The recent Air India crash has been a crucible for public outrage, with the pilot’s incompetence seemingly laid bare. Yet, in a twist that would delight a tragedian, the pilot’s father has emerged to defend his son, invoking the sanctity of UK aviation standards. This, of course, is the ultimate irony: a defence that hinges on the very system that, if we are honest, has been in quiet decline since the fall of the British Empire.
Let us examine the father’s argument. He claims his son was trained to rigorous UK standards, that the crash was a product of circumstance, not negligence. Perhaps he is correct. But the deeper question is whether those standards themselves have become a hollowed-out relic, a bureaucratic edifice masking institutional decay. We live in an age where we venerate processes as if they were sacred texts, yet we ignore the human fallibility that corrupts them. The pilot, after all, was a man, not a machine. And men, unlike standards, are prone to error.
Recall the Victorian era, when British engineering was the envy of the world. The steamship, the railway, the telegraph: these were triumphs of precision and discipline. But discipline required more than paperwork; it demanded a cultural ethos of meticulousness, a pride in craft. Today, we have replaced that ethos with a tick-box compliance that breeds complacency. We audit, we certify, we regulate, yet we forget that the spirit of excellence cannot be legislated. The father’s defence, then, is a symptom of a broader disease: the substitution of genuine competence with the mere appearance of it.
This tragedy also echoes the Fall of Rome, when the legions were still drilled in the old ways, but the heart had gone out of the empire. The standards remained, but they were empty shells. Similarly, UK aviation standards may be world-class on paper, but the system that enforces them is increasingly porous. The crash is not an indictment of one man; it is a warning that our institutional reverence is misplaced. We worship the form, but ignore the substance.
Let us not be fooled by the father’s plea. It is a distraction. The real culprits are the rot within the system and the fetishisation of external validation. We must ask ourselves: are we building a civilisation of competence, or merely curating a museum of standards? The answer, I fear, is shamefully clear.








