I-5 wrote:I probably said or did as many insensitive things at 21 (I’m 53 now), so yeah I get it. He definitely sounded like the ‘get off my lawn’ type and then some. We all eventually become that guy
He was a devout Catholic with 7 kids and 20 years difference between the oldest and youngest, so I suppose we can excuse some of his excesses.
I-5 wrote:People will lose their jobs simply because the company made a huge miscalculation on the Max program by shady practices that killed hundreds of people in the name of corporate greed - all legal of course. They simply can’t afford to keep making planes they can’t deliver and therefore get paid for. I still think the Max will not get the-certified without a major re-design beyond software, and/or scrap it entirely. Ironically, they already had a better airframe in the discontinued 757, which has a higher landing gear that can accommodated the larger engines without having to move their location on the wings. I’m sure it would have cost more to redesign the wings, update the avionics, get re-certified, and the-train pilots. But it would have been a more sound design for safety sake. That’s capitalism when you don’t have a higher mission than pleasing the stock price.
I'm not going to agree that it was all "in the name of corporate greed". Obviously there was a profit motive at work, particularly at the higher levels of the company, but there's a lot of blame to spread around. They had engineers that, in the absence of proper regulatory oversight, lost sight of the human nature of their work. Planes became personal toys, the object of engineering challenges seeking a resolution within a given set of constraints. I would be very surprised if anyone on the board told them not to disclose their solutions to the engineering challenges to the airlines and individual pilots or that it was OK for them to rely on critical data from a single sensor. Those decision almost certainly were made at a level below the BOD and was not profit driven.
I've seen similar things happen in my former line of work, where engineers lose sight of the overall objective and things like safety and quality get overlooked. One of the things that happens is that they try to assign numerical values to subjective criteria like quality and safety. They don't ask themselves the proper "what would happen if" questions.