1. Case + Ethical Dilemma
The problem with Boeing has progressed from an accident or ‘manufacturing defect’ to a trend. In fact, on January 5, 2024, there was an “aircraft door plug panel that blew out” on an Alaska 737 Max 9 plane during flight, causing damage to the fuselage, requiring an emergency landing. Then doubts about “missing bolts” and “shortcomings” found in Boeing’s manufacturing process quickly surfaced. The FAA responded with audits and production restrictions. Then reports began to come in about loose hardware and other problems with other airplanes. This follows the two crashes of Boeing’s 737 Max 8 models that resulted in 346 fatalities due to ‘design flaws’ and ‘management’s review’ and ‘exchange’ of ‘information with the FAA in 2018-2019.’
- Weakened areas vs. continued production. Internal results and outside data pointed to systemic quality problems, yet production and shipments continued with significant commercial pressure. The risk to passengers and customers in choosing to get these jets out the door with such fundamentals in question rests with those innocent parties.
- Oversight dependence vs. risk of capture. Historically, regulators have delegated significant certification activity to Boeing. From an ethical perspective, Boeing's responsibility is to exceed the requirements and not exploit them. Going through loopholes to go faster erodes the social license that the company requires.
- Public messaging vs. internal reality. While Boeing’s management boasts “safety is our top priority” and “we put transparency first,” investigators and whistleblowers point to failed processes, fear of retaliation, and management's obsession with timelines and stock price. When brand messaging doesn’t correlate with behavior, it’s no longer PR; it's mere deception.
SOURCES
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alaska_Airlines_Flight_1282
https://www.faa.gov/newsroom/updates-boeing-737-9-max-aircraft
https://drs.faa.gov/browse/excelExternalWindow/DRSDOCID122693486620240106201913.0001?modalOpened=true
https://abcnews.go.com/US/alaska-airlines-door-plug-ntsb-report/story?id=106992184
This was a good analysis of Boeing's ethical failures. I like how you were able to trace problems all the way back to the company's system as a whole showing that there are flaws in the entire corporation. This post captured how their actions differ from what they officially state.
ReplyDeleteI like your choice to use Boeing. This is maybe the most important ethical dilemma that someone in our group has talked about because it brings physical safety into question.
ReplyDeleteI was actually considering taking up the Boeing case myself, but I wasn’t sure I could present it correctly given the complexity. Your breakdown of the conflict between production pressures, oversight, and public messaging really captures why this is such a critical ethical issue.
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