| Can someone explain why the tiny risk of death associated with Boeing's safety issues matters at all compared with the far greater risks that we take for granted (driving, etc.)? I don't get it. It seems like we all make riskier tradeoffs whenever we buy a used car instead of a newer, safer one, or when we buy a slightly less safe new car instead of the safest new car. By not spending more on a safer vehicle, we're saying that we're willing to trade a certain amount of savings for a certain amount of risk. How much more are we willing to spend to make aviation safer, when it's already so much safer than driving? One argument I've seen on HN is that most car accident deaths are preventable by a responsible driver, while passengers have no control. Ok, even if 99% of car accident deaths were preventable, that leaves 1% that are unpreventable. 1% of the ~35,000 car accident deaths in the US each year = 350. Compare that to ~zero commercial aviation deaths/year in the US over the last decade or so.
Source: https://injuryfacts.nsc.org/home-and-community/safety-topics.... If we include Boeings 737 MAX overseas deaths, that adds ~350 deaths.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_accidents_and_incident... Which doesn't seem to change the picture. |
Down the street are 2 different KFCs.
One uses oil that sometimes, a very small percentage of the time, will instantly kill you. The other does not. They arrived at using the riskier oil because it saves them 5c a day and it makes the books look better.
Are you really asking why anyone would even bother differentiating these two because the drive to the KFC carries more risk?
Why would you as a consumer want to fly on something with an ever worsening safety record?
Why would you as an airline want the bad press, loss of revenue, and loss of reputation associated with a safety incident?