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⚖ Operations · FAA PHAK Chapter 2, Aeronautical Decision Making; 14 CFR § 91.141Q-191 · 191 of 251

A remote pilot sees a TFR active 1.5 miles from their planned shoot location. They think: 'That TFR is for a presidential visit 10 miles away. It definitely doesn't cover my spot. The FAA wouldn't care about a little drone this far out.' What hazardous attitudes are present, and what is the correct response?

Why →
Anti-authority ('rules don't apply to me') and invulnerability ('it won't happen to me') are two of the FAA's five identified hazardous attitudes. The pilot is simultaneously dismissing an active regulation and assuming personal immunity from consequences. Presidential TFRs typically extend 30 NM from the location and are among the most aggressively enforced airspace restrictions in U.S. aviation.
The trap →
The thought 'FAA wouldn't care about a little drone' is textbook invulnerability rationalization, and it is factually wrong for presidential TFRs, where military aircraft intercepts are documented. Two years without incident is survivorship bias, not evidence of invincibility.
SOURCE → FAA PHAK Chapter 2, Aeronautical Decision Making; 14 CFR § 91.141CHECKED APR 21ACS V.C.K1MED
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