News arrives that the father of the pilot involved in the recent Air India crash has publicly sworn to defend his son’s reputation. A noble sentiment, no doubt. But one that reeks of a deeper cultural ailment, a refusal to face the music when the symphony of incompetence plays its final chord.
Consider this. In the hallowed halls of Victorian England, a man who caused a disaster would be expected to do one thing: fall on his sword, metaphorically if not literally. The concept of personal honour demanded it. Today, we have parents issuing press statements. We have lawyers drafting defamation suits. We have an entire apparatus designed to deflect, deflect, deflect. The crash itself becomes a secondary concern, a mere backdrop to the drama of reputation management.
Let us be clear. A plane crash is not a minor fender bender. It is a catastrophe that often leaves families shattered and lives extinguished. The investigation into its causes is not a personal vendetta against a pilot’s family name. It is a necessary, clinical process to ensure such horrors do not repeat. When a father steps forward to “defend” his son, he implies that the truth is an attack. He implies that accountability is a slur. This is the logic of the nursery, not the cockpit.
We have seen this before. In the fall of Rome, the elite retreated into private worlds of honour and prestige while the barbarians were at the gates. Today, our elite retreat into legal teams and PR campaigns while the public demands answers. The pilot’s father may believe he is protecting his son. In reality, he is obscuring the truth and insulting the memory of those who perished.
History teaches us that great nations rise when they embrace responsibility, and fall when they embrace excuses. The United Kingdom once understood this. We had a stiff upper lip, not a litigious lower one. We would have demanded the pilot’s full cooperation, not his father’s grandstanding. We would have seen a tragedy as a call to improvement, not a threat to reputation.
Some may call me cruel. Some may say that a father’s love is natural. But let us distinguish between natural affection and public duty. The father’s role here is not to shield his son from the consequences of his actions. It is to urge him to face the investigation with honesty and courage. Anything less is an insult to the dead.
I say this not out of malice, but out of frustration with the softness that has infected our discourse. We have become a society that values feelings over facts, intentions over outcomes. We have become a society where a father can use the tragedy of a crash to play the victim. This is decadence. This is decline.
Let the investigation proceed. Let the facts speak. Let the pilot accept whatever judgment is due. And let us hope that somewhere, in the wreckage of this disaster, we find a renewed commitment to the old virtues: duty, honour, and the unflinching pursuit of truth.
Until then, I will be here, watching the fall of another Empire, one press release at a time.










