The future of flying

I see no pooping.
There's a community note claiming there was no pooping, but somebody posted a picture in the comments showing where poop was smeared on the carpet, and calling of the falseness of the community note. The community note claims the 12 toilets were all clogged with rags.

The whole situation seems hard to believe. I mean, I believe the plane had to return to Chicago because all the toilets were inoperable, and I believe that the problem had to do with it being a planeload of Indians, but it's still amazing that they could actually overload all the toilets on the plane so early in the flight.
 
Indians normally poop a toilet full then move on to the next toilet until there are no more toilets left, then go pooping on the streets or in parks.
On a plane it's a little more cramped so the logical step is to poop the toilets full then go for the isles then the footwells then the staff area and kitchen. Finally it becomes unsafe as the pilots won't let them poop in the cockpit so you start having riots so they need to do a proper clean and replace the toilets to repeat the process again.

I suspect that the Indian airline in question cleaned the isles footwells and staff area/kitchen but forgot to replace the toilets so the pilots had to turn back out of fear of poop slinging riots and or a breach of the cockpit which might've resulted in a much more dangerous situation.
 


ATC recording has female pilot repeatedly refer to her flight as "ten thousand and six" while ATC repeats back correctly "1006". Also confirms the wrong weather info, and when corrected by ATC she says "I can't read my own writing".



That may not have anything to do with the cause of the fire, but it sure doesn't instill much confidence.
 
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Close Call at Washington (DCA): Delta A319 & USAF T-38 Jet

A tense moment unfolded at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport (DCA) on Friday (28) when a Delta Air Lines Airbus A319 (Reg. N342NB) taking off came into close proximity with a US Air Force T-38 jet (67-1833), a supersonic trainer frequently used for military pilot training.

- Delta flight #DL2983 was departing DCA at 3:15 PM ET (7:15 PM UTC), bound for Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport (MSP) on a routine flight.
- Our data reveals the T-38 jet flew past the Delta aircraft at 800 feet, traveling at 350+ mph.
- The military jet took off from and later returned to Langley Air Force Base (LFI) in Virginia.

 


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