Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So now it has come out that ATC lost contact with the plane "moments" after takeoff. Bizarre that fighter jets weren't sent to investigate sooner. It was allowed to fly up the East Coast and back!
This is what I want to know… if it was flying over DC even near the no-fly zone, why weren’t the jets on it then?
People keep claiming "Oh, you guys think the Air Force is like the avengers." No. I want to know why an unresponsive plane was allowed to fly from Tennessee to Long Island, over very populated cities. I want to know why it didn't not make a scheduled landing and the Air Force didn't scramble jets until 30 minutes later when it was flying over DC. That could've been a bigger tragedy than it was, had it crashed in New York City or in downtown DC. It was flying over Philly, Baltimore...it was a huge risk to people on the ground. How was it flying for several hours without any ATC contact?
JFC. Let it go. It wasn't unresponsive that whole time. And they began to notice and escalate when it didn't do what was expected. The premise of your question is unfounded based on the reporting that's out now. And I get why others are frustrated with the implication of what you might expect folks to do... but short of shooting it down, they both noticed at an appropriate time and did all the things!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So now it has come out that ATC lost contact with the plane "moments" after takeoff. Bizarre that fighter jets weren't sent to investigate sooner. It was allowed to fly up the East Coast and back!
This is what I want to know… if it was flying over DC even near the no-fly zone, why weren’t the jets on it then?
People keep claiming "Oh, you guys think the Air Force is like the avengers." No. I want to know why an unresponsive plane was allowed to fly from Tennessee to Long Island, over very populated cities. I want to know why it didn't not make a scheduled landing and the Air Force didn't scramble jets until 30 minutes later when it was flying over DC. That could've been a bigger tragedy than it was, had it crashed in New York City or in downtown DC. It was flying over Philly, Baltimore...it was a huge risk to people on the ground. How was it flying for several hours without any ATC contact?
Anonymous wrote:The pilot community CA t be bothered explaining all that to you. I could, but it's not worth it.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So now it has come out that ATC lost contact with the plane "moments" after takeoff. Bizarre that fighter jets weren't sent to investigate sooner. It was allowed to fly up the East Coast and back!
This is what I want to know… if it was flying over DC even near the no-fly zone, why weren’t the jets on it then?
People keep claiming "Oh, you guys think the Air Force is like the avengers." No. I want to know why an unresponsive plane was allowed to fly from Tennessee to Long Island, over very populated cities. I want to know why it didn't not make a scheduled landing and the Air Force didn't scramble jets until 30 minutes later when it was flying over DC. That could've been a bigger tragedy than it was, had it crashed in New York City or in downtown DC. It was flying over Philly, Baltimore...it was a huge risk to people on the ground. How was it flying for several hours without any ATC contact?
Anonymous wrote:The pilot community CA t be bothered explaining all that to you. I could, but it's not worth it.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So now it has come out that ATC lost contact with the plane "moments" after takeoff. Bizarre that fighter jets weren't sent to investigate sooner. It was allowed to fly up the East Coast and back!
This is what I want to know… if it was flying over DC even near the no-fly zone, why weren’t the jets on it then?
People keep claiming "Oh, you guys think the Air Force is like the avengers." No. I want to know why an unresponsive plane was allowed to fly from Tennessee to Long Island, over very populated cities. I want to know why it didn't not make a scheduled landing and the Air Force didn't scramble jets until 30 minutes later when it was flying over DC. That could've been a bigger tragedy than it was, had it crashed in New York City or in downtown DC. It was flying over Philly, Baltimore...it was a huge risk to people on the ground. How was it flying for several hours without any ATC contact?
The pilot community CA t be bothered explaining all that to you. I could, but it's not worth it.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So now it has come out that ATC lost contact with the plane "moments" after takeoff. Bizarre that fighter jets weren't sent to investigate sooner. It was allowed to fly up the East Coast and back!
This is what I want to know… if it was flying over DC even near the no-fly zone, why weren’t the jets on it then?
People keep claiming "Oh, you guys think the Air Force is like the avengers." No. I want to know why an unresponsive plane was allowed to fly from Tennessee to Long Island, over very populated cities. I want to know why it didn't not make a scheduled landing and the Air Force didn't scramble jets until 30 minutes later when it was flying over DC. That could've been a bigger tragedy than it was, had it crashed in New York City or in downtown DC. It was flying over Philly, Baltimore...it was a huge risk to people on the ground. How was it flying for several hours without any ATC contact?