We need to build a community before we can exert any influence on anything.
We need to be really sure we know what we're talking about before we even start trying to exert any influence on anything.
A community is a group. Group intelligence is calculated by taking the individual with the lowest IQ and dividing that figure by the number of members. I learned that in an issue of Glider Rider a LONG time ago. And it perfectly explains how we ended up with USHGA, the Oz Report, and the org.
So we gotta be real careful about how we build and structure our community and manage communications. I don't really want Head Trauma over here and policy being determined by taking the midpoint of our opposing positions. We'd end up with a zero every time.
It's easy to dismiss one person as a kook.
So how come this single kook 'caused the whole structure of the national organization to go so totally ballistic two years ago? Rachel Carson was pretty much a lone kook with a typewriter. You know how much damage a lone kook with the email address of a good lawyer can do? Good lawyers commonly cause other people to put guns to their own heads and pull the triggers.
Right now I see about 4 active members in this topic. If that's all we end up with, then it won't matter whether the 4 of us agree or disagree. The outcome will be the same.
That's absolutely wrong. Even on Jack's rag with all of his scumbags busy attacking me I was able to get through to someone on the opposite side of the planet who wasn't even participating in the discussion. Just because what I wrote made sense to him he was able to abort a launch at the last moment upon catching a missed leg loop. Yeah, it wouldn't have killed him if he had gone ahead but the next time he might catch two.
One lone kook who knows what he's talking about and can communicate it is infinitely more valuable that five hundred sheep with excellent social skills.
And one lone kook without all the distracting bleating is probably gonna be even more effective. That's the underlying strategy of Kite Strings. Marc Fink has got plenty of other sandboxes he can pee in without adulterating our message.
From what I know now (which is still fairly limited), I think the straight pin would be superior to a curved one. So on that thin shred of evidence...
This is NOT a thin shred of evidence. This is a SQUARE WHEEL. I knew it was a square wheel the INSTANT I first laid eyes on one. I didn't need to load test it. And whenever I meet a pilot on the flight line I just look at his shoulder. If I see a fat barrel I know it's got a bent pin inside and I know I'm looking at an idiot.
Similarly when I saw my first Wallaby release I didn't hafta wait for it to start killing people to know that it would. And this has absolutely nothing to do with tow experience. It's just common sense.
...I was thinking that maybe a good next step would be to take a look at the existing SOPs...
Nobody's ever looked at the existing SOPs. Nobody makes the slightest effort to comply with them. And they sure as hell weren't gonna give mine a sideways glance. They were too busy figuring out ways to have me killed.
The long term future, of course is more difficult to see because it depends on whether or not we can actually gain a sufficient number of members to make any difference ... in anything!!
One person can make a HUGE difference. Donnell was dismissed as a lone kook and immediately kicked out of the USHGA forum - which was called a magazine back then. So he created his own forum and xeroxed and sent it all over the world and established the global foundation for hang and, later, paragliding towing. The problem was that he actually was a kook but nobody ever fully figured that out - 'cept for Mike Lake and his crowd, and they got silenced and written out of the history.
I think we can provide a forum where all opinions are heard (we're doing that already).
Early today - Greenwich time - one of our Hawks guys made on Jack's rag a recommendation, based solely on his OPINION with nothing it the way of reality to back it up, which has gotten people killed before and will undoubtedly do so again.
I despise opinions. Opinions have killed more people in hang gliding than rotors, dust devils, stalls, lockouts, midairs, and hook-in and sidewire failures combined. I don't wanna hear anyone's opinion on anything and I'll reciprocate by not expressing any of mine. Except, of course, on albino Samoan Unitarian baroque accordion players, their rotten little Cairn Terriers, people who hide them in their attics, and people who don't report people who hide them in their attics. Otherwise I just wanna talk about math, physics, data, history, and serial killers.
We can also pool our collective wisdom...
"Collective wisdom" sounds suspiciously like "group intelligence". See comments above.
But it's clear that right now we can't dictate anything to anyone...
But judges and juries can. That's were most of my money is right now.
Pilots need to think of the US Hawks as a place where they will want to visit because we offer them more views than are tolerated on hanggliding.org or ozreport.com.
In my opinion - oops - the problem is just the opposite. In aviation we should tolerate just one view of a stall. On the Jack and Davis Shows they encourage different views and takes on stalls and tend to ban people with the proper one.
Now in the long run, we will have to face the question as to whether towing systems (like seatbelts and helmets) should be mandated by an organization or not.
I don't know what you mean by that. You don't need a seat belt or helmet to drive a car or fly a glider and you're probably never gonna have one come into play enough to matter. You NEED a towing system to tow - it's already mandated.
Kinda like mandating a glider. If you don't have one you're not gonna be gliding - at least not very well and not for very long, as a lot of people who stand on launch ramps and assume they're hooked in have found out.
We don't mandate glider designs either. We don't specify materials, nose angles, aspect ratios, wingspans, or colors.
We DO mandate MINIMUM STANDARDS for gliders. We mandate minimum strength, stability, handling, and performance standards. That's why, outside of the odd tumble, a risk we all sign on to for the privilege of flying hang gliders, nobody's scared of the gliders and they tend not to kill us unless we give them a lot of help.
We also mandate minimum standards for the thing that points the glider in the right direction to get it back on the ground in one piece.
But we don't have ANY meaningful minimum standards for tow systems. And you don't hafta search more than about a page back on ANY glider forum to understand that, consequently, EVERYBODY is, justifiably, scared SHITLESS of them.
We don't even really hafta write the standards. Sir Isaac Newton did a pretty good job of that three hundred years ago. We just need to express them in short sentences using words of two or fewer syllables so pilots can understand them - as I did two years ago - then decide whether we're gonna start enforcing them ourselves or continue to let Mother Nature do the job.
I'd offer an opinion on that issue but I've already gone over my quota on this post.
P.S. Speaking of guns and seat belts... The guy holding a gun to your head is not necessarily your enemy. I had a guy point a gun at my head, write a twenty-five dollar ticket, and tell me to buckle up before I resumed my trip. I am now more likely to do what I should be doing in part because that guy is probably still out there and, if not, I know he's got friends.