Aviation Information



LifeHealthInsurance.ca

Young Men Trying to Imitate the 9-11 Scenario, Part I


Why did the young man near Tampa, FL fly a little private aircraft into the Bank of America building there? A Cessna 152; What damage could that possibly do? We must figure out a way in preventing our youth from growing up into homegrown terrorists.

Young men crashing into buildings in airplanes is simply insane; how could this happen. Although in the scheme of things this act in itself is irrelevant to life on Earth, we should explore it. First let's say that we need a mentoring program for those who excel in whatever it is they choose. The young man in Tampa chose to fly. He caught the flying bug as aviators say and that was that. Many others too had caught that bug. Myself included.

My brother flies a C-130 for the US Marines, my dad was a Navy jet jock and grandfathers flew in WWII. Realize that many other famous people caught the flying bug. Including our current President and his father also a President and pilot in WWII. So we cannot condemn a person who wants to reach beyond the norm, someone who wants to achieve, some one who strives and ultimately fulfills that need through flight. There was nothing wrong with a young man wishing to fly. It is actually quite admirable.

While other kids are poking pencils at each other in classrooms, ditching school, and cheating on tests, this young man was studying his homework during his classes to give him extra time to fly, his true passion. So do we need more FAA rules against flying at a young age? No. We need a better mentoring program for those who excel in other areas besides the typical sports, student government, grades, music or extra curricular activities that all kids do. For those who are different, want to achieve different objectives or are simply not cut from the same mold, we need to pay attention to these needs. These are also our future leaders. Gates for instance took apart computers designed little programs and operating systems and we called him a geek. Why? We needed his expertise and driven nature to help propel PC use, which has now simplified life for nearly one-third the population on the Planet and helped in the productivity and betterment of all mankind.

If you read biographies as I do, at least a few hundred of them of great people, you will see that many achieve or excel at an early age at something way away from what we call the norm. Einstein was thrown out of school, they said he would not amount to anything. Even on the dark side. The little Hitler youth who studied in Vienna to become an architect was unable to do go after his dream. Had he had a mentor he could have followed in those years after his mother died or even a supporting father, his innate abilities to draw buildings, may have helped him become one the world's leading architects of the time. Fore it is often the drive and human spirit which is the wild card of human endeavor. But instead we all know what happened.

There is a program for those young flying kids. It is called the Civil Air Patrol. I was a member. It is to develop strong aerospace leaders for the future. Yet the IRS came down on private pilots and aircraft owners for using it as a tax write off for fuel for their private planes. Many of these pilots used this extra fuels to take students or cadets in the CAP-Civil Air Patrol up for rides. They took the youth on field trip type weekend events and searches for crashed or lost aircraft and looked for the locations of ELT-Emergency Locator transmissions.

Our company, The Aircraft Wash Guys, www.aircraftwashguys.com , has helped raise money for the CAP with fundraising events in the past. To help build leadership and camaraderie without giving away free fish, teaching them to fish if you will. This is something that the young man who flew into the B of A building was clearly missing. Others in his peer group and older people who understood his dreams to fly. His counselor at school told us of the young man's statement; "I wish I could do something to help my country, I would like to join the air force and fly an aircraft to help." That does not sound like a bad or evil person to me. At the airport he washed aircraft and he traded for pilots lessons. I did the same thing as young person. It takes a lot of aircraft washes to pay for fuel and instructor and a plane for an hour these days. With liability insurance at FBOs-Fixed Base Operators so high; nearly 30% of the cost to rent the damn airplane is insurance. Why? Attorneys. They sue every time someone crashes. They sue the manufacturer Cessna, they sue the flight school, they sue the estates of the instructors, the pilot himself and any other person they can think of. We are talking millions, not thousands. That is the problem with the cost. Read Airport Business, Flying, AOPA, Sport Aviation or Private Pilot, you will see. When the luxury tax law was enacted 30 years ago the aviation market tanked and never really recovered. People who had aircraft they bought leased them back to a flight school to afford the monthly payments. It worked good and lots of aircraft and lots of people learning to fly. That was wonderful for general aviation, aircraft sales prices and the entire general aviation industry. With a lease backed plane to an FBO an owner could also have the ITC-Investment Tax Credits on the purchase and then write off the payments. This caused more aircraft to be sold and Piper, Cessna, Mooney, Beechcraft, Rockwell, Aeronica, Robinson, Grumman all did well in aviation.

End Part I

"Lance Winslow" - If you have innovative thoughts and unique perspectives, come think with Lance; www.WorldThinkTank.net/wttbbs


MORE RESOURCES:

AFP

Asia, Pacific nations vow to fight threats to civil aviation
AFP
The Asia-Pacific Ministerial Conference on Aviation Security was held in response to an aborted terror attack on Northwest Airlines Flight 253 approaching ...
Minister Merrifield Represents Canada at International Conference on Civil ...Benzinga
GCAA maintains increasing growth rates in air navigation operationsAME Info

all 26 news articles »


Irish Independent

FAA directs airlines to check tail flap of 737s
The Associated Press
SEATTLE — The Federal Aviation Administration has issued an emergency airworthiness directive demanding that airlines check a mechanism that controls tail ...
FAA requires inspection of 600 Boeing 737sSeattle Times
FAA orders emergency 737 inspectionsPuget Sound Business Journal
Airliner safety inspection called...Big winds wreak havoc in Northeast9&10 News
Channel 4 News -KOMO News -Renton Reporter
all 159 news articles »


New York Daily News

Honoring our heroes: Woman pilot receives medal for service
Staunton News Leader
In 1963, she joined the Federal Aviation Administration as part of the Women's Advisory Committee, and in the mid-1970s she helped spearhead an effort ...
Female aviation pioneers awarded Congressional Gold MedalNewsChannel 9 WSYR
Aviation pioneer from Kalamazoo to be honoredWWMT
WWII aviation pioneer to be honored in DCEvanston Review
Carolina Newswire (press release)
all 716 news articles »


Press-Register - al.com (blog)

'Hubble' IMAX film opens March 19 at the Naval Aviation Museum in Pensacola
Press-Register - al.com (blog)
The large-format movie opens March 19 at the National Naval Aviation Museum's IMAX® Theatre Giant Screen and offers viewers an inspiring, unique look into ...

and more »


Forecast links aviation activity and national economic growth
CharterX
The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) is forecasting that key airspace safety and efficiency modernization efforts will play a vital role in spurring ...



At long last, Ord's aviation pioneer honored by Congress
Grand Island Independent
Auble, a longtime Ord optometrist, was looking for someone to take this memorabilia and preserve the legacy of Sharp, an aviation pioneer and Ord native. ...



SINDH TODAY

Commission restored to travel agents
The Hindu
A directive by the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) has asked several international airlines to restore the system of paying travel agents a ...
DGCA asks carriers to reinstate travel agents commissionHindu Business Line
DGCA against zero commission on airline ticketIndian Express
Fliers to soon be rid of transaction fee burdenTimes of India
Sify -Calcutta Telegraph -TopNews
all 27 news articles »


AFP

AirAsia pioneer plans to move into Formula 1
AFP
KUALA LUMPUR — When Malaysian aviation tycoon Tony Fernandes came from nowhere to launch budget carrier AirAsia with just two planes in 2001, the industry ...

and more »


Aviation Security High on Asian-Pacific Summit Agenda
NTDTV
Ministers from 18 Asian-Pacific countries are meeting in Tokyo to discuss the state of security in civilian aviation. The conference comes in the wake of ...



Oxford Aviation lays off 23, blames county
Mainebiz Daily
By The Mainebiz News Staff Oxford Aviation is again tussling with its host county over maintenance of the building it leases, and says the dispute forced it ...
Oxford Aviation owner claims dispute is forcing layoffsWCSH-TV

all 6 news articles »

Google News

home | site map
© 2006