520 - Would You Get On This Plane?

MGTOW Sandman Quotes - Podcast tekijän mukaan Mgtow

Sponsor Link Money Line Investmentshttps://www.moneylineinvestments.com/The mother daughter pilots forging a path for female aviatorshttps://www.cnn.com/travel/article/do...Mystery link:    • How Women Compete For Partners - Joyc...  Rumble: https://rumble.com/c/c-2039428Odysee.TV: https://odysee.com/@SandmanMGTOW:cBitchute Link: https://www.bitchute.com/channel/YIxe...Sandman 2:    / @sandman2317  Twitter:   / sandmanmgtow  SubscribeStar.com: https://www.subscribestar.com/sandmanPaypal / Email: Sandmanmgtow @ Gmail.comBitcoin Address: bc1qtkeru8ygglfq36eu544hxw6n9hsh22l7fkf8uvHi Everyone Sandman Here,This video is brought to you by a donation from Mr. Anonymous. He didn't give me a topic so I wanted to cover this article called: "The mother daughter pilots forging a path for female aviators". This is in line with another story I recently covered with women becoming truckers. I thought this was a new story but apparently it's from a few years back and I missed it. I know a lot of guys get anxious flying these days if there's one woman in the cockpit let alone two of them or two of them that are a mother daughter duo. Someone should ask the question when are these two going to go on lonely fans. I don't think any of us want to see that. The story was originally on CNN and the article. It covers Donna & Suzy Gerrett a mother daughter flying dove duo. Donna's mother as well as her father are pilots. It makes me wonder did her mother get together with her father to help her become a pilot in the first place? You know for mentorship through matrimony. Suzy Garrett, her mother, was one of the first pilots for regional carrier SkyWest. This idea of a man doing something and then the woman following in his footsteps is pretty common. I did the same in the early 2000s when I was building a web business and was working with my girlfriend at that time. As for Skywest their ESG score must be so high that it's up in the air, literally and figuratively. They went viral and passengers were taking pictures with them. Probably some to send their life insurance agent just in case they didn't make it back alive for proof. Flight attendents and rampers were asking for pictures too. I was also right that Suzy looking for a mentor because she was dreaming of becoming a pilot since the 8th grade. What better way then marrying a man that's a pilot that can also help her out. But 30 years ago the landscape of aviation has been dominated by white males and that is little changed she says. 94% of pilots are white and 92.5% are male. That seems to match up with the Statistics that 7-8 percent of long-haul truckers in the United States are women as well. In the trucking video I mentioned earlier one of the truckers, a 36 year old woman had a husband that was also a trucker helping her out. I don't think people understand how important mentorship is for women in such fields. Apparently the number of astronauts is similarwith 90% being male so far. There are now organizations like Sisters of the Skies trying to get scholarships for female pilots as well as mentorship. Good luck in this world of metoo. Now it's never going to happen and I suspect that the number of female pilots may actually fall in the future. Suzy says she never faced discrimination in the cockpit and feels she got the same opportunities as male counterparts. So there you have a woman saying there's no sexism. In fact she probably had tons of men help her out. She says it was mostly the people outside the job, passengers that weren't too happy about flying with a female pilot. I've also noticed the pattern where the father and or mother do something and then their children also tend to go into that field. Of course she would if she has the genetic advantage where both her parents were able to make it in that industry. She probably inherited the same brain. Donna Garrett started flying in college after her father taught her the ropes. So her father mentored her. No risk of sexual misconduct there unless they were flying to Epstein's island or something. The mother daughter flying duo see themselves as a good example to encourage other women to become pilots. Of course they probably won't receive the same mentorship. I'll discuss more in a moment but let me first tell everyone about today's sponsor Moneyline investments:Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/mgtow/donationsAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy

Visit the podcast's native language site