print-icon
print-icon

Fighting Back Against Affirmative Action In Aviation

Portfolio Armor's Photo
by Portfolio Armor
Monday, Nov 06, 2023 - 17:14
The late Conrad Jules Aska, who flew a Boeing 767 into the ground near Houston in 2019.
The late Conrad Jules Aska, who flew a Boeing 767 into the ground near Houston in 2019.

Trying To Stop The Competency Crisis

A recurring theme we've discussed here is the dangerous decline in competence in America that stems from a lie: that every group is equal in average abilities, so that any disparities in test results are the result of racism or sexism. That's led to a reduction in objective testing, more affirmative action, and more incompetent people elevated to positions where they can do real damage.

We've previously looked at how this insidious problem has impacted medicine (The End of Civilization) and aviation (The Next Affirmative Action Disaster). In that second post, we noted we've already had an affirmative action cargo plane crash, and asked if an affirmative action passenger crash was next. 

In February of 2019, Flight Officer Conrad Jules Aska, pictured above, was at the controls of a Mesa Airlines Boeing 767 cargo plane, operated on behalf of Amazon.com, that crashed 40 miles southeast of George Bush Intercontinental Airport in Houston. After the crash, investigators at the National Transportation Safety Board found evidence that Aska was unqualified for his job: 

The first officer previously worked at Mesa Airlines, Air Wisconsin, and CommutAir. At the latter two airlines, the NTSB found that he failed to finish training and was promptly flushed out of those carriers. He spent just a month at CommutAir. 

Before working at Atlas, Aska was a first officer at Mesa. He tried but could not upgrade from FO to captain on the Embraer 175 regional jet at the Phoenix-based regional carrier. Check airmen, or pilot trainers, at Mesa raised several concerning flags to NTSB investigators.

Captain Paul Allred, Mesa Air check airman, told the NTSB that Aska was "one of the worst he'd ever seen, probably a 2" out of 10 in terms of piloting skills.

Meanwhile, Captain Leigh Lawless, another Mesa Air check airman, said Aska had a "lack of understanding of how unsafe he was."

NTSB investigators wrote, from talking with Lawless, that Aska "was making very frantic mistakes, lots and lots of mistakes, and did a lot of things wrong but did not recognize this was a problem. He thought he was a good pilot never had any problems and thought that he should be a captain. He could not evaluate himself and see that he did not have the right stuff."

Is An Affirmative Action Passenger Crash Next? 

Let's hope not, but the signs so far this year have not been auspicious. Last month, a female air traffic controller at Burbank Airport in Southern California got her left and right mixed up and cleared a plane to land on a runway that already had another plane on it. 

More Close Calls At Air Traffic Control

Since then, we've had more close calls at air traffic control, such as this one last month.

The air traffic controller in the video sounds like a young African American man. In the subsequent post in which Gregg Re includes the full video, he writes, 

In other similar 'near-miss' incidents, where pilots have apparently taken off without clearance, alert controllers have used ground radar (or their eyes) to instruct planes to stop before hitting each other, in the case of pilot error. In this case, after the collision, the controller replied, "You say what?"

It just just a year ago that the FAA announced a plan to specifically recruit "women and other underrepresented groups" to "enhance safety."

That wasn't even the only recent near disaster caused by incompetent air traffic controllers. Another was reported the week before that one in Portland. 

Fighting Back Against Affirmative Action In Aviation

Finally, someone is fighting back against all of this. America First Legal, led by former Trump staffer Stephen Miller, has filed a civil rights complaint against three major U.S. airlines for hiring based on race and sex, instead of skill: 

The full text of Miller's tweet there reads:

Unsurprisingly, Southwest Airlines is also engaged in similar practices to American and United Airlines. Since at least 2020, Southwest has engaged in discriminatory hiring and promotion processes under the guise of creating “more diverse, equitable, and inclusive opportunities and candidate pipelines.”

Back to his thread:

 

If America First Legal is successful in keeping incompetent affirmative action pilots out of the cockpit, they will save lives--including those of the incompetent pilots. 

In Case You Missed It

If you're a subscriber to our trading Substack/occasional email list, check your inbox for our latest trades. We've adjusted the weightings of the nine signals we're using after analyzing last week's data, and placed three trades on stocks reporting earnings after the close today or before the open tomorrow: two bullish, and one bearish. If you're not a subscriber, you can sign up below.

Early Tuesday Update

Of the three trades we alluded to above, one was on a company that reported after the close Monday, Trip Advisor (TRIP). It posted a double beat and was up ~12% after hours. If that price holds tomorrow, we will have a triple digit gain on our options trade. 

More trades tomorrow. 

If You Want To Stay In Touch

You can scan for optimal hedges for individual securities, find our current top ten names, and create hedged portfolios on our website. You can also follow Portfolio Armor on Twitter here, or become a free subscriber to our trading Substack using the link below (we're using that for our occasional emails now).

Contributor posts published on Zero Hedge do not necessarily represent the views and opinions of Zero Hedge, and are not selected, edited or screened by Zero Hedge editors.
0
Loading...