When Truth Is Misinterpreted as Disrespect
Recently, members of the “Pilot Mental Health Campaign” suggested that “nobody respects” Pilots for HIMS Reform.
We believe that statement says far more about discomfort than it does about respect.
Reform movements are rarely embraced by the institutions they examine.
When we call out inconsistencies, opaque policies, or structural incentives that harm aviation professionals, it may feel uncomfortable to those invested in the current system. But discomfort is not disrespect. Transparency is not hostility. Accountability is not aggression.
We Tell the Truth — Publicly and Transparently
From day one, P4HR has operated in the open.
- We publish source documents.
- We cite regulations.
- We document timelines.
- We present data.
- We invite scrutiny.
When we see hypocrisy, we point it out. When we see contradictions, we document them. When we see harm, we give it a name.
That is not disrespect. That is integrity.
Movements built on secrecy fear sunlight. Movements built on evidence do not.
Respect Is Not Measured by Applause
We have engaged directly with leadership at ALPA. We have spoken with multiple union representatives across aviation. We have attended HIMS seminars and engaged openly with program stakeholders. We have met with Congressional staff. We have presented formal legislative frameworks.
At the HIMS Advanced Topics Seminar in Louisville, some attendees laughed when legislative reform was mentioned.
We understand why.
Change introduces uncertainty. Accountability introduces risk. Reform introduces exposure.
But laughter does not invalidate evidence. Discomfort does not erase data.
Fear of Reform Is Not an Argument Against Reform
There is an undeniable reality:
- The HIMS system contains structural conflicts of interest.
- Financial incentives exist.
- Monitoring standards are inconsistently applied.
- First-class airline pilots face materially different treatment than others.
- Transparency is limited.
- Administrative decisions often lack clear medical justification.
We have documented these patterns. We have collected data. We are building peer-reviewed support. We are drafting legislation.
The need for reform is not a matter of popularity. It is a matter of fairness, medical ethics, and due process.
Transparency Makes Some People Uncomfortable
When institutions operate with broad discretion and minimal oversight, transparency can feel threatening.
But aviation is built on checklists, verification, and accountability.
Why should aeromedical oversight be different?
When we question:
- Why identical medical situations produce different outcomes,
- Why surveillance continues absent diagnosis,
- Why financial burdens escalate without statutory clarity,
we are not being disrespectful.
We are asking the same questions any safety-minded aviation professional would ask.
We Do Not Seek Approval — We Seek Integrity
If being honest costs us popularity in certain circles, we accept that.
History consistently shows:
- Reformers are criticized before they are understood.
- Critics are labeled disruptive before they are validated.
- Whistleblowers are dismissed before they are vindicated.
We are not interested in being liked.
We are interested in:
- Medical integrity,
- Equal standards,
- Evidence-based policy,
- Legislative clarity,
- Protection for pilots and ATCs alike.
The Data Speaks
We are building structured, scientifically valid data collection. We are preparing IRB-compliant survey instruments. We are documenting case patterns. We are tracking systemic inconsistencies.
Reform is not emotional. It is empirical. And it is overdue.