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Previous comments... You are currently on page 3.
Prior approval is the watchword of federal regulations. They did it with medical devices in 1976, long before that with transportation of all types. long before that even with our food, and lately with our medical care.
Getting time to make enough resources to be able to "shrug" without living in a cold, dark tent.
Its very depressing
Nevertheless, my point was not that I own a wedge of the universe pointed to by my property but that people who own drones generally get bored flying them over their own property at any height and start flying them over someone else's.
So, setting aside the simplistic Austrians, what is an appropriate objectivist solution to the fact that drones can endanger aircraft?
What technological solution keeps drones out of the flight path of airplanes that are landing and taking off -- or swooping low to drop fire retardant?
Admittedly this is still a theoretical problem, but we have had times in So. Cal. when airborne firefighting was brought to a halt because of the presence of drones.
Of course, government registration is a useless form of revenue enhancement.
Drones can present a hazard, that is my only point.
As to the FAA, all they can do is put out useless rules and regs. Useless because they are not able to enforce them effectively even if it wasn't against property rights.
The problem with the drones lies with the operators of course. The FAA can't regulate and supply them sense or intelligence.
Technical solution would be jamming the controls frequencies to keep them out.
Not only is this philosophically inconsistent with a free country it is inconsistent with sound science. On top of this all, the money wasted on the big bureaucracy could be spent much better on technical solutions and on proper understanding of the property rights involved
I sure haven't heard of one yet. But it seems that anything new, the bureaucracy does a mad search to find a reason to regulate, license, and get fees. I just don't know how I've managed to remain alive all the years I have without gov't taking full control of my life.
Flesh and hollow bone is going to be easier for the engine to survive than metal pieces of a drone.
According to the CNN article "The plane's CFM56-5B/P turbofan engines were certified in 1996 as being able to withstand bird ingestion of 4 pounds."
http://www.cnn.com/2009/US/02/12/huds...
As an observation tool does that spill over to camera angles so flying not overhead but using the camera as a SLA or Side Looking Airborne system enter the picture in both the 2nd amendment and as a potential civil privacy issue?
Just to add some flavor to the mix of questions.
I can just see Obeyme saying 'fundamentally the Court hasn't visited that area yet. "
I wonder how dangerous drones are to aircraft?
The word 'drone' covers everything from the 2 oz drone charging on my USB port to military drones weighing in excess of a ton.
.55 pounds is pretty light. I'm sure hitting birds is more dangerous. Are they freaking out over nothing or is there a real danger -- and at what weight?
Aren't drones included as arms under the 2nd amendment?