I started a Wakelet collection of video and article links on “Boeing 737 Max Whistleblowers.” Those links are embedded at the bottom of this post.
I highly recommend watching the Netflix documentary, “Downfall: The Case Against Boeing.”
The merger of Boeing with McDonnell Douglas was and is a train wreck for safety in US aviation. This is an ongoing tragedy, and the fact that two Boeing whistleblowers are now “mysteriously dead” before they could testify before Congress is almost certainly a crime.
This documentary makes me never want to fly on a Boeing aircraft ever again, and certainly never fly on a Boeing 737 Max.
The executives of Boeing / the old McDonnell Douglas should be held criminally responsible for deaths of the 737 Max crashed aircraft.
It is important for us to study events and case studies like this, when whistleblowers speak out to try and stop immoral and (sometimes) illegal actions by individuals and corporations.
This reminds me Enron, and a presentation I heard on April 6, 2006 for the Texas Tech University Ethics Day, by Lynn Brewer, the author of “Confessions Of An Enron Executive: A Whistleblower’s Story.” I wrote a blog post about that talk. It made quite an impression on me.
Ethics and integrity matter.
These are important issues and events we should study and discuss in schools and colleges.
I encourage you to add “Downfall: The Case Against Boeing” to our video watchlist.