Submitted by DiamondPittcairn t3_11u3grk in nottheonion
Wienerwrld t1_jcmb5za wrote
Some of those planes climbed and dove several times before crashing. I can’t imagine the terror.
ooDymasOo t1_jcn65uy wrote
“Boeing has argued that this is speculative, and that damages shouldn’t be awarded for “pre-impact fright and terror.” An expert in human factors and aerospace physiology hired by Boeing countered the above by arguing the following:
“While passengers undoubtedly perceived the flight as scary, humans have a tendency to hold on to hope and not expect the worst. Ultimately, it is impossible to know the subjective experience of each occupant””
Zacolian t1_jcnmyjy wrote
As a plane crash survivor I can tell you right now this is bullshit. When that thing is going down I was confident I was going to die, even though I’m clearly here today.
JackKovack t1_jcnx3xx wrote
Shit, what plane crash were you in?
bloodmonarch t1_jcnz97r wrote
The one whete he survives.
supersalad51 t1_jcpahsg wrote
I think it was the Lost one
JackKovack t1_jcph41s wrote
THE LOST ONE!!!!! AHHH!
[deleted] t1_jcuy6hd wrote
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AceBalistic t1_jdk8u3x wrote
What plane did you crash in?
Elmodogg t1_jcn7587 wrote
If it is impossible to know the subjective experience of each occupant, how can Boeing be so sure that they weren't suffering the worst terror and anguish until the moment of impact?
tdupbeats t1_jcnhb3v wrote
They don’t… burden of proof though. It’s a shitty thing to argue, but I guess they weighed the cost of paying for the suffering vs. the hit their image would take for making the argument.
SilasX t1_jcujtwr wrote
It’s a weaker burden in a civil case though, just “more likely than not”. So, if “we really can’t know” then we should assume the average response to flight terror, not the lowest.
Wienerwrld t1_jcn6xr6 wrote
Unconscionable.
ChrisFromIT t1_jco2g8o wrote
>Ultimately, it is impossible to know the subjective experience of each occupant””
If only they were still here, they would be able to tell us.
O wait, they can't, because they are fucking dead Boeing. Dead because of you, Boeing.
Fuck Boeing.
JackKovack t1_jcnwsmc wrote
Woo! This is like a ride! Haha haha, this is fun. Oh, we’re going down fast wahoo! We’ll be fine. Says the lawyer.
Busty_Superhero t1_jco9xgc wrote
This is moral fuckery. Even an optimist, holding on to hope, would be suffering during a flight crash. The tendency to believe you’ll live doesn’t mean you don’t feel absolute terror during a life-or-death situation.
TheDwarvenGuy t1_jcnbsum wrote
For all we know it could've been like a fun roller coaster ride for them before the end
CatAvailable3953 t1_jcqju1r wrote
As a retired aircraft accident investigator I find Boeing’s position reprehensible but not surprising. It’s a corporation. Not a person. Money is the only objective.
Antibotics t1_jcte3f3 wrote
>It’s a corporation. Not a person.
Indeed, except corporations are made of people, so each one of those individuals who contributed to the problem is actually responsible (morally, if not legally).
Hiding behind the corporation is a cop out. I'm sure the individual people at Boeing who made or contributed to the decisions that led to all the suffering and eventual deaths can morally excuse their actions by saying it was the company and not themselves who did it.
[deleted] t1_jcpq51l wrote
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trickster55 t1_jd0ea6b wrote
sociopath moment
NofksgivnabtLIFE t1_jcmv4fu wrote
As someone who doesn't fly but did for sick parents turbulence had me speaking to a higher power to cut it out. I wasn't on one of those though as for sure would be scared to the point of being passed out probably.
washington_jefferson t1_jcn1kzl wrote
> I don't usually fly, but I made an exception when my sick parents needed me. During the flight, the turbulence was so bad that I found myself praying for it to stop. Although I wasn't on a flight like that again, I know I would be extremely frightened and possibly even pass out if I experienced such turbulence again.
-- ChatGPT Bot (Beep-Bop)
[deleted] t1_jcner2j wrote
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