal, but you may number terrible vertigo among them, and a curmudgeonly insistence in the teeth of clear statistical evidence to the contrary that flying is always, somehow, a crap shoot, a roll of the probability dice, that I simply don't want to take. you can add to that those grim pictures of American Flight 191, or Pacific Southwest Airlines flight 182, both from the late 1970s, and that more or less settles the issue for me.

But even i will admit that those grim reminders from history were not so much faults of the equipment itself, or of design flaws, but of human maintenance or piloting errors.

Not so with the recent problems that seem to be afflicting American manufacturer Boeing's commercial airliners. We've see an spate of problems, from problems in the computerized automatic pilots pitching noses up or down too much, altimeter problems, doors or windows falling off in mid flight, tires coming off on takeoff or landing and bouncing down the runway, Dutch rolls, and more recently, reports of "counterfeit Chinese titanium" that somehow made its way not only into Being aircraft, but Airbus aircraft as well.

Well, now you can add cracked cockpit windshields to the list, according to this story shared by V.T.:

The opening lines in this one say it all:

Here we go again.

While flying from Heathrow to San Francisco, a Virgin Atlantic Boeing jet’s windshield cracked at 40,000 feet.

Photographs show that a central window pane is shattered with cracks in several areas, but investigators have been unable to determine what caused the damage.

...

Experts have said that the plane’s altitude meant it could not have hit a bird and no immediate other course have been highlighted but temperatures outside the aircraft were -50 degrees Celsius.

Now anyone who has flown from the United Kingdom to the United States will know that route. You do fly high, and temperatures are going to be very cold outside the aircraft. And you're flying much too high for the windscreen to be hit by any bird. And aircraft have been making that journey for decades without cracked windshields. But in the wake of all the other problems Boeing seems to be suffering, we can probably write this incident off to the same cause: cultural agenda-driven incompetence, behind which one may also suspect lies some good old-fashioned industrial espionage and sabotage.

The article goes on to mention the following incident:

Earlier this month, a passenger jet with 163 passengers and nine crew members barely cleared the runway by ten feet due to a software glitch that caused it to take off with insufficient power.

The TUI Boeing 737-800, departing from Bristol Airport’s 1.2-mile runway 9 to Gran Canaria on March 4, had difficulty gaining enough lift during takeoff.

The 15-year-old jet eventually managed to get airborne but passed over the nearby A38 road at less than 100 feet before making its way to the sunny island.

Back in the 1970s, there were many crashes of the emerging jumbo-jets that seemed to involve a flaw in the McDonnell-Douglas DC-10, and accordingly, even when I did fly, I would always make certain that the flight was not on a DC-10. In fact, on my final flight from the United Kingdom back to the States, I had been booked on a DC-10, and actually had to ring up the travel agency ande have them book another flight - on a Boeing! - that would avoid any DC-10s. Well, as you might have guessed, with all the problems Boeing seems to be having lately, customers are now actually voicing concerns, if not abandoning Boeing aircraft altogether (presumably for Airbus):

Would you fly on Boeing? Terrified flyers take to TikTok to say they'd be changing flights and travelling with anti-anxiety medication - as three of the aviation firm's planes crash in two days

Years ago, when I was teaching college, I warned my students that the increasing "enstupidation" of the American "edgykayshunal" establishment would lead to a collapse of all standards in the country, and we could become a third world junkyard of incompetence as elevators and airplanes would start literally falling from the sky. I turned out to be right, and here we are.

So what is to be done? Here's my dream scenario: the government in the form of Congress should hold public hearings, and the lamestream propotainment media should run special broadcasts of those hearings, and invite Boeing executive and manager after Boeing executive and manager to explain what steps they're taking to end this spate of nonsense and restore quality and excellence to the company. Meanwhile, the FAA should threaten to pull all licenses of all Boeing aircraft, if only to convince Boeing that the government is serious in a sort iof "fix the problem or go out of business" sort of way. In the meantime, the government should fast track any start-up commercial aircraft manufacturer that demonstrates beyond a shadow of a doubt that it has not been taken over nor will it subscribe to "diversity, equity, and inclusion", but rather, will hire engineers that can actually do math and design things without CAD programs. (That will be a tall order).

But wait, that's just my fantasy on the government side of the hearings. I have a fantasy of what those subpoenaed Boeing executives and managers should say in response to Congressional probing: they should point out, repeatedly and ad nauseam, that unsafe aircraft are what you, the government and public, get when you press programs of cultural "Diversity, Inclusion, and Equity" (D.I.E.) over actual demonstrated competence and excellence. They should come into those hearings, armed for bear, and name the names of the Congressmen and senators who have funded and enabled the edgyhayshunal nonsense behind it, and they should point out that there are such things as genuinely stupid and incompetent people, and that they are not entitled to design aircraft, or service, or maintain them simply because of their obesity, purple hair, or the bone in the septum of their nose or the tattoos plastered on their faces.

In short, Do you want to fix Boeing? I mean, really fix it? Then you've got to fix education. And you can start by abolishing the lack of competence and discipline that came with teacher certification and the whole edubabble edifice that comes with it. There was a time that teachers were hired to teach things like mathematics, literature, history, biology, physics, not because they had a "teacher's certificate" in some vacuous socialization program called education, pedagogy, methodology and all the other nonsense that teachers must sit through to get that certificate, but solely and simply because they were competent in actual subjects. Restore that, and you will restore Boeing, and perhaps a host of other forgotten names once associated with quality.  Traditional education never had need of certification, or teachers' unions, or all the rot American "education" has become.  After that, you can go to work on the related "disciplines"...

Boeing's woes are just the symptoms of a much deeper disease, and that disease is cultural and spiritual, and therefore, is concentrated in the institutions that bear and transmit culture: the academy, universities, and schools (and yes, the churches, but that's another subject for another day).

See you on the flip side...

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Joseph P. Farrell

Joseph P. Farrell has a doctorate in patristics from the University of Oxford, and pursues research in physics, alternative history and science, and "strange stuff". His book The Giza DeathStar, for which the Giza Community is named, was published in the spring of 2002, and was his first venture into "alternative history and science".

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