A Boeing quality engineer went public Tuesday with damaging allegations that the jet-maker took manufacturing shortcuts to increase production rates that leave potentially serious structural flaws on its 787 and 777 widebody planes.
The Boeing engineer, Sam Salehpour, alleged that almost 1,000 787s and about 400 777s currently flying are at risk of premature fatigue damage and structural failure.
Busses. Bikes. Trains. Boats.
By the way, busses create greenhouse gasses. If we need to get carbon emissions to zero, and you take the bus, by your own logic, you are a murderer. Stew on that for a bit.
Plenty of busses run on city electric grids. But you're right, we need to make all busses electric and make the electricity renewable. Its not OK to burn a gram of fossil fuels.
Well gee wiz, I sure hope you're ensuring any and all of your electricity is coming from renewable sources without emissions. That coal stuff is pretty nasty! Otherwise you'd be a bit of a hypocrite every time you posted something here, wouldn't you?
Bike trip would take weeks, bus trip several days, have you heard of the train system in the US? And if it's across land, well, guess I can't take a boat! Guess what that leaves?
What would you suggest in this case, o' paragon of virtue?
Do you have a job? Is it feasible for you to ride your bike for weeks to get to commitments? Or are you, as the other commenter said, speaking from a very, very privileged position?
I've traveled across the US by bus, train, and bicucle. Im quite familiar with those methods of transport, yes. I recommend trains.
If you can't make it to your comittments with reasonable methods of public transportation you have too many comittments.
Adjust your life to what is sustainable. Don't try to fit a square peg in a circular hole. If you are invited to some event that's thousands of miles away, say you can't go because its too far.
Traveled across the US by bus?! Sorry, I'm not interested in the opinions of mass murderers. I weep for your victims. Somebody bring out the guillotine.
And that's a "no" on the full-time job, then?