Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Tim Thornton's avatar

Thanks for that insider perspective on what the rest of us watched from afar. I won't spin a long comment about all that I think this presidential transition represents or the work that needs to be done, but I would like to call out two failures of communication in my quick read of this journal record. The first thing that I would like to call out is that lumping all immigration into one large bucket is not helpful or accurate. First of all, the difference between legal immigration quotas and "high-value" high tech developers and contributors coming into the United States has not changed and will not change under Donald Trump (unless it goes up). Confounding what is happening on our borders with the kind of talent that is helpful to grow innovation and change in fields like A.I., is neither helpful or accurate. Secondly, I believe there are millions who have entered our country via a swimming test or rock climbing test at the southern border who are not contributing members to our nation--not even in the service industry where we constantly read and hear the elite class call out as their place in our society. I don't think we would be having the problems or massive financial drain on our welfare systems if these people were being integrated into our nation--people who are here illegally, but still getting social service well beyond that of citizens and our own homeless.

My second area of concern that I think has to be addressed aggressively and is not getting the traction that is needed in congress is that we are arguably on the verge of financial collapse as a nation with a $36T nation debt that is growing faster than the illegal immigration and no one in congress is will to face the fact that we have a Gov that is between 35-50 times the size of one of the nation's largest corporations (Exxon Mobile Corp) and we live in more of a Banana Republic today that gives millions and even billions of dollars to bureaucrats to spend recklessly with virtually no accountability. NGO's have become the newest vehicle for Gov corruption and congress lives by the lie that there is very little in our budget that can be reduced or changed. This lie, from both sides of the aisle, is the lie of "non-discretionary spending". This lie has been used for decades and we have not had even a balanced budget since Bill Clinton. Congress continues to hide behind this lie and we are standing on the edge of this national collapse of our financial system.

If we are unable to get these two issues addressed quickly and at a level that exceeds any prior administration's efforts to change our nation, everything else is merely academic and it really won't matter. These are not original thoughts or ideas. Far smarter people that me have been ringing the alarm of what happens next to a nation that lives on borrowed money and refuses to do in the business of the nation what every entrepreneur that you know has to do every day in their businesses and their homes. Live within their means. We have not tried to live within our means for a very long time and now the price to get back to zero may be a fool's dream.

Expand full comment
Eric Grumling's avatar

RE: "support for drone technology"

The big push in the small drone universe these days is what's called beyond visual line of sight (BVLOS) operation. Under current rules (14 CFR part 107) a pilot must keep eyes on their aircraft at all times, either directly or indirectly with the use of human spotters. Binoculars or electronic means aren't allowed (voice comms between spotters and pilot over radio are permitted). There is a waiver process that requires manually walking a request to the FAA office in DC. A handful of waivers have been granted to large corporations (Southern Company) and first responders in large cities.

For at least 5 years there's been a proposed rule change (14 CFR part 108) for setting the rules for BVLOS flight. It's slowly working through the system, mostly because the FAA has gone through five different directors since 2018, two of them "acting" directors who were just chair sitting because they didn't have the congressional mandate to implement policy. The current director, Michael Whitaker, has only been in place since October 2023 and has stepped down as of Jan 20, despite being appointed with wide bipartisan support (98-0 vote).

If and when a new FAA administrator is appointed, the priority will be (well, probably should be) address the growing number of incidents around airports involving commercial and crewed aircraft. Mostly an issue with execution of the existing rules, but also one of recruiting air traffic controllers and continued modernization. Of course getting part 108 through can happen concurrently, but once the rules are in place there will be a lot of pushback from other agencies, local municipalities, general aviation communities (who might find themselves competing with drones for missions like cropdusting), and the public at large. It has to be right, but more importantly, it has to be promoted as a net positive. I don't see that happening without a champion at the legislative or executive level.

The current waivers are showing the usefulness of stationing drones in areas such as power substations, high crime areas and for security perimeters. "Drone as first responder" has become the latest buzzword for selling hardware to police forces. By positioning drones in remote docks (I prefer the term nest, but that's just my warped sense of humor), a pilot at the 911 dispatch center -or pretty much anywhere- can get eyes on a situation in minutes, relaying video to the squad car in route. Suspects have even surrendered to drones. Just like you can't outrun Motorola, you can't hide from Skydio. As waivers continue to be granted for limited use across delivery and other missions the real value of drones will be clear.

Much of my business plan ultimately depends on part 108. I was hoping things would have moved a lot faster than they have. I'm hopeful that someone in the new administration will get part 108 implemented but it's obviously going to be a very low priority and likely not to get much positive press either. Picking battles is how DC works. If the waivers are good enough to show progress, that might be enough for the FAA to call it a success. But what might be is still a long way away.

And then there's the whole thing about DJI and not having a US ecosystem that can effectively produce the equivalent products, but this is long enough!

Expand full comment
6 more comments...

No posts