I guess he avoided multi-story buildings, so they had to figure out another way to make him "fall."
I guess he avoided multi-story buildings, so they had to figure out another way to make him "fall."
Retired Sailor, Marine dad, semi-professional cyclist, fly fisherman, and Indian School STEM teacher.
Assistant Operating Officer at Farm Soap homemade soaps. www.farmsoap.com
He should have borrowed the presidential train as apparently Vlad’s not a big fan of flying either. I also like the theory that he’s just moved to Vlad’s retirement place in Venezuela or one of Messi’s compounds in Argentina, where he’ll resume his career as head chef to the Kremlin.
https://www.cnn.com/2023/07/10/europ...cmd/index.html
https://www.lbc.co.uk/news/putin-esc...sia-noahs-ark/
rw saunders
hey, how lucky can one man get.
Does a discussion of Prigozhin even belong in this thread? After all, he had a very rational fear of flying...
Greg
Old age and treachery beat youth and enthusiasm every time…
All the larger geopolitical issues aside, it's gotta be sobering for at least the family and friends of the aircrew, who presumably had nothing to do with Prigozhin himself, unwitting pawns entangled in a situation beyond their control.
Sorta, kinda. The plane belonged to Priggo so I'm guessing the crew were on his payroll, that is, not there by accident, not knowing who might be on the flight.
His other plane, however, made it safely to Moscow, which I thought was interesting: clearly, there was no interesting cargo on that flight.
The idea that Priggo faked it was raised amongst my mates, but I think he loves attention too much to even stomach the idea of going dark. Plus, his air force general buddy had already disappeared, so I think it was just a matter of time.
Having seen some photos posted on Twitter, my ex-military buddies were surprised that they could even identify the corpses so quickly.
Chikashi Miyamoto
BA are marvellous when they are good, but when they're not, they're really shit. There's nothing in-between with them. But then, the misfortune of facing Italian ground staff probably didn't help either.
One of the trips to Singapore had our flight circling the airport several times. Is that what's called a go around? I had a head cold which led to excruciating pain in my ears as the cabin pressure changed on approach and kept circling, with, of course, the fasten seat belt sign lit. I think I have a fairly high tolerance for pain, but I had tears in my eyes. I finally called for a flight attendant and asked for a half full cup of hot water to put against my ears. It probably wasn't a very long period, but it seemed like eternity. I think it was the third and last country in three weeks so I was tired already, and that episode really pooped me out. Luckily, the work in Singapore was virtually stress-free, thanks to our people there, but yeah, that ear-ache is very well etched in my memory.
PS, speaking of seatbelts, on another flight (I forget where I was going), the seatbelt sign was off. We suddenly hit some air pocket or whatever (apologies, I have no idea what's what up there) and sent one passenger across the aisle up so high and hard that he hit the overhead storage thingy and cracked open his head. The turbulence was only for a split second. I always have my seatbelt on when I'm in my seat, and I have not changed my procedure after seeing that episode.
Chikashi Miyamoto
Flight was going from Moscow to St. Petersburg. Friend in Prague says rumor there is speed of recovery on the ground was such that there must have been a team already out waiting. And that possible missile trail in original video suggests that footage might have been shot from missile launch site. And that Prigozhin and co. were dead already to ensure no survivors possible.
Dan Fuller, local bicycle enthusiast
Chikashi Miyamoto
"Don't insult the alligator until you've crossed the river."
Jay Dwight
"When you tweak the tail of a tiger, you better have a plan to deal with his teeth".
+/- 4,800 pilots suspected of falsifying their medical records…VA benefits the key issue…pretty sad.
https://apple.news/AJaxzNfCJRomzlNngKVl6dQ
rw saunders
hey, how lucky can one man get.
I think it's a slippery slope to target pilots for failing to report issues that likely existed when they were flying in the military. It would be easy to rationalize that if they could land a Hornet on a pitching carrier deck, they could land a 737 on a long runway.
For their claims and disability payments, I think there's an issue with how Veterans are handled and encouraged to report every minor condition when they leave active duty. The system compares the person who joined the military to the person leaving active duty, even if decades have passed. Everything wrong with a Veteran is because of his/her military service. When I retired, the DAV enrolled me in the VA and had power of attorney to handle my claim with the VA. The VFW does the same thing. I got a kick out of the article quoting an American Legion person when most of their members cannot join the VFW because they never saw combat or were forward deployed. I am a life member of the American Legion because they helped my son get into the Naval Academy. I am also a life member of the VFW and an officer at my local post.
Retired Sailor, Marine dad, semi-professional cyclist, fly fisherman, and Indian School STEM teacher.
Assistant Operating Officer at Farm Soap homemade soaps. www.farmsoap.com
Yes, they do tend to be pretty well loaded. However, it doesn't take a lot of boxes to pay for the flight. There's a lot of money in freight. When Fedex has a really bad quarter, it's still a really good quarter compared to the companies who fly the other kind of cargo, self loading cargo.
Earl Glazer
Delta flight #79 from Prague to JFK experiences an engine failure on takeoff.
rw saunders
hey, how lucky can one man get.
Old age and treachery beat youth and enthusiasm every time…
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