I really struggled to make this podcast. Not because I didn't have stuff to say (I always seem to have stuff to say) but because I was afraid I would make people angry.
I think that is a stupid reason to not do a podcast.
I hope this makes people angry - although I softened this message a lot before I posted this message.
We need to let go of our need to blame somebody for not predicting these events and start to really talk about a system prevention to this very unique problem we have in the United States.
Our need to blame is getting in the way of our ability to improve.
Listen to this podcast.
Best Safety Podcast, Safety Program, Safety Storytelling, Investigations, Human Performance, Safety Differently, Operational Excellence, Resilience Engineering, Safety and Resilience Incentives
Give this a listen.
Thanks for listening and tell your friends. See you in motion someplace.
PAPod 576 - From Continuous Improvement to Continuous Capacity: 10 Operational Indicators You Need
This episode shifts the safety conversation from continuous improvement to conti
PAPod 575 - Vancouver Workshop: A Case Study in Failure, Justice, and Resilience
Todd Conklin talks with Brent Sutton and Jeff Lyth about the upcoming HOP Worksh
PAPod 574 - Margin for Safety: Lessons from 50 Years in the Cockpit
This episode explores human performance and aviation safety, contrasting airline
PAPod 573 - The Stability Trap: Why Safe Organizations Still Fail
Jay Allen interviews Todd Conklin about his new book, The Stability Trap, explor
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