Rebuttal Planefan25

Human lives are more important than money. Most would say this, but when it comes to aviation there seems to be a disconnect to the rest of society. People seem to think it’s a natural consequence of innovation. When in reality it doesn’t have to be.      

Venture capitalists are calling death a natural consequence of innovation. They compare a human life to their monetary value when discussing the risks. They say that the way the government puts value on human life is too high. Right now the value of life statistic(VSL) is $12.5 million dollars, it’s supposed to be the average amount of money an American makes in their life. The opposition claims that this is too high because as the Federal Aviation Administration calculates the possible amount of money lost if a plane crashes the number becomes extraordinarily high causing the FAA to pass regulation even if just one plane is saved.  They say this price encourages the FAA to enact laws that contain insanely hard to reach goals and that it’s halting innovation. From their perspective the risk of death isn’t worth the high cost of investing. They compare aviation regulation to the regulation controlling cars being extremely loose. 

First of all innovation doesn’t have to be deadly, at all. The Airbus A380 has the highest passenger capacity we’ve ever seen. Yet it still has no fatalities associated with it. We still haven’t been able to fully utilize the aircraft. Only major international airports with long runways and large enough fuel networks can handle it. There is no reason to develop larger aircrafts because we have a large aircraft we just don’t use it. Other areas of innovation like speed and fuel efficiency are different. But we had planes like the Concorde that ended up being phased out due to noise pollution, fuel efficiency, and costs. It had one major crash caused by debris on the runway, not even caused by mechanical failure, and it was abandoned. The article argues that we encourage manufacturers to just re-release previous versions. Yes, we do but for a good reason. We know that the fundamental mechanics of that aircraft work safely so why change it? Improving the Concorde or A380 is safer because they haven’t failed us. Starting over would only lead to more costs, testing, regulation and death. No one is arguing against improvements, we are arguing against innovation for the sake of being new, not improving.

Putting a human life to a monetary value is necessary but it shouldn’t be the only factor. Each human life is important, everybody deserves a chance to go about life without the fear of dying. While it is important when discussing the economy we can’t separate the idea that a human’s life doesn’t deserve to be cut short for innovation, especially passengers who are unaware. The consequences of valuing life lower than it already is could be detrimental to society. A person is a person with their own life experiences, family, job and goals no matter if you are in their life or not. You can’t separate that even in scenarios where logic is the main component.

Comparing aviation to cars is unfair and disrespectful, planes were developed to be amazing feats of engineering. Taking that and saying we should treat plane regulation like we treat our regulation on cars taints the reputation we have built. Firstly planes carry so many more people in one trip so when they fail it is so much more devastating. We can’t treat them like a car that only carries about 4 people. Behind the wheel you are also in control of your vehicle or you trust the person who is. But when you get on a plane you have most likely never met the pilot. Despite this you know that they have gone through years of training to be in the position they are in. There are reasons we are so strict on planes, especially commercial, we have set a safety record that people trust in. Without that trust aviation is nothing.

So no we should not encourage the government to ease up on policies slowing down innovation. There is way too much risk associated with doing so and lowering the cost of a human life to fit investors standards is dangerous. No one expects that they will be on the next plane that crashes, because it happens so little, we need to keep it that way. Opening the door for sketchy companies to make the planes we need to keep us safe is a recipe for disaster. 

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2 Responses to Rebuttal Planefan25

  1. davidbdale's avatar davidbdale says:

    Human lives are more important than money. Most would say this, but when it comes to aviation there seems to be a disconnect to the rest of society. People seem to think it’s a natural consequence of innovation. When in reality it doesn’t have to be.

    —What’s a natural consequence of innovation?:
    —1. What people would say?
    —2. That human lives are important?
    —3. That aviation is disconnected from society?

  2. davidbdale's avatar davidbdale says:

    They compare a human life to their monetary value when discussing the risks.

    —You mean they measure a human life in dollars.

    We need a quote if you’ve got one.

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