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Video of 21 Savage Flying Plane By Himself With Amber Rose

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Source: Prince Williams / Getty Via | HipHopDX 21 Savage Takes First Solo Flight With Girlfriend Amber Rose MIAMI, FL –  21 Savage  has apparently been taking flying lessons for the past several months with dreams of piloting his own private plane one day. But first, he has to obtain his pilot’s license. In a new video uploaded to Savage’s Instagram account on Monday (October 23), the  Issa rapper can be seen sitting in the cockpit alongside an instructor as he lands his first flight on his own. The caption reads simply, “First Flight.” Finish this story [ here ]  

Video of 21 Savage Flying Plane By Himself With Amber Rose

Andreas Lubitz, Germanwings Co-Pilot, Wanted to "Destroy" Plane on Purpose, Investigators Believe

Andreas Lubitz, the co-pilot of the doomed Germanwings flight that crashed into the Alps this week, set out to destroy the plane on purpose, officials believe. Marseille prosecutor Brice Robin, citing “black box” recordings, said Lubitz was alone in the cockpit when the Germanwings plane crashed, killing 148 . He intentionally started the fatal descent while the pilot was locked out, and there was “absolute silence in the cockpit” as the pilot fought to re-enter. Robin said “the most plausible interpretation” for this turn of events was that the co-pilot had deliberately barred the pilot from re-entering the cockpit. Robin said, “We hear the pilot ask the co-pilot to take control of the plane and we hear at the same time the sound of a seat moving backwards and the sound of a door closing.” He said the pilot, named in the German media as Patrick S., had probably gone to the toilet, and “at that moment, the co-pilot is controlling the plane by himself.” “While he is alone, the co-pilot presses the buttons of the flight monitoring system to put into action the descent of the airplane. He operated this button for a reason we don’t know yet.” “It appears that the reason was to destroy this plane.” Lubitz was alive until impact, the prosecutor said. Air traffic controllers made repeated, failed attempts to contact the aircraft, upon which passengers could be heard screaming just before the crash. So who is Andreas Lubitz and why would he do this? Details are emerging of the German co-pilot’s past, although his apparent motives are a mystery. Lubitz, 28, had undergone intensive training and ” was 100 percent fit to fly without any caveats “, according to Carsten Spohr, the head of Lufthansa. The German carrier, which owns Germanwings, says his training was briefly halted six years ago, but “the suitability of the candidate was re-established.” German Chancellor Angela Merkel told reporters that the co-pilot’s apparent actions had given the tragedy a “new, simply incomprehensible dimension.” The Airbus 320 from Barcelona, Spain to Duesseldorf, Germany, hit a mountain in France, killing all passengers and crew on board earlier this week. Official have said that the co-pilot was “not known by us” to have any links to extremism or terrorism, though the thorough investigation will continue.

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Andreas Lubitz, Germanwings Co-Pilot, Wanted to "Destroy" Plane on Purpose, Investigators Believe

Preciousness: Tamera Mowry-Housley’s Baby Boy Aden Turns 2 With Airplane-Themed Party [PHOTOS]

Isn’t he just the cutest?? Tamera Mowry-Housley’s Son Aden Turns 2 With Plane Party Tamera Mowry’s baby boy Aden just turned 2 years old, and he is as adorable as can be. Apparently little Aden loves the Disney movie Planes , so the family threw his 2nd birthday bash at the Museum of Flying at the Santa Monica Airport. The little pilot-in-training hoppd in the cockpit with his cousin Cree, checked out the planes with Uncle Tahj, and snuggled up with auntie Tia. SO CUTE! Peep more pics below: TameraMowry.com

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Preciousness: Tamera Mowry-Housley’s Baby Boy Aden Turns 2 With Airplane-Themed Party [PHOTOS]

ISRAEL’S PRE-ELECTION ATTEMPT TO DEFLECT A NEW 9/11 INVESTIGATION By Gordon Duff STAFF WRITER/Senior Editor

Nila Sagadevan is an aeronautical engineer and a pilot. There are some who maintain that the mythical 9/11 hijackers, although proven to be too incompetent to fly a little Cessna 172, had acquired the impressive skills that enabled them to fly airliners by training in flight simulators. What follows is an attempt to bury this myth once and for all, because I’ve heard this ludicrous explanation bandied about, ad nauseam, on the Internet and the TV networks—invariably by people who know nothing substantive about flight simulators, flying, or even airplanes. A common misconception non-pilots have about simulators is how “easy” it is to operate them. They are indeed relatively easy to operate if the objective is to make a few lazy turns and frolic about in the “open sky”. But if the intent is to execute any kind of a maneuver with even the least bit of precision, the task immediately becomes quite daunting. And if the aim is to navigate to a specific geographic location hundreds of miles away while flying at over 500 MPH, 30,000 feet above the ground the challenges become virtually impossible for an untrained pilot. And this, precisely, is what the four hijacker pilots who could not fly a Cessna around an airport by themselves are alleged to have accomplished in multi-ton, high-speed commercial jets on 9/11. For a person not conversant with the practical complexities of pilotage, a modern flight simulator could present a terribly confusing and disorienting experience. These complex training devices are not even remotely similar to the video games one sees in amusement arcades, or even the software versions available for home computers. In order to operate a modern flight simulator with any level of skill, one has to not only be a decent pilot to begin with, but also a skilled instrument-rated one to boot — and be thoroughly familiar with the actual aircraft type the simulator represents, since the cockpit layouts vary between aircraft. The only flight domains where an arcade/PC-type game would even begin to approach the degree of visual realism of a modern professional flight simulator would be during the take-off and landing phases. During these phases, of course, one clearly sees the bright runway lights stretched out ahead, and even peripherally sees images of buildings, etc. moving past. Take-offs—even landings, to a certain degree—are relatively “easy”, because the pilot has visual reference cues that exist “outside” the cockpit. But once you’ve rotated, climbed out, and reached cruising altitude in a simulator (or real airplane), and find yourself en route to some distant destination (using sophisticated electronic navigation techniques), the situation changes drastically: the pilot loses virtually all external visual reference cues, and is left entirely at the mercy of an array of complex flight and navigation instruments to provide situational cues (altitude, heading, speed, attitude, etc.) In the case of a Boeing 757 or 767, the pilot would be faced with an EFIS (Electronic Flight Instrumentation System) panel comprised of six large multi-mode LCDs interspersed with clusters of assorted “hard” instruments. These displays process the raw aircraft system and flight data into an integrated picture of the aircraft situation, position and progress, not only in horizontal and vertical dimensions, but also with regard to time and speed as well. When flying “blind”, I.e., with no ground reference cues, it takes a highly skilled pilot to interpret, and then apply, this data intelligently. If one cannot translate this information quickly, precisely and accurately (and it takes an instrument-rated pilot to do so), one would have ZERO SITUATIONAL AWARENESS. I.e., the pilot wouldn’t have a clue where s/he was in relation to the earth. Flight under such conditions is referred to as “IFR”, or Instrument Flight Rules. And IFR Rule #1: Never take your eyes off your instruments, because that’s all you have! The corollary to Rule #1: If you can’t read the instruments in a quick, smooth, disciplined, scan, you’re as good as dead. Accident records from around the world are replete with reports of any number of good pilots — I.e., professional instrument-rated pilots — who ‘bought the farm’ because they ‘lost it’ while flying in IFR conditions. Let me place this in the context of the 9/11 hijacker-pilots. These men were repeatedly deemed incompetent to solo a simple Cessna-172 — an elementary exercise that involves flying this little trainer once around the patch on a sunny day. A student’s first solo flight involves a simple circuit: take-off, followed by four gentle left turns ending with a landing back on the runway. This is as basic as flying can possibly get. Not one of the hijackers was deemed fit to perform this most elementary exercise by himself. When professional airline pilots, the majority trained by the United States Air Force, were asked to recreate the New York 9/11 attack in a flight simulator, two thirds failed entirely. None could duplicate the Pentagon attack at all. This is what the pilots had to say: “Regarding your comments on flight simulators, several of my colleagues and I have tried to simulate the ‘hijacker’s’ final approach maneuvers into the towers on our company 767 simulator. We tried repeated tight, steeply banked 180 turns at 500 mph followed by a fast rollout and lineup with a tall building. More than two-thirds of those who attempted the maneuver failed to make a ‘hit’. How these rookies who couldn’t fly a trainer pulled this off is beyond comprehension.” .Much more at the link…… http://canadiansforpalestine.ning.com/profiles/blogs/israels-preelection-attempt… added by: treewolf39

Miami Heat Chartered Jet Made Emergency Landing

john jauchler NBA’s Miami Heat players aboard a chartered jet made an emergency landing Sunday in Chicago. The onboard mechanic was sick so he needed to be rushed to the hospital. Heat spokesman Tim Donovan said the man, who was not named, was fine and the team trainers tended to him  while on flight. The mechanic was believed to be a diabetic coma. After that, flight to Miami resumed and they arrived at exactly 5:04 am Sunday. “Just landed back in the MIA feels good to be back home safe and sound,” Heat guard Daequan Cook tweeted on his Twitter feed. Heat guard Dwyane Wade wrote on Twitter about the surprise landing. “Hey everyone pray for our pilot,” Wade wrote. “… He went into a Coma. God bless this man and his family.” Donovan said the man was in the cockpit when he became ill. The team was returning to Miami after beating the Minnesota Timberwolves 97-84 Saturday night. NBA’s Miami Heat players aboard a chartered jet made an emergency landing Sunday in Chicago. The onboard mechanic was sick so he needed to be rushed to the hospital. Heat spokesman Tim Donovan said the man, who was not named, was fine and the team trainers tended to him  while on flight. The mechanic was believed to be a diabetic coma. After that, flight to Miami resumed and they arrived at exactly 5:04 am Sunday. “Just landed back in the MIA feels good to be back home safe and sound,” Heat guard Daequan Cook tweeted on his Twitter feed. Heat guard Dwyane Wade wrote on Twitter about the surprise landing.”Hey everyone pray for our pilot,” Wade wrote. “… He went into a Coma. God bless this man and his family.”Donovan said the man was in the cockpit when he became ill. The team was returning to Miami after beating the Minnesota Timberwolves 97-84 Saturday night. Miami Heat Chartered Jet Made Emergency Landing is a post from: Daily World Buzz Continue reading