

Does it not strike you as strange that such a law would be necessary?
The consequences of jumping over Niagra Falls will deter most people

Does it not strike you as strange that such a law would be necessary?
The consequences of jumping over Niagra Falls will deter most people
I can't even imagine what this world be if like you had to show your I.D to buy your cookie rashons
After becoming a subsidiary of General Dynamics Corporation in 1985, Cessna stopped producing piston-engine airplanes with the 1986 model year due to concerns over product liability. In 1992, Textron, Inc. acquired Cessna Aircraft and soon resumed producing light aircraft; however, rising production costs and concerns over product liability did not justify the reintroduction of the popular and affordable two-seat models.
Pummeled by skyrocketing litigation and insurance costs--the industry paid $210 million in claims in 1986--production of general aviation (GA) aircraft plummeted 95% in the past two decades, from 17,811 in 1978 to just 928 last year. More than 100,000 people lost their jobs.
Cessna Aircraft ceased making piston-powered airplanes in 1986; Piper Aircraft slipped into Chapter 11 in 1991; Beech Aircraft spent an average of $530,000 defending itself in 203 accident cases in which the NTSB concluded that the aircraft's design and manufacture were not a factor.
"The average age of the GA fleet is 27 years," says Ed Stimpson, president of the General Aviation Manufacturers Association (GAMA). "We were getting sued on 30-, 40-, and 50-year-old airplanes." He jests that, prior to the legislation, had a pilot crashed the original Wright Flyer he could have sued the Wright Brothers for design defects--92 years after the aircraft was built.
http://www.manufacturing.net/dn/index.asp?layout=article&articleid=CA151518
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