Boeing continues to make headlines in 2024, and not for reasons that bring any comfort to airline passengers.
The shocking mid-air blowout of an Alaska Airlines flight in early January unveiled a concerning lack of quality assurance in Boeing's production line. However, this was only the tip of the iceberg.
As Glenn has since reported, Boeing has long sacrificed quality assurance during their years-long "woke" overhaul to comply with new ESG and DEI standards. Boeing engineers' attempts to sound the alarm bells warning of the company's diminished quality standards have continually been silenced, and is it any coincidence that one of the main whistleblowers mysteriously committed suicide this year following his public testimony?
There is clearly trouble afoot with Boeing. Here are the top 6 Boeing failures in 2024 alone that indicate their quality standards may have been compromised.
January 5th: The Alaska airlines mid-flight blowout
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The great Boeing debacle began with the terrifying mid-flight blowout of an emergency exit door on an Alaska Airlines flight shortly before landing in Portland, Oregon. The plane was 16,000 feet in the air when the blowout occurred, immediately depressurizing the cabin. A faulty pin inside the door caused this terrifying incident, and though non-fatal, it initiated the FAA's mandated grounding of all Boeing 737 Max 9 aircraft for further investigation.
January 13th: The ANA window crack
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A Boeing 737-800 operated by Japan's All Nippon Airways (ANA) was forced to return to its departure airport for an emergency landing after the window in the cockpit cracked mid-flight.
January 19th: The blazing engine
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A Boeing 747-8 cargo plane made an emergency landing at the Miami International Airport due to an engine failure. Videos on social media show the plane's engine engulfed in flames during its emergency landing.
January 23rd: The lost wheel
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A Boeing 757 operated by Delta Airlines lost a nose wheel during an attempted takeoff from the Atlanta International Airport. All passengers and luggage were removed from the plane.
March 12th: The Latam Airlines mid-flight plunge
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At least 50 of the 240 passengers on LATAM Airlines Flight 800 from Sydney, Australia to Auckland, New Zealand were injured when the Boeing 787-9 Dreamliner suddenly plunged 100 meters in mid-air. The plunge sent passengers not wearing their seatbelts flying to the roof of the plane, causing injuries that required hospitalization for 13 of the injured passengers.
A passenger on board the flight told the Wall Street Journal that the pilot said the cockpit went "black." Though mainstream accounts have attributed the so-called "technical event" to someone in the cockpit engaging an incorrect lever, this passenger's testimony indicates there's more to the story than what the press is reporting.
April 2nd: The Boeing bathroom debacle
A Boeing 737 Max 9 from Hawaii to Alaska had to turn around when its bathroom flooded the plane mid-flight. Passenger Dustin Parker said, "There was probably two to four inches of standing water that swooshed out as soon as you opened that front door of the lavatory."