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1. sys327+BM1[view] [source] 2025-11-05 15:23:42
>>jnsaff+(OP)
In 1986, I lived a mile or so from where a mid-air collision sent a DC-9 crashing into a neighborhood, which killed 15 people on the ground: https://www.presstelegram.com/2016/08/30/cerritos-plane-cras...

Every time I board a plane, I think what a crazy thing I am doing, but then I remember that I could be safe and snug in my house and still be in a plane crash.

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2. dmd+PN1[view] [source] 2025-11-05 15:29:54
>>sys327+BM1
> Every time I board a plane, I think what a crazy thing I am doing, but then I remember that I could be safe and snug in my house

To be fair, statistically, your living room is far more dangerous than the cabin of an airplane.

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3. coddin+bP1[view] [source] 2025-11-05 15:35:07
>>dmd+PN1
Forgive me, but by what possible metric: miles traveled in it?
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4. flobos+oQ1[view] [source] 2025-11-05 15:40:38
>>coddin+bP1
> by what possible metric

Micromorts, maybe? https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Micromort

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5. rogerr+bU1[view] [source] 2025-11-05 15:55:50
>>flobos+oQ1
The relevant bits here - deaths from all causes in the US are 22 micromorts per day. Lower in the article, airline travel is listed as 1 micromort per 1000 miles travelled.

Background risk of death from non-natural causes are listed as 1.6 per day; many of those non-natural causes do not exist in an airplane cabin (e.g. you probably aren't going to be murdered because no one has anything more effective than a plastic spork, you probably aren't going to kill yourself, you probably won't be hit by a car). So it seems reasonable to say that being inside an airliner cabin is safer than being outside of one.

Also, this is probably confounded by many super-old or super-sick people not choosing to fly - if you are in an airliner, you are probably healthier than the average person.

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