Try telling yourself this story when the door blows off your airplane.
Engineering excellence doesn't happen by accident, and for anyone that works in any kind of technical field I'd expect a higher level of interest and/or pride than this kind of luke-warm "oh well, what did you expect". That attitude isn't a neutral stance, it's part of the problem.
> It's surprisingly easy for this to happen even with competent people in charge.
Exactly what management at Boeing is saying to regulators and the public while they cut corners on engineering, wreck a company that was around before they were alive, and fail-upwards with golden parachutes.
I'm not suggesting you need to lose sleep over every decline in quality everywhere, but your casual stance that cleaning up other people's messes is your whole job description is very likely a self-fulfilling prophecy. And if you're normalizing this then people that do like quality have to fight that much harder for it.
In my experience the people like the OP lead to the opposite of engineering excellence. Engineering is a team sport. Engineering excellence requires teams of people working together. It requires identifying gaps, understanding how they came to be, and building systems to make sure they stay fixed. It requires understanding that humans and systems built by humans are fallible and applying checks and automation as needed.
Or you can just be the guy that yells that everyone else is doing it wrong and then wonder why you don't get hired
Engineering excellence doesn't happen by accident, and for anyone that works in any kind of technical field I'd expect a higher level of interest and/or pride than this kind of luke-warm "oh well, what did you expect". That attitude isn't a neutral stance, it's part of the problem.
> It's surprisingly easy for this to happen even with competent people in charge.
Exactly what management at Boeing is saying to regulators and the public while they cut corners on engineering, wreck a company that was around before they were alive, and fail-upwards with golden parachutes.
I'm not suggesting you need to lose sleep over every decline in quality everywhere, but your casual stance that cleaning up other people's messes is your whole job description is very likely a self-fulfilling prophecy. And if you're normalizing this then people that do like quality have to fight that much harder for it.