Correct. This is a problem with men and women across the West and has been for awhile. Arrested development, delayed family formation, if ever. It's almost as if they have been fed a steady diet of "encouragement" that this is the most high status, desirable lifestyle for at least a generation or two...
@Breaking911 It's amazing that people feel this emboldened to act like this in public without fear of having an encounter with law enforcement and lasting repercussions. I guess kind of a theme of the last 6 years or so.
Look buddy there's several examples in aviation crash history where passengers have been unable to exit the plane quickly during an emergency due to obstacles in the cabin preventing them. You also can't brace yourself properly on the seat in front of you if it's reclined. You don't want to add anything like not being able to get out of your row quickly when seconds may mean living or dying in a panic inducing emergency. Google UA232 for an example.
There's a saying in aviation: "checklists are written in blood." If there's a rule, it usually means someone died because of it.
But I think you know this, you're just trying to be purposely obtuse on the internet.
@go_demarest@michellebackus_ Well, aviation experts, there you go, Steve from Coeur D'Alene, has done his research and spoken. Let's just get rid of this pesky useless rule.
@TheRetroSlayer It was light years ahead! Ferrari F40 vs Porsche 959. Radar detectors, running from the cops. My favorite driving game from that era. The Amiga version, which my uncle had, had groundbreaking graphics and sound for the time.
https://t.co/uAsLiQAvAI
This is a major theme I've realized lately: once major changes are codified by Congress, they become nearly impossible to reverse or even reform. The bureaucracy absorbs them, expands them, and institutionalizes them, often far beyond the original mandate.
We are very good at creating systems and very bad at rolling them back. Visa programs, "temporary" Covid-era voting changes, Homeland Security, you name it.
Our system seems built for only managing moderate disagreements within a shared consensus. Of course, the problem is that we no longer have that consensus.
@oldyzach I know it may be hard for young sim racers to understand, but this was pretty much revolutionary when it came out in terms of both graphics and gameplay. I cannot tell you how many hours I spent on this thing--with a joystick!--thinking it felt so "realistic".