During the second world war technology leaps were placing kids skilled at driving a horse and buggy into the pits of some of the most sophisticated machines man has ever produced and those farmer's children had to deal with issues as intuitive as the compressibilty of air near the speed of sound!
Today it takes a year and a half and about 300 hours of flight time plus 1,000 hours of ground school to teach a college engineering graduate to fly a F-16. People, an F16 is many magnitudes of order "EASIER" to fly than a BF109 or a P47D!
Losses during WWII ran something like this; about 1/3 to training crashes, about 1/3 to operational accidents; and about 1/3 to enemy combat. It was twice as dangerous to learn, and get into combat, than it was to actually fly the mission!
More USAAF pilots were killed in the "graveyard spiral" than were killed in combat, more pilots and crews were lost in scud running and weather related collisions with the ground than were lost in combat.
Of course Kamikaze pilots had no such Problem...9/11 taught us some parts of flying can be learned,and other parts disregarded..
As of the end of 2006, in General aviation, there were 597,109 active certificated pilots, according to the AOPA Jan. 12, 07 newsletter which cites the FAA's estimates. This number has been declining slowly over the long term, down from a high of over 827,000 pilots in 1980.
I wonder how many Flight Simulator Pilots are the in the world?
Drone pilots and crews are the vanguard of a revolution in warfare, one that the U.S. military and intelligence agencies have bet on heavily. The first Predator carrying weapons was rushed to Afghanistan just four days after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. Today, the Air Force is spending nearly $3 billion a year buying and operating drones, and is training pilots to fly more unmanned than manned aircraft. Demand is so strong that even non-pilots such as civil engineers and military police are being trained.
More than 7,000 drones of all types are in use over Iraq and Afghanistan. The planes have played an integral part in the offensive now being carried out in Marja, Afghanistan, by U.S. Marines and British and Afghan troop.
an Air Force captain, was heading for his day shift on a new kind of job, one that could require him to kill another human being 7,500 miles away. Seated in a padded chair inside a low, tan building, he controlled a heavily armed drone aircraft soaring over Afghanistan. When his shift ended, he drove 40 minutes back through the desert to the hustle and neon of Las Vegas......
I would think this will end the debate ......I do not think the RED BARON would like this warfare.....for him no honor,no risk,no winning or losing,no sweat,no blood,no tears ,no shouts of joy,no exhilaration,...now just do your job,and off to dinner! War totally desensitized and antiseptic!..like some Star Trek Episode of Old!