Youtube comments of User 2C47 (@user2C47).
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Agreed, those pilots are stupid. They were flying right next to that thing, right where it can collide with them, using air-to-air missiles at point-blank like dumb rockets (when they should have used short range AGMs, actual dumb rockets, guns (the big kind like the AC-130 or A-10 have), or even bombs). Radar and Heat seeking AAMs (Like the AIM-120 and AIM-9 that appear to be used here) can't lock what might as well be terrain. Ideally, the aircraft should have stayed at least a few kilometers away, unless they're an A-10 doing a gun run or dropping bombs. Being at high altitude would also help, and choosing to not fly right under the beast, against orders, and then ejecting would have helped, but likely isn't possible because management said all the pilots have to die.
Also, this thing seems to ignore square cube law like it's a 30' long creature that got scale tool'd, and the physics of the wake turbulence isn't quite right.
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Another way to think of autism would be engineer type vs executive type. The engineer is not very social, but knows how everything works and how to fix it when it doesn't. The executive is highly social, but sees most technology as a black do thing box, and wouldn't have the first clue what to do (besides call support) if something unexpected happens.
Personally, I am definitely an engineer type, and must confess to destroying a nearly pristine Bell 500 set when I was about 7, an action I've regretted since I was 13.
Also, I have no clue why some people think it is a disorder, even though in most cases it absolutely isn't. When I was in elementary school, administration demanded that I be medicated for nonconformity, or else be kicked out of school. Fortunately, I was able to finally quit in 7th grade after jumping through dozens of bureaucratic hoops.
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