JohnB wrote:
menards wrote:
Nah, you're way off with your analogy. If you choose to have a kid, that kid WILL die. Death is a guarantee.
Good to see you got my joke.
Still, would-be parents could put off having a child or
the fear the child would predecease them.
It might happen
or it might not.
Are we not going to do
anything because of various fears?
Better sell the cars and get a job working from a very secure home. And don't go near people, I hear there is a nasty virus going around!
So we are left with the dilemma of not restoring a potential flyer because it
might crash.
Guess what, the hangar might burn down, Seattle might get destroyed in a tsunami, or rioters might burn it for some sort of political statement against the military or carbon fuels.

And your comment about King Tut's jewels is interesting but missed the point.
Of course they won't let someone wear them for fear of loss...but they very wellcould have been lost in shipment (plane crash, boat sink) during one of their international exhibitions.
So the Egyptian government thought the risk was warranted.
After all, a historic treasure that is not seen or enjoyed by people isn't doing anyone much good.
Whether they be ancient artifacts or a 1941 bomber.
Your parenting analogy is still off even after you changed the parameters. Choosing to *not* have kids because of a fear that said kid may predecease you still doesn't follow. The people that choose that will never know what wasn't created. So there is no "loss".
If you want your parenting analogy to work, I'll help you out. Remember "preservation" is the operative word. You would be comparing the parents who say their child can not play youth football because Will Smith made a movie about concussions, and they don't want their child to get brain damage, or they cant play little league because that one kid from NJ took a line drive to the chest and was killed a while ago. The inverse of these parents are for sake of example, the parents of a child who races motocross, and their 7 year old is jumping the 65cc dirtbike over 30 ft gaps. You have two sets of parents with two different views on how to raise a child. They will argue, wont see eye to eye on many of the issues, but neither of them are "right" and neither are "wrong". Remember, my original point was "its a debate"
Skipping over your off topic remarks about cars and viruses that are also off, You make one valid observation, "the dilema (or debate) of not restoring a potential flyer (to flight status) out of fear it may get destroyed in a crash (from flight operations)."
This is the point yes. Guess what, there are many many many more airframes being preserved in storage than there are being restored to airworthy condition. Preservation is the name of the game. yes there is risk of a hangar fire, or other natural disaster that MAY destroy an airframe, but the risk of this happening is LOW compared to flight ops (talk to an insurance guy on this point)
Finishing up on king Tuts jewels, you dont know much about historic artifacts. When there is a shipment to international events, copies are shipped. not the originals. Most of the items on display in many museums are fakes, with the originals preserved in storage. Hard to do with a Bomber. That said, when the Boeing Bee was restored to airworthy condition by Boeing and went to the MOF, the Richardson Family had to approve ALL flights the Museum wanted to do. Preservation.
All that said, If some Bitcoin Billionaire coughs up the appropriate amount of crypto to purchase the airframe, gets it to fly and subsequently augers in, it was their $ to spend and that's what they chose to do.