Last edited by mmoc96d9238e4b; 2017-12-14 at 05:41 PM.
I don't think the rule should exist but there should be some social consequences for making stupid choices or people will continue to make them.
So what will happen if the pilot collapses mid flight then?
Who will be held responsible?
Maybe the rules should stay in place and that one random fucker should look for a different job, tough luck. People with bad eyesight, even though they can wear glasses to improve it, aren't allowed to fly either.
Which requires you to take medicine to make it bearable just like Diabetes 1.
So...? Do you start to realize it?
You don't even know a HIV+ person.
And again, which ones?
I know you don't know which ones and which ones are not, which is the main reason I'm asking - still fun though.
A spontaneous issue is a freaking stroke btw, which is more likely to happen due to the medication required. Just saying.
Oh and lets not forget that you are actually far more likely to get diabetes...or polyneuropathy
Last edited by mmoc96d9238e4b; 2017-12-14 at 05:59 PM.
Diabetes messes you up sometimes if you do take your medicine too. You often have to guess your dosage because labels are garbage sometimes, if they're provided at all. Your blood sugar needs to be over 5 to drive a car, and you have to check every 2 hours. That's not very practical in a plane.
You realise this isn't the 1980's right? The medications that are available now reduce the HIV-virus to such a low, undetectable level that anybody having proper treatment is no less or more prone to somebody that doesn't have the virus. Your immune system only becomes more depleted the more that the HIV is developed within your system, so for someone who's taking medication it's literally undetectable.
It's a pretty stupid rule honestly.