I have to pay more for fuel and higher taxes. I have pay property tax, sales tax, tie down fees, Annuals, re-register my airplane, get a new Xponder, prepare for ADS-B, get a medical every 2 years, BFR
The grand scheme is to boost the public's image of general aviation until it exceeds the starry-eyed excitement and admiration that it once enjoyed post WW2. I'm pretty sure pilots still crashed into houses and died on a regular basis back then, but from what I have read, people shook it off because aviation was awesome! That's the spirit that beat the Japanese!

RobBurson wrote:We all have our own style of dealing with non pilots and there impression of planes and flying. I have used both methods. It all depends on my mood. Some times I am nice. Other times I'll tear their head off and take a S ^ & % down the hole.
Good day

Nice doesn't always get you where you want to be. Sorry that is just the cold hard truth. Want more air space, more airports. All it takes is $$.
RDUStinson wrote:Nice doesn't always get you where you want to be. Sorry that is just the cold hard truth. Want more air space, more airports. All it takes is $$.
Not having a$$loads of cash at my disposal, I guess nice is all I've got...
Beer, Beerman. You've got beer. Never underestimate the lubricative properties of a pint in bridging divides.
nmflyguy wrote:Some who are posting on this topic seem a bit proud of their ability to zap anyone who says anything negative, or harbors blind ignorance of our flying. I'm with Zane, though.
We're a very small group, us pilots ... roughly half a million out of 300+ million, and we have a bad safety rep amongst most of those 300+ million. We make noise. We take up valuable real estate with our airports and airstrips. We sometimes crash into houses and kill the occupants ... not very often, but every single one of those incidents makes headlines in the local paper, live video at 6 pm, etc. etc.
Some may sneer at the concept of our being "ambassadors" of our hobby/sport/profession of flying ... but we could easily have flying taken away from us by government regulation, budgetary decisions, and lawsuits. Maybe some don't remember, but back in the 1980s, product liability lawsuits virtually destroyed the GA aircraft manufacturing industry in the USA. It took government action limiting that liability before Cessna, Piper, etc. were able to get back into business making airplanes again.
Any of us who have ever spent time in a foreign country - most of which are far less friendly to GA than here in the USA - you'll understand that whatever burdens we think we have now can always be made far more onerous.
If too many of us go around with a chip on our shoulders, grumpily putting ignoramuses in their place, and generally confirming for too many taxpayers and voters an impression that airplane drivers are a bunch of flaming assholes ... well, maybe we'll just get legislated out of our airplanes as a result .... or the local government will decide shut down the GA airports 'cause we're a pain the ass, and there won't be a political price to be paid because everybody thinks we're a bunch of pricks anyway. Or the Forest Service will start closing their backcountry airsrips, because they won't have to worry about facing an angry mob at the public hearing.
Remember that next time you launch into another rant, and "tear someone's head off and shit down the hole". And by the way, thanks very much for endangering my right to fly.
On the day that the FAA was formed pilots lost the " Right" to fly. Like a drivers license a flying license is a privilege maintained via abiding regulations and money. The few times GA lobby gets Congress and the Senate to vote for a FAA regulation that makes flying easier it is not because of democracy. In the end it is because they want those few votes we as pilots can give them or they are on the ground floor of some new technology that will make a lot of money.

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