Originally Posted by
KC10 FATboy
DoJetDriver, seriously? I never once said that a major aircrews don't screw up. And I never once said that the crew in ATL never screwed the pooch. Please show me where I typed that? Because you are wrong.
Why do you have so much disdain for regional crews?
Originally Posted by
KC10 FATboy
There is a clear difference in lack of professionalism between the two incidents. If you can't see that, well, nevermind, we already been down this road with you. Recall the SwissAir crap?

Yeah, sure do. It's funny, 2 other guys (both military instructors) knew what I was getting at. You were the ONLY one that suffered from reading comprehension failure.
Originally Posted by
KC10 FATboy
The crew in ATL wasn't engrossed in conversation that distracted them.
Were they on fire? Were they facing structural failure? Were they facing fuel starvation/exhaustion?
Originally Posted by
KC10 FATboy
There were human factors for sure that could lead anyone down that path. But in the CRW incident, they choose to not do their duties properly and it bit them in the ass.
That's funny, did the DAL crew do their duties properly? Did they verify/crosscheck the piece of pavement they were pointed at? Did they back each other up? Do they use CRM at a very critical time like we're all trained to do regardless of major/lcc/regional, etc?
Originally Posted by
KC10 FATboy
Get off your freaking high horse buddy.
And I ask the same of you. Especially since you display such gross disdain, as well as ignorance towards the "regional" spectrum of this job.
Originally Posted by
KC10 FATboy
However, trying to legitamize an accident by saying "well majors have screwed up as well" is extremely childish and unprofessional -- as if that makes it ok.
Trying to legitamize/rationalize that because they were major airline pilots and were in such a 'dire" emergency so that makes it OK is "childish and unprofessional" as well.
Open your eyes buddy. It's cool, you don't have to send repeated nasty grams like you did to myself (and others) in the past.