Comment by hosh
2 years ago
Emotionally, it seems hard for me to believe that the Boeing leadership would be part of something criminal. And yet, the timing is weird.
This dude hasn’t been employed by Boeing for some years. He was part of a Netflix documentary made about it. I don’t think the public took him seriously until people died, and there were multiple safety incidents.
It would be interesting to see what the police report about this was. How long has he owned that gun? From what angle the that bullet come from? Were there any drugs still in his system? Any witnesses at the time of the shooting?
If it was suicide, surely there are evidence that it is suicide and other evidence disproving that he was murdered.
You don't need to pull the trigger. You just do everything in your power to make their life unlivable.
They take care of the rest.
This is why whistleblower laws have to be strong and be enforced very swiftly.
While that can be true, there would still be evidence supporting that, besides making things unlivable. My questions still stands -- what were the circumstances around the gun shot? How long has he owned that gun? How exactly did it happen?
Isn't it worth checking?
>Boeing leadership would be part of something criminal
They are definitely part of something criminal, not murder but the whole mess and the resulting deaths are a criminal act.
Maybe people manage to segment off what it means to be a defence contractor in their own heads. But I figure if you produce and sell the means of killing people, you would be fine with killing people.
You are making assertions about my character without knowing anything at all about me.
You don't have the knowledge to make such statements. And you shouldn't guess when making aspersions against a large number of peoples' character.
Echoing the other response, this doesn't seem fair at all (and I don't even work in the space). I'd suggest you reflect on that opinion some more and think about why people work in defence.