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247 points po | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.267s | source
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tgsovlerkhgsel ◴[] No.43531597[source]
If you hate the long form filler and know what a fighter jet is, start (with the knowledge that the pilot is landing in poor weather) at "Suddenly, at 1:32:05 p.m", read until the first two sentences in section 2, then skip to section 5.

Edit: That said, there are no answers. It's just the long known story: A pilot ejects from a malfunctioning (but likely flyable) jet, gets cleared in the first two investigations because most other pilots would have interpreted the situation similarly, promoted, and then fired less than 4 months after moving with his family to the location of his new role. It remains unclear why but scapegoating to distract from the plane's issues is commonly seen as the most likely explanation, with all the risks it entails (pilots becoming more hesitant to eject or openly admit mistakes so safety can be improved).

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yard2010 ◴[] No.43531827[source]
The soviet russians nuked Chernobyl with this attitude, it must be good
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Sabinus ◴[] No.43532213[source]
Your comment reminded me, an excellent showcase of institutional shenanigans is the Chernobyl miniseries on Netflix. Denial, blame, coverups, accountability. It's a very well made series in a grim Soviet setting.
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yaro330 ◴[] No.43532613[source]
Just please don't take it as a documentary. It's a disservice to the people that actually worked at the plant that day and portrays them as arrogant fools, which none of them actually were.

That Chernobyl Guy on YouTube did great breakdowns.

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1. marshray ◴[] No.43543270[source]
I will watch the Youtube guy you're talking about, but I did listen to a many episode podcast with the writer/director discussing the books of direct, personal interviews that were documented after the incident.

Most of the major events depicted in the show are things I recall having been reported previously.

I thought many of the workers in the plant, the first responders, etc were portrayed as heroes and most at least quite sympathetically.