Any "Latest & Greatest" about Delta?
Gets Weekends Off
Joined: Jul 2010
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From: window seat
Pretty much. Sort of. There's still been a lot of other factors considered though. At a minimum that relative wouldn't even start until the equavalent widebody positions were stapled to the top. Then there's pay and retirement expectations to consider. No way is top 2% going to slide over to be top 2% with a narrowbody only airline.
Pretty much. Sort of. There's still been a lot of other factors considered though. At a minimum that relative wouldn't even start until the equavalent widebody positions were stapled to the top. Then there's pay and retirement expectations to consider. No way is top 2% going to slide over to be top 2% with a narrowbody only airline.
You boys may want to pick Carl's brain about how that red/green thing worked. The good news is I doubt we'll get an alcoholic arbitrator who couldn't write......or will we

PS........yes I've been drinking
Here is what you posted:
Also, my W2 is up 50,000 since the merger in 2008. Not 120,000...50,000. Equating to about $8,400 per year or abot a 4 to 5% increase. COLA increases. You continue to embarrass yourself by just making up numbers.
You and your handlers must actually sit around and say: "OK, how can we fool them today? How can we talk a lot and completely misinform."
Carl
Well.......where have we seen this before? Where in OUR history have we seen an international widebody airline merge with a smaller narrowbody domestic airline? Oh, wait.......young southies hate northie history, even when it's on point.
You boys may want to pick Carl's brain about how that red/green thing worked. The good news is I doubt we'll get an alcoholic arbitrator who couldn't write......or will we
You boys may want to pick Carl's brain about how that red/green thing worked. The good news is I doubt we'll get an alcoholic arbitrator who couldn't write......or will we


Carl
Pretty much. Sort of. There's still been a lot of other factors considered though. At a minimum that relative wouldn't even start until the equavalent widebody positions were stapled to the top. Then there's pay and retirement expectations to consider. No way is top 2% going to slide over to be top 2% with a narrowbody only airline.
Winning!

Carl
Can't abide NAI
Joined: Jun 2007
Posts: 12,078
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From: Douglas Aerospace post production Flight Test & Work Around Engineering bulletin dissembler
Relevant to the flying some of us do. Amazingly nasty disease that effects it's means of transport and modifies it!
Malaria Makes Mosquitoes Meaner
Malaria Makes Mosquitoes Meaner
Here you go Ferd:
IMO, the "answer" is the line pilots getting back to basics. Specifically, that means everything good in life requires risk taking and the abandonment of fear. Remember wanting to date that beautiful girl that caught your eye in high school? You put fear of failure aside and asked her (unless your newK then she asked him
). Remember all the risk you took in flight school? You abandoned fear, accepted the risk as part of the deal, and ended up flying fighters. Then ended up at a major airline. I could go on, but you get my point. What happened to our ability to take calculated risks? Is it a byproduct of achieving the top level in aviation? We're so afraid of losing the top level that we're manipulated by anyone who uses our life success as a weapon against us?
The biggest issue we face is unique to Delta and that is our fear campaigns are waged by our own union...not management. Management would be glad TO do it, they just don't need to. Until we line pilots can make votes based on what can be achieved as opposed to what might go wrong, our national union will continue achieving their goals...to our everlasting detriment. This will be true with a DPA or any representative entity.
None of us would be where we are without the fearless and selfless actions of those airline pilots that came before us. IMO, we're doing a p!ss poor job of continuing that legacy for the young people who will come after us. I'm very disheartened by that. We can change that. Every one of us has the proven ability to take a calculated risk. We just need to get back to that basic ideal.
Carl
). Remember all the risk you took in flight school? You abandoned fear, accepted the risk as part of the deal, and ended up flying fighters. Then ended up at a major airline. I could go on, but you get my point. What happened to our ability to take calculated risks? Is it a byproduct of achieving the top level in aviation? We're so afraid of losing the top level that we're manipulated by anyone who uses our life success as a weapon against us?The biggest issue we face is unique to Delta and that is our fear campaigns are waged by our own union...not management. Management would be glad TO do it, they just don't need to. Until we line pilots can make votes based on what can be achieved as opposed to what might go wrong, our national union will continue achieving their goals...to our everlasting detriment. This will be true with a DPA or any representative entity.
None of us would be where we are without the fearless and selfless actions of those airline pilots that came before us. IMO, we're doing a p!ss poor job of continuing that legacy for the young people who will come after us. I'm very disheartened by that. We can change that. Every one of us has the proven ability to take a calculated risk. We just need to get back to that basic ideal.
Carl
IMO, the "answer" is the line pilots getting back to basics. Specifically, that means everything good in life requires risk taking and the abandonment of fear. Remember wanting to date that beautiful girl that caught your eye in high school? You put fear of failure aside and asked her (unless your newK then she asked him. Remember all the risk you took in flight school? You abandoned fear, accepted the risk as part of the deal, and ended up flying fighters. Then ended up at a major airline. I could go on, but you get my point. What happened to our ability to take calculated risks? Is it a byproduct of achieving the top level in aviation? We're so afraid of losing the top level that we're manipulated by anyone who uses our life success as a weapon against us?
The biggest issue we face is unique to Delta and that is our fear campaigns are waged by our own union...not management. Management would be glad TO do it, they just don't need to. Until we line pilots can make votes based on what can be achieved as opposed to what might go wrong, our national union will continue achieving their goals...to our everlasting detriment. This will be true with a DPA or any representative entity.
None of us would be where we are without the fearless and selfless actions of those airline pilots that came before us. IMO, we're doing a p!ss poor job of continuing that legacy for the young people who will come after us. I'm very disheartened by that. We can change that. Every one of us has the proven ability to take a calculated risk. We just need to get back to that basic ideal.
Carl
The biggest issue we face is unique to Delta and that is our fear campaigns are waged by our own union...not management. Management would be glad TO do it, they just don't need to. Until we line pilots can make votes based on what can be achieved as opposed to what might go wrong, our national union will continue achieving their goals...to our everlasting detriment. This will be true with a DPA or any representative entity.
None of us would be where we are without the fearless and selfless actions of those airline pilots that came before us. IMO, we're doing a p!ss poor job of continuing that legacy for the young people who will come after us. I'm very disheartened by that. We can change that. Every one of us has the proven ability to take a calculated risk. We just need to get back to that basic ideal.
Carl

I guess I have always had a hard time following the union discussion because while I'm glad I'm a union member......if I was going to get involved in more than flying my trip and going home, I'd be a Chief Pilot.

Seriously, with my biz and advanced admin degrees plus senior USAF stuff, I think the best way to help out the bros it to be where the rubber meets the road. I honestly think the union has a vital role, and I'd love to see ours be more effective. I honestly wish you and Bar well improving ours.......but I think you'll have to improve ours as I don't honestly see an alternative.
Ferd
I need another beer......this was a buzz kill
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