Tuesday, May 7, 2019

I think you are going to see many more airline passengers injured by turbulence this century and after

Why?

If you study Global Warming, what happens in Global warming???

Heat rises faster and faster and this creates faster and faster winds and updrafts and downdrafts and this creates more and more turbulence than we saw in the 20th century. Because of this it is vital if you are not walking to the bathroom or back on a passenger plane that you wear your seat belt loosely so you don't injure yourself or (crash the plane) if Everyone isn't wearing a seat belt and they all piled up either in the front or side or back of the plane during extreme turbulence. But, in turbulence this bad where piles of people are thrown a specific place after bouncing hard off the ceilings or walls most of them would be dead at this point. So, it is better to wear your seat belt loosely. You will notice in turbulence that stewards and stewardesses fly up and hit the ceiling and fall down on passengers. This is actually quite common flying over the Pacific ocean if you are going to Hawaii from the U.S. or from San Francisco or other west coast city to Any asian landing field.

So, even more important to buckle up loosely when flying across the Pacific. The flight I'm thinking about where the stewardess hit the ceiling and came down on top of passengers was about 1989 I believe. So, it might be worse now. My worst flight was from Incheon to San Francisco (S. Korea to San Francisco with 9 hours of constant up and down and sideways. When they served my meal the forks and spoons and glasses went through the air and got stuck in the empty seat next to me. I told the stewardesses that the electric sleeping seats next to me in business class likely wouldn't work because silverware went down inside the mechanism but I'm not sure she understood me because English was obviously her 2nd language. I finally had to go to the bathroom or wet my seat so I just took my seat belt off and walked and she said " sit down" and I said "If I do I'll wet my seat. I can't wait any more for the turbulence to stop!" So, I bounced off the walls in the bathroom for awhile and then bounced back to my electric sleeping seat in business class and put my seat belt on. The business men in Business class seemed to take the insane bouncing in stride like this was normal or something. This actually made it easier to deal with in the end not to have women around screaming from the insanity of it all. It sort of made me want to never fly all the way across the Pacific Ocean to S. Korea ever again.

This was only 2 or 3 years ago.

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