Anonymous ID: ab88c4 June 5, 2024, 4:52 p.m. No.20973872   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3877 >>3903 >>3914 >>3924 >>4045

Two more Boeing whistleblowers go public over plane safety: ‘Like a ticking timebomb’

 

https://nypost.com/2024/06/05/us-news/two-more-boeing-whistleblowers-go-public-over-plane-safety

 

They say they just want to make sure the planes don’t crash.

 

Two former employees of Boeing and its key contractor have told The Post that — despite the deaths of two whistleblowers within two months this year — they are more determined than ever to tell the truth about what they allege are dangerous practices at the once-great but now-scandal-scarred manufacturer.

 

Roy Irvin, a veteran of Boeing, and Santiago Paredes, who worked at Spirit AeroSystems (not to be confused with Spirit Airlines), are just two of at least 20 whistleblowers in the process of making their concerns about safety and quality issues at the aerospace giant public.

 

Their testimony comes after years of Boeing being dogged by whistleblower testimony and congressional investigations.

 

A scathing House Transportation and Infrastructure report in September 2020 found that two 737 MAX crashes in 2018 and 2019 were the “horrific culmination” of “repeated and serious failures” by the company and regulators. Then in January, a fuselage plug blew off a new Alaskan Airlines Boeing 737 MAX-9 at 10,000 feet.

 

A whistleblower told the Seattle Times that the fault lay with Boeing because after the fuselage was delivered by its manufacturer, Spirit, a panel had been removed at Boeing’s Renton, Washington, factory and reinstalled without four crucial bolts.

 

Now Irvin and Paredes are speaking out.From 2011 until 2017, Irvin was a quality investigator at Boeing in North Charleston, SC, trying to ensure that $250 million 787 Dreamliner planes were ready to be put to work before they left the factory. He began at the company in 2009.

 

Irvin said he “pushed back” almost every day at serious safety and quality issues he found on planes that had left the factory floor and were on the “flight line,” meaning they were supposed to have been checked and found to be good to go.

 

But they weren’t, Irvin alleges, and he was often forced to be “insubordinate” because of how many times he called out the problems he saw.

 

“Missing safety devices on hardware or untightened hardware means that you’re not going to be able to control the airplane if those fail,” Irvin told The Post. “The safety device is on there. If the fastener is not secured correctly, it’s going to fall off and you’re not gonna be able to control the airplane.”

 

Irvin worked with Boeing whistleblower John Barnett, 62, who was found dead on March 9 in a hotel parking lot in South Carolina, his silver pistol in his hand, after he failed to show up for the second part of his testimony for a bombshell lawsuit against the company. Police ruled that Barnett died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound.

 

Then Joshua Dean, 45, a former quality auditor at Spirit AeroSystems, died in early May from a fast-growing infection.

 

The deaths, paradoxically, may have empowered others to come forward.

 

Brian Knowles, a Charleston, SC, attorney who represents whistleblowers including Irvin and Paredes and also represented Barnett and Dean, told The Post his law firm has fielded dozens of new calls from potential whistleblowers in recent weeks. “Most of the people we’re hearing from are current employees,” he said. “These are not disgruntled employees.

 

“In many cases they love the company. It’s not about bringing down the company — it’s about getting it back on track.

 

“Boeing says they are open to hearing criticisms but in reality they are not being addressed internally and many are retaliated against for speaking out.”

Anonymous ID: ab88c4 June 5, 2024, 4:57 p.m. No.20973894   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3924 >>3950 >>4045

Diamond industry ‘in trouble’ as lab-grown gemstones tank prices further

 

The demand for diamonds has declined as its allure fades in a key consumer market: China.

 

https://www.nbcnews.com/business/rcna155700

 

“A diamond is forever,” but perhaps not for the increasing number of consumers spurning the gemstone for lab-grown counterparts, gold and even other colored gemstones.

 

The slogan was coined by diamond giant De Beers in 1948, capturing the impression of security and romance. But not all relationships withstand the test of time.

 

The company’s largest shareholder Anglo American plans to divest De Beers as it restructures its business after rejecting a takeover bid from BHP. Anglo American CEO Duncan Wanblad told the Financial Times that selling De Beers will be “the hardest part” of the company’s radical restructuring.

 

“Diamonds don’t really fit in anymore despite the strong legacy of De Beers under Anglo,” said independent diamond industry analyst Paul Zimnisky.

 

“Anglo is ultimately going to do what its shareholders want, and it seems they want to focus on a longer-term strategy of commodities that support the green infrastructure buildout, for example copper,” he told CNBC.

 

Dwindling diamond demand

The demand for diamonds has declined as its allure fades in a key consumer market: China.

 

Falling marriage rates as well as growing popularity for gold and lab-grown gems all drove down Chinese demand for diamonds, said market research firm Daxue Consulting. The end of pandemic restrictions also saw consumers channeling their spending toward travel experiences instead of diamond products.

 

Diamond prices have fallen 5.7% so far this year, according to Zimnisky’s rough diamond index, declining more than 30% from their all-time high in 2022.

 

De Beers once commanded a monopoly on the diamond market, but its share has fallen. Economic conditions led the company to cutting prices by 10% at the start of the year, Bloomberg reported citing sources.

 

“Last year was a much tougher period for the [diamond] industry as economic challenges, a post-Covid lull in engagements and a growth in supply of lab-grown diamonds all affected demand conditions,” Anglo American’s head of communications, Marcelo Esquivel, told CNBC.

 

The preference for lab-grown diamonds also plays a critical role in driving down prices of natural diamonds, said Ankur Daga, founder and CEO of fine jewelry e-commerce company Angara.

 

“The core issue is the rapid growth of lab-grown diamonds,” he said. Daga added that in the U.S., which is the largest consumer of diamonds, half of engagement ring stones will be lab grown this year, up from just 2% in 2018.

 

_______

 

[Diamond mafia]

>blood diamonds

Anonymous ID: ab88c4 June 5, 2024, 5:02 p.m. No.20973918   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3923 >>3924 >>4045

>another homo pox

 

New sexually transmitted fungal infection detected in NYC — the first case in the US

 

https://nypost.com/2024/06/05/lifestyle/new-sexually-transmitted-fungal-infection-detected-in-nyc

 

Health experts are warning of new and highly contagious fungal strains after an NYC man in his 30s developed a sexually transmitted form of ringworm — the first reported case in the US.

 

“Healthcare providers should be aware that Trichophyton mentagrophytes type VII [TMVII] is the latest in a group of severe skin infections to have now reached the United States,” said Dr. Avrom S. Caplan, an assistant professor in NYU Grossman School of Medicine’s dermatology department.

 

Caplan co-authored a case study published Wednesday about an unidentified New Yorker who became infected with TMVII, with a rash appearing on his penis, buttocks and limbs. Cases of TMVII have been on the rise in Europe, especially in men who have sex with men. The man in the new case study had visited England, Greece and California. He reported having sex with men during his travels, none of whom disclosed similar skin issues.

 

“Since patients are often reluctant to discuss genital problems, physicians need to directly ask about rashes around the groin and buttocks, especially for those who are sexually active, have recently traveled abroad, and report itchy areas elsewhere on the body,” study senior author Dr. John G. Zampella advised. Zampella noted that infections caused by TMVII seem to respond to standard antifungal therapies such as the medication terbinafine (also known as Lamisil), but they can take months to clear up. They also may be confused with lesions caused by eczema, which may delay treatment.

 

A different itchy and contagious skin infection that causes rashes similar to TMVII is proving to be a greater challenge for dermatologists.

 

Trichophyton indotineae — which is widespread in India and was first confirmed in the US last year — often resists terbinafine treatment, the NYU Grossman School of Medicine researchers said.

 

They analyzed data from 11 men and women treated for Trichophyton indotineae in NYC hospitals between May 2022 and May 2023. Seven of the patients received standard doses of terbinafine. Their rashes did not clear up, perhaps because of genetic mutations in the fungus. The antifungal pill itraconazole yielded better results, but Caplan cautioned that the drug can interfere with other medications and cause nausea and diarrhea, among other side effects.

 

Caplan said that while dermatologists should be on the lookout for TMVII and Trichophyton indotineae, US rates so far remain low. His team hopes to expand their research into the two species of fungus over the next few months.

 

“These [initial] findings offer new insight into how some of the fungal skin infections spreading from South Asia can evade our go-to therapies,” Caplan said. “Beyond learning to recognize their misleading signs, physicians will need to ensure their treatment addresses each patient’s quality of life needs.”