A massive Air India plane crash killed nearly 250 people this week, raising tough questions about aviation safety. The Boeing 787 Dreamliner went down seconds after takeoff in Ahmedabad, India, smashing into a medical school. Only one passenger survived the disaster that left families shattered and a nation in mourning.
Early footage shows the plane’s flaps and landing gear in the wrong positions during takeoff. Experts say this critical error points to possible pilot mistakes or mechanical failures. Boeing’s troubled Dreamliner line faced past issues with brakes and engines, but this marks its deadliest crash ever. Taxpayer-funded bailouts for Boeing now look even more reckless.
Indian officials bungled their first press conference, dodging basic questions about the crash. Chaos erupted as reporters demanded answers about maintenance records and crew training. This lack of transparency fuels suspicions of cover-ups to protect powerful corporations. Real leaders would’ve shown accountability, not defensiveness.
The plane’s black boxes were damaged but recovered, offering hope for clarity. American investigators head to India to help decode the flight data. Conservatives know: America’s expertise will likely fix foreign mistakes yet again. Foreign airlines should adopt our safety standards instead of cutting corners.
Most victims were Indian and British citizens, with globalists already exploiting the tragedy for open-border agendas. But national sovereignty matters—countries must control their skies securely. This crash proves air travel demands strict oversight, not lax international regulations.
Air India’s parent company offered families $116,000 per victim—a slap in the face to grieving parents and spouses. Corporate giants treat human life as a line item while executives collect bonuses. True justice requires holding Boeing and Air India financially and legally responsible.
Survivors describe a “fireball” and screams before impact. First responders heroically pulled bodies from the wreckage despite suffocating smoke. Meanwhile, elites lecture us about “climate change” instead of fixing real problems like airline safety. Priorities matter.
This catastrophe exposes the high cost of failed leadership and corporate greed. Americans demand better—secure borders, thriving industries, and accountability at every level. The FAA must ground unsafe planes, and Washington must put citizens’ safety above woke corporate partnerships.