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Nov. 17, 2023 - Radio Renaissance - Jared Taylor
15:25
Think Twice Before You Fly
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Hello, I'm Jared Taylor with American Results.
The internet censors are going to hate this video.
So if you like it, please send the link to all your favorite liberals.
There hasn't been a fatal commercial airline accident in the U.S. since 2009.
We're due for one.
We're due for a lot.
The New York Times has published the results of its own study that found 300 near collisions in the most recent year for which there were data.
Over the last 10 years, that number has more than doubled.
Incompetent air traffic controllers are a big part of the problem.
Controllers tell pilots which runways to use, when to take off and land, and where to fly.
If a controller gets it wrong, he can tell two planes to smash into each other, like a case from New Orleans this summer.
A controller...
The Green plane told the Green plane coming in from the left to land on the same runway from which the Purple plane was about to take off.
The Green plane aborted the landing and just avoided crashing into the Purple plane.
In July, a controller told an Allegiant Air Flight, cruising at 23,000 feet, to turn right into the path of another plane.
The pilot had to make such a violent turn that a flight attendant fell and was injured so badly the pilot had to land so she could get medical treatment.
Passengers on board were
A U.S. senator thinks he knows why there is so much incompetence.
Yes. DEI.
I will explain.
Air traffic controllers work for the FAA, or Federal Aviation Administration, which is part of the Department of Transportation.
Too many controllers are white.
And so, in 2012, our black president, Barack Obama, ordered our Hispanic Transportation Secretary, Michael Huerta, to order the FAA to solve that awful problem.
Secretary Huerta ordered a barrier analysis report.
You see, if there aren't enough blacks, or women, it's always because of malicious barriers.
The very first sentence of the report says that the Secretary made an historic commitment to transform the Federal Aviation Administration into a more diverse and inclusive workplace that reflects, understands, and relates to the diverse customers we serve.
When you fly, you never see a controller.
Controllers never see you, but they must reflect.
Understand and relate.
The racism detectors found what they were looking for.
White people and Asians were scoring too high on the controller aptitude test, called the ATSAT, and they were getting better.
More troubling, there is evidence that the percentage of people scoring 85 or higher on the ATSAT in certain RNO classifications, that means race and national origin, has been steadily increasing over the last three years
at a higher rate than ATSAT.
White people were pulling ahead.
Here is proof of racism.
The percentages of various groups that scored 85 or better out of 100 on the ATSAT.
The previous three years had been grim.
Look at those pesky whites.
In 2009, 68% scored 85 or better.
And in the next years, it was 74% and then 78%.
And look at blacks poking along at 37%, 36%, 38%.
Asians were another disaster.
And, uh-oh!
Women in red scored worse than men in orange.
So the ATSAT was racist and sexist.
Look at the subject tests, dial reading, applied math, angles, air traffic scenarios.
These are all spatial mathematical tests.
Men are better at them than women, and whites and Asians are much better at them than blacks.
So the barrier analysts did what good barrier analysts do.
They declared that the ATSAT is a barrier to RNO and gender diversity.
So, in 2014, the FAA ditched the ATSAT, which it had used for decades, and told all the people who had scored 85 or better and were waiting for a job offer that they had to take a brand new test called the Biographical Assessment.
This was an online personality test of 114 questions.
It asked such things as the number of different high school sports you played, the number of college credit hours you had in art, music, dance, or drama, whether you had a job in any of the last three years.
It was graded pass-fail according to mysterious, never-acknowledged criteria.
My guess is that if you played a lot of sports and took no art classes, you were more likely to be black.
So you passed.
The first year of the new test, 28,000 people took it and only 2,200 passed.
They were then invited to the FAA Air Traffic Control School in Oklahoma City.
If you failed the biographical assessment, too bad.
Imagine the fury of people who scored well on the ATSAT but failed this fluffy, nonsense test.
Most of them had gone through two- or four-year college-level air traffic training at 36 schools officially approved for affiliation with the FAA.
Many had huge student debts.
More than 2,600 top-scoring candidates, overwhelmingly white, were purged from the list of highly qualified potential hires.
According to this article, a number of veteran working controllers took the test to see what it was like.
They failed.
But wait, there's more.
Black Union lobbied for new air traffic tests, then helped its members cheat on it.
There is something called the National Black Coalition of Federal Aviation Employees.
It claims to be in the business of promoting equal opportunities.
Well, we know what that means.
The black coalition had been screaming for the new test.
The trouble is the test couldn't come right out and ask, are you black?
That would be too blatant.
Instead, it asked about art and sports, and black test takers might give the wrong answers.
The inspector general of the Department of Transportation found that the FAA fed the right answers to the black coalition, which fed them to black test takers so they could cheat.
And, of course, lie if they had taken art and played no sports.
It's a crime to cheat on a federal exam or help someone cheat.
But there was no punishment.
This guy, Joseph Teixeira, resigned from the FAA and the cheating scandal disappeared like the morning mist.
But he left behind such a stink that in 2015, the Mountain States Legal Foundation filed Brigitte VFAA, which became a class-action suit.
The named plaintiff, Andrew Brigitte, shown here with one of his lawyers, graduated from Arizona State University's FAA-approved aviation program, scored a perfect 100 on the ACSAT, and washed out on the biographical assessment.
More than 2,000 other plaintiffs have joined the case.
In 2020, federal judge Dabney Friedrich found that the plaintiff has alleged sufficient facts to satisfy the intentional discrimination element of this hiring preference claim.
Intentional discrimination.
These lads should get fat settlements.
In the meantime, the FAA doesn't have enough controllers.
As you can see from this graph in 2013, in anticipation of its nifty Keep Out Whitey test being introduced the next year, it cut hiring, and the number of controllers fell.
However, it turned out that these off-the-street diversity hires, who had played sports and took no art classes, washed out of the FAA's own training school, while those thousands of white high-scorers looked for other jobs.
Post-COVID air travel has come roaring back, but there aren't enough controllers.
According to this article, when you hear flight delays blamed on weather or the airlines, the problem is often overworked, overwhelmed air traffic control.
The big New York Times investigation I mentioned earlier found that of the 313 air traffic facilities in the country, only three were fully staffed.
The New York regional facility, for example, is short hundreds of controllers and is operating at just over 50% recommended staffing.
The Times quotes anonymous burnt-out controllers.
The staffing shortage is beyond unsustainable.
It has now moved into a phase of just plain dangerous.
Also, controllers are making mistakes left and right.
Fatigue is extreme.
This is a 4,000-word article.
Guess how many words were about the thousands of top-qualified candidates who were frozen out because they were white?
Zero. And how about the black cheaters?
Can't mention that.
This is the newspaper of record, after all.
FAA bureaucrats haven't given up.
Here is a recent FAA meeting that Fox News got hold of.
Is this lady saying that inclusion is more important than safety or just equally important?
It's interesting because safety is, you know, separate from the mission, but is more integral to any mission, to any technical goal, any objective than diversity and equity and inclusion in particular.
So how do we make them more the same?
Either way, inclusion is integral and into a mess that even the New York Times recognizes could kill people.
Whom should Joe Biden nominate to run the FAA?
Why, a certified ignoramus named Philip Washington, but he's a black ignoramus and inclusion is integral.
Here are highlights from his Senate hearing last March.
So, Mr. Washington, can you quickly tell me what airspace requires an ADS-B transponder?
Not sure I can answer that question right now.
That's okay.
We'll just keep going.
So, that's a pretty important part.
So, what are the six types of special use airspace that protect this national security that appear on FAA charts?
Sorry, Senator.
I cannot answer that question.
Okay. So, what are the operational limitations of a pilot flying under?
Basic Med.
Senator, I'm not a pilot, so...
But obviously, you'd never see the Federal Aviation Administration, so any idea what those restrictions are under Basic Med, quickly?
Well, some of the restrictions, I think, would be high blood pressure.
Some of them would be...
It's more like how many passengers per airplane, how many pounds in different categories, and what altitude you can fly under.
and then amount of knots, it's under 250 knots.
So it's not having anything to do with blood pressure.
So can you tell me what causes an aircraft to spin or to stall?
This went on for a while, and the candidate couldn't answer a single question.
He withdrew his nomination.
When this guy was running the Los Angeles Metro, he said, everything we do in terms of mobility, we look through the lens of equity.
As part of his job at the Denver airport, he changed the contract bidding process to emphasize equity.
He also spent millions of dollars to build a Hall of Equity.
And what you see here are a few of the artist's conceptions of how the place will celebrate discrimination against white people.
So you can see why Joe Biden loved him and why I wouldn't put him in charge of a lemonade stand.
But Phil got a consolation prize.
In August, Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg appointed him as one of 24 members of the Advisory Committee on Transportation Equity, where he will be giving sage advice on the safe, efficient, sustainable, and equitable movement of people and goods.
Does equitable mean BIPOCs get there quicker than white people?
Here are the wise and happy 24 who will be sniffing out racism and analyzing barriers.
Finding a white man among them is like playing Quares Wall.
Of course, standards everywhere are crumbling because BIPOCs can't meet them.
Just last month, we got Dim, incompetent, black social workers.
But at least their mistakes won't destroy two airplanes and kill 500 people.
Our rulers don't usually patronize social workers, but they do ride in airplanes.
So I thought this foolishness would never make it into the life-or-death jobs.
Haha, silly me!
In 2021, we got United Airlines vows 50% of new pilots hired will be women or minorities to reflect passenger diversity.
Who's going to reflect the passengers who are children or blind or who don't know left from right?
And in case you were wondering, there are already 52 medical schools that no longer require applicants to take the Medical College Aptitude Test or MCAT because, well, you know why.
Here are just a few of the 52. You might print out this list and check it every time you see a young doctor.
Last I heard, the country was still majority white, but not for long.
If things are this bad now, imagine what the country will be like with BIPOCs in complete control.
Good luck, America!
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