What will keep the US Hawks from becoming another USHPA or HGAA?
You will ... hopefully. The price of freedom is eternal vigilance. Everyone has to do their part once in a while.
And be prepared to do it alone.
If you see something that's not being done correctly, then it's your duty to speak out.
FYI: You're making Sam's decision to ban you from the SW Texas forum look better all the time.
And I now see that when someone "Searches TadEareckson's posts" TadEareckson's SW Texas forum posts are no longer to be found. How convenient!
One big difference between the US Hawks and other organizations is that the US Hawks really does honor the free speech of its members.
As long as your free speech isn't critical of the practices of other members and...
I'm asking you to stop using words that can't be used during prime-time broadcast television.
...would be approved by the FCC (and Jerry Falwell) for prime-time broadcast television (although promoting practices, operations, schools, and instructors likely to get people killed is perfectly OK).
Will the US Hawks try to replace USHPA or the HGAA?
No. I started the HGAA because I wanted pilots to have choices. Eliminating USHPA (or the HGAA) would reduce our choices and that's never been my goal. Pilots who like USHPA should have USHPA.
Rock solid and becoming more so with each passing hour.
Pilots who like the HGAA should have the HGAA.
Dead as the Dodo.
And pilots who like the US Hawks should have the US Hawks. As I said when founding the HGAA, more choices gives us a better chance of each pilot finding an organization that they like. Hopefully those organizations (USHPA, HGAA, US Hawks) will all work together to make our sport better.
Does ANYBODY still think the USHPA or SGAA has the slightest interest in doing that?
They each appeal to different kinds of pilots and that's likely to give us more total pilots participating in our national organizations.
Of the people who fly hang gliders only a microscopic percentage are pilots.
Win. Win. Win. I hope the US Hawks' relationships with USHPA and the HGAA will be positive.
I hope the precise opposite.
How will the US Hawks try to be different from USHPA or the HGAA?
The US Hawks will try to be more of a grass roots organization - more like the start of hang gliding.
At its start hang gliding was saturated with developers, experimenters, and innovators. Now it's almost entirely stupid clones who've had everything - including large servings of crap - handed to them on silver platters and have no concept of evolution and no interest in understanding why things are as they are now. We shouldn't be expecting much.
There's nothing wrong with the strong central control exhibited by other organizations...
And US Hawks which just celebrated its first birthday as a dictatorship.
...but the US Hawks will appeal to pilots who want more local control...
By local dictators.
...and greater personal participation in decision making.
Good luck.
We believe that good decisions sometimes require a significant effort to dig into the facts.
Sam Kellner - 2010/03/28
Yeah, I don't even read all of those long winded "explanations".
Unless that effort requires more than sixty seconds of reading and thinking.
Sometimes arguments are heated, and that's not something to be feared or rejected. That's the process - painful or not - that leads to better decisions.
Sam Kellner - 2011/08/08
Let's promote the HG brotherhood. Let's respect the forum and BobK.
Unless they create disharmony affecting the Hang Gliding Brotherhood, the Forum, and its Leader.
Petr - 2011/07/25
It is now only a little more than a week ago that I met Keavy at Ridgely and took an early morning tandem flight with Adam, being towed up behind her small plane. After a couple of years, returning to a hang glider for what I though would be one flight was really exciting and I was happy to see that my old HG flying instincts were coming back. Nevertheless, what really changed my mind so that I signed up for more after landing was the good vibe I got from people at Highlands, the sense of camaraderie, joy of flying and professionalism that exuded from all of them.
Camaraderie - surefire ticket to professionalism and competence. The Highland Aerosports model is DEFINITELY the one we wanna be shooting for. And if you need any tips on dealing with threats to camaraderie I can't recommend a better authority than Adam Elchin.