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[return to "YouTuber who staged plane crash faces up to 20 years jail"]
1. gavinh+Ht[view] [source] 2023-05-12 02:09:06
>>tafda+(OP)
This case infuriates me.

At the time, I had just finished sending in an appeal to being denied a medical clearance to become a pilot because of a history of clinical depression.

That appeal required undergoing a battery of tests, a psychological evaluation, multiple meetings with a therapist and a report from the same, and 15 hours of flight instruction plus a report of my performance by the flight instructors.

I intended to be professional. Everyone thought I was safe to fly.

I nevertheless thought the FAA would deny my appeal. I was right. [1]

So because I once had clinical depression, I can't get a medical. And yet, yahoos like this get to fly simply because stupidity and malice isn't as well-documented as a history of mental illness. Sigh...

To be clear, I don't think the FAA is at fault here; they didn't know, and they acted fast once he did it. They did a great job.

I just wish they would let me fly.

[1]: https://gavinhoward.com/2022/09/grounded-for-life-losing-the...

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2. latchk+Ku[view] [source] 2023-05-12 02:16:20
>>gavinh+Ht
Is flying in the US your only option?
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3. gavinh+fv[view] [source] 2023-05-12 02:19:11
>>latchk+Ku
Now that I have a history with the FAA, I probably couldn't fly international.

I also have a wife. I can't just pack up and move to a different country.

When the rejection came, I decided my marriage was worth more than flying.

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4. latchk+Vv[view] [source] 2023-05-12 02:25:17
>>gavinh+fv
Yea, I read your post.

Having now lived outside of the US for a period of time, I've come to the grand realization that the US is one of the least 'free' countries out there (and I moved to a communist country!).

My guess is that if you really wanted to find a way to fly, you could, and it wouldn't require moving.

If there is a will, there is a way.

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5. gavinh+Gx[view] [source] 2023-05-12 02:42:31
>>latchk+Vv
I have a moral code that is against bribery.
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6. Saigon+YD[view] [source] 2023-05-12 03:52:07
>>gavinh+Gx
I was able to immigrate to Vietnam and set myself up without bribery. I've been here 10 years.

Mainly it was a matter of learning how to do the paperwork properly. Some people here pay bribes, others refuse to. I won't claim everything here is magically ideal, but as a general rule if you don't put yourself in situations where you need to pay bribes, you won't have to pay them. Mostly simple things like getting a driver's license if you're going to drive, maintaining your vehicle, and registering your current address.

Foreign residents here do have a bit of a reputation for poor compliance on stuff like this and doing everything the shadiest, laziest, and most fragile way possible.

This situation has improved in recent years -- I currently know maybe 4 or 5 other legal immigrants. We are a minority -- your assumptions about the behavior of the average person who moves here from North America are not entirely without merit, it's just not a universal truth.

Anyway I don't mean to argue with you -- just provide a hopefully interesting slice of life from a different part of the world.

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7. latchk+fK[view] [source] 2023-05-12 04:56:35
>>Saigon+YD
Ha! I moved to Vietnam as well. (in Oct 2016). Only back in the US because I was locked out during covid and ended up changing all my plans and making things work here for now.

I love the ability to just pay the cops off, it is the best corruption ever. Who wants to go to court when you can just settle the matter right then and there for a few bucks. I also have a totally valid drivers license (A2) with my picture super imposed on someone else's head.

I'm curious, how did you immigrate there?

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