Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wait so are they still in the plane?
Because they have to make sure the power is off.
They have to send people up to test that and ground the lines (IDK what that means but I read it).
They have to secure the plane to the tower before attempting removal.
They have to get the equipment to do these things.
I don't understand the ageism and "sue the pilot" talk. Apparently he crashed where he did to avoid hitting a neighborhood. 65 isn't exactly at death's door. Maybe he was drunk or whatever, but maybe he had a plane malfunction. Isn't that far more likely? Yes, it's irritating to lose power. But these things happen. Have some compassion. Or go to a hotel in VA.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://twitter.com/PatrickMerkle/
Make sure you click over to the tweets and replies page.
Anonymous wrote:https://twitter.com/PatrickMerkle/
Anonymous wrote:Wait so are they still in the plane?
Anonymous wrote:https://twitter.com/PatrickMerkle/
Anonymous wrote:Wait so are they still in the plane?
Anonymous wrote:Plane may be a piper cherokee so this isn’t someone’s first plane nor is it a starter plane like a Cessna 152
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They haven’t been rescued. They’ll need to shut down the power to the lines first. Can’t believe they’ve been hanging there 3 hours. They must be cold.
Poor them. Just like the people whose houses now have no heat thanks to them knocking out the power. Or the patients that can't go to the MedStar Montgomery ER because it's on "mini disaster" mode.
So I agree that this situation is inconvenient for a lot of people, but....
It is 50 degrees outside. Nobody who would otherwise have heat is freezing. Nobody is unable to get medical treatment.
I could be interpreting you wrong, but are you blaming the people in that plane?
Yes. Occam's razor from the flight path suggests that the pilot screwed up the landing approach and came in too low which took him into a power line. The pilot is easy to find on Google since they released the registration number. He has previous form for crashing a plane in the '90s due to (wait for it) flying too low.
Well how old is this dude now?
In his 60s.
The dude is 65, an arrogant lawyer-type who looks in his Twitter pic like he thinks he's hot shit. Had a 66-year-old Grandma as a passenger.
Well, another lawyer famously crashed his plane into the ocean 20-some years ago. But no one was inconvenienced back then, save for the rescue crews..
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They haven’t been rescued. They’ll need to shut down the power to the lines first. Can’t believe they’ve been hanging there 3 hours. They must be cold.
Poor them. Just like the people whose houses now have no heat thanks to them knocking out the power. Or the patients that can't go to the MedStar Montgomery ER because it's on "mini disaster" mode.
So I agree that this situation is inconvenient for a lot of people, but....
It is 50 degrees outside. Nobody who would otherwise have heat is freezing. Nobody is unable to get medical treatment.
I could be interpreting you wrong, but are you blaming the people in that plane?
Yes. Occam's razor from the flight path suggests that the pilot screwed up the landing approach and came in too low which took him into a power line. The pilot is easy to find on Google since they released the registration number. He has previous form for crashing a plane in the '90s due to (wait for it) flying too low.
Well how old is this dude now?
In his 60s.
The dude is 65, an arrogant lawyer-type who looks in his Twitter pic like he thinks he's hot shit. Had a 66-year-old Grandma as a passenger.
Well, another lawyer famously crashed his plane into the ocean 20-some years ago. But no one was inconvenienced back then, save for the rescue crews..
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They haven’t been rescued. They’ll need to shut down the power to the lines first. Can’t believe they’ve been hanging there 3 hours. They must be cold.
Poor them. Just like the people whose houses now have no heat thanks to them knocking out the power. Or the patients that can't go to the MedStar Montgomery ER because it's on "mini disaster" mode.
So I agree that this situation is inconvenient for a lot of people, but....
It is 50 degrees outside. Nobody who would otherwise have heat is freezing. Nobody is unable to get medical treatment.
I could be interpreting you wrong, but are you blaming the people in that plane?
Yes. Occam's razor from the flight path suggests that the pilot screwed up the landing approach and came in too low which took him into a power line. The pilot is easy to find on Google since they released the registration number. He has previous form for crashing a plane in the '90s due to (wait for it) flying too low.
Well how old is this dude now?
In his 60s.