The Manila Times

The woman who landed the plane

- CREATORS.COM

FOR years, people such as myself have been arguing that gender discrimina­tion doesn’t just hurt women: It hurts all of us, our economy,

The stories about the obstacles that Tammie Jo Shults, the now- famous pilot of Southwest Flight 1380, faced in her quest to become a pilot are more than a testament to her tenacity.

The obstacles she faced are not so different from the obstacles women continue to face in predominan­tly male occupation­s

the old stereotype­s about men being better at such things that have kept the doors shut and the ceiling far too low.

Whenever I hear a woman’s voice come through the plane intercom saying that she’s the captain and giving our estimated landing time, I can’t help but smile. Sure, I’m happy to see women breaking glass

walls. But it’s more than that. Women such as Tammie Jo Shults had to be better than the men they were working with, competing against, trying to prove themselves to, or they would not get command of the plane. I feel safe with a woman up front.

And what about the other women, those who might have been almost as (or just as) capable as Shults, but lacked her fortitude, or her determinat­ion, or maybe a bit of luck along the way?

When you eliminate 50 percent of the population, or close to it, from your pool -- whether it is a pool of would-be pilots or engineers -- or when 50 percent of the population, or close to it, believe they won’t have a fair chance or won’t be welcome, you don’t get a better pool of applicants. You get a smaller pool. You eliminate people who actually are more skilled, more adept, have more potential, than those who remain.

There is nothing about flying a plane that is inherently male, nothing about being a man that makes you better at the technical side, better in a crisis, better as the leader of the team.

Tammie Jo Shults, her co-pilot and the cabin prove what a difference a great team can make. And a woman was leading that team, commanding that plane, with the lives of the passengers and crew in her hands.

She did not panic. She was steely calm.

that men are better at handling a crisis than women; better at making the life-and-death decisions; better at facing down the prospect of imminent death?

how men’s brains make them better scientists than women, better engineers than women, better drivers, better pilots and leaders?

Some men are better at such things than other men. And some women are better than any of the boys. Ability can only be measured individual­ly. When instead of treating individual­s as individual­s we judge then according to their sex -- or their sexual orientatio­n, or their race or religion or any

-- we lose great people, better people.

Tammie Jo Shults reportedly concluded that she would have a much better chance

opposed to the Air Force. Obviously, it was

been no different?

How many amazing women doing amaz-

say, “Wow, what an amazing pilot! And, oh yes, she happens to be a woman, but that’s not surprising, because of course women are pilots -- great pilots, great engineers.” Someday, when half the pilots and engineers and CEOs are women, it won’t be surprising.

We have a long way to go. But thanks to the courage and skill and determinat­ion of one woman, we may be a little bit closer today.

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