There’s a place in France where you can get strapped under a blimp. They then give you some paddels and you can controll every movement (up, down, sideways, front, back) with these. It’s probably the closest we humans will ever get to actually flying by ourselves. And yes, I learned that from the Tom Scott video:
I applaud Frazz’s conclusion. Human spirit can sometimes be sublimely successful and uplifting. Human nature, on the other hand, is truly a mixed blessing.
Example. After mustering out, I was an ad rep for a mid-major newspaper. Turned out to be good training for when I later became a middle-school and secondary teacher. In the years since I retired, I find that my memory favors dealing with 100 or more kids a day, their parents, the administration, and federal interference over having to deal with adult humans in business and sometimes in their leisure activities.
There is a VAST difference between flying and being stuffed in a tube and air freighted. Most, when admiring the birds, long for that freedom and open space; neither of which exist on an airliner.
That complaining isn’t human nature, Frazz, except so far as it is human nature to complain about discomfort, inconvenience, & highway robbery resulting from corporate greed.
Airline companies – yet another reason to invest a modern high-speed rail system………
If you really want to fly, go to Saturn’s moon Titan. With its dense atmosphere and low gravity, a human could probably take flight (or at least jump remarkably far) with plastic wings.
Early this year, I was on a 14-hour flight. I won’t complain about the airline, but there were five little kids nearby, and hardly five minutes would go by without one of them screaming. They never slept at the same time.
Bilan about 2 years ago
Not me, Caulfield. No matter how much the airlines try to ruin it, I still love flying.
ChristineFoxdale about 2 years ago
Most don’t complain about the flying. We complain about the conditions under which it takes place.
Erse IS better about 2 years ago
Naturally, Frazz feels that way.
alien011 about 2 years ago
There’s a place in France where you can get strapped under a blimp. They then give you some paddels and you can controll every movement (up, down, sideways, front, back) with these. It’s probably the closest we humans will ever get to actually flying by ourselves. And yes, I learned that from the Tom Scott video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CwABJGzifao
Nachikethass about 2 years ago
“MOST humans have flown mechanically”?
First World assumptions…
sandpiper about 2 years ago
I applaud Frazz’s conclusion. Human spirit can sometimes be sublimely successful and uplifting. Human nature, on the other hand, is truly a mixed blessing.
Example. After mustering out, I was an ad rep for a mid-major newspaper. Turned out to be good training for when I later became a middle-school and secondary teacher. In the years since I retired, I find that my memory favors dealing with 100 or more kids a day, their parents, the administration, and federal interference over having to deal with adult humans in business and sometimes in their leisure activities.
P51Strega about 2 years ago
There is a VAST difference between flying and being stuffed in a tube and air freighted. Most, when admiring the birds, long for that freedom and open space; neither of which exist on an airliner.
goboboyd about 2 years ago
an ically existence.
grocks about 2 years ago
Excellent distinction that Frazz makes
Caldonia about 2 years ago
Frazz, “Friend to All Children” isn’t fond of human nature. Okay….
calliarcale about 2 years ago
I do like Caulfield’s vocabulary.
rugeirn about 2 years ago
When I compare the experience a bird has in the air with the experience I have in an airliner, I do not call what I do “flying”.
dadlivonia about 2 years ago
LY’d to death here
Cozmik Cowboy about 2 years ago
That complaining isn’t human nature, Frazz, except so far as it is human nature to complain about discomfort, inconvenience, & highway robbery resulting from corporate greed.
Airline companies – yet another reason to invest a modern high-speed rail system………
oakie817 about 2 years ago
Less than 20 percent of the world’s population has ever taken a single flight,
The Wolf In Your Midst about 2 years ago
If you really want to fly, go to Saturn’s moon Titan. With its dense atmosphere and low gravity, a human could probably take flight (or at least jump remarkably far) with plastic wings.
Mel-T-Pass Premium Member about 2 years ago
Caulfield and Frazz are having an adverbsarial relationship today.
kunddog about 2 years ago
I am sure that people in the international space station, or its equivalentskylab, Tiangong ..etc have experienced trued human flight.
d_mock about 2 years ago
Terrible assumption. I expect better of him.
AndrewSihler about 2 years ago
Well, when complaint is generously merited, what’s wrong with it?
Stephen Gilberg about 2 years ago
Early this year, I was on a 14-hour flight. I won’t complain about the airline, but there were five little kids nearby, and hardly five minutes would go by without one of them screaming. They never slept at the same time.
Night-Gaunt49[Bozo is Boffo] about 2 years ago
Within his narrow sphere he is speaking not the entire world.
MayCauseBurns about 2 years ago
If God had meant man to fly, he would have made it easier to get to the airport.
tcviii Premium Member almost 2 years ago
Fun with adverbs.