Another Boeing-linked whistleblower dies suddenly



Joshua Dean, 45, of Wichita, Kansas, worked as a quality auditor at Spirit AeroSystems' flagship manufacturing site, which supplies Boeing with various plane parts — including the door plug that popped off an Alaska Airlines 737 MAX flight, forcing a rough landing in January. Dean, who held a degree in mechanical engineering and had decades of experience, was among the first whistleblowers to claim that Spirit had turned a blind eye to defects on the controversial airliner.

Dean died suddenly Tuesday — several weeks after Boeing whistleblower John Barnett supposedly killed himself in a truck outside his South Carolina hotel amidst depositions in Charleston. Police are still investigating Barnett's death.

Barnett and Dean were both represented by the same South Carolina-based law firm, and both raised awareness about quality control issues in the Boeing supply chain.

Background

According to the Seattle Times, Dean was fired in April 2023 for allegedly bungling inspections, leading to the shipment of defective tail fin fittings to Boeing. Dean alternatively maintained that he had been canned in retaliation for having repeatedly flagged errors he observed on the factory floor — errors he suggested Spirit supervisors had ignored. He indicated as much in his November 2023 wrongful termination complaint to the Department of Labor.

A former co-worker, Lance Thompson, told the Times that Dean frustrated the mechanics on the factory floor precisely because of his attention to detail.

"There was value in what he did, and he found some things you might not expect to," said Thompson. Dean "caught 'em because he was standing over their shoulder watching them, and nobody else was."

Investors brought a federal class action lawsuit in January against Spirit, claiming they suffered financial damage after the company's stock took a nosedive over the quality control scandal. The company's former CEO, Tom Gentile, who resigned in October, and the company's CFO, Mark Suchinski, were named co-defendants in the suit.

The complaint stated that "constant quality failures resulted in part from Spirit’s culture which prioritized production numbers and short-term financial outcomes over product quality," reported the Wichita Eagle.

The lawsuit contained Dean's allegations against Spirit, including the claim that he was threatened when he attempted to draw his superiors' attention to defects.

According to the suit, Dean identified improperly drilled holes on a 737 MAX aft pressure bunkhead in 2022. This was especially troubling because that plane component helps maintain pressure during flight. Dean submitted a written report to his manager about the issue and alerted other supervisors. The defect was, however, apparently hidden from Boeing and investors until August, some ten months later.

The complaint alleged that Dean was fired over his continued efforts to highlight such defects.

Thompson said, "They went after him and fired him to make it look like we had one crazy guy who's to blame."

Dean indicated in his deposition that Spirit had effectively been gutted by the pandemic, such that a great many experienced workers left or were laid off. In fact, Dean was laid off during cutbacks in 2020 but brought back the next year in a different role.

According to the whistleblower, the turnover resulted "in more rework and repairs that had to be performed" on account of a deterioration in the quality of the work.

These problems were allegedly compounded by the company's "culture of not wanting to look for or to find problems."

"We strongly disagree with the assertions made by the plaintiffs," a Spirit spokesman said of the lawsuit.

Dean told the Wall Street Journal in January, "It is known at Spirit that if you make too much noise and cause too much trouble, you will be moved."

"It doesn't mean you completely disregard stuff, but they don't want you to find everything and write it up," he added.

Sudden death

Dean reportedly succumbed Tuesday morning to a sudden and fast-spreading infection.

His aunt, Carol Parsons, told the Seattle Times that two weeks prior to his death, Dean had taken ill and went to the hospital with breathing troubles. Things reportedly got much worse at the hospital, where he was intubated, then developed pneumonia. Soon he was plagued by MRSA, an antibiotic-resistant staph bacteria.

Dean's condition quickly deteriorated. He was flown from Wichita to a hospital in Oklahoma City, according to his aunt. In Oklahoma City, he was placed on an extracorporeal membrane oxygenation machine that resupplies oxygen-filled blood to the body. The Times indicated further that doctors had him sedated, then put on dialysis. A CT scan later revealed he had also suffered a stroke.

"It was brutal what he went through," said Parsons. "Heartbreaking."

Before he died, doctors had even considered amputating his infection-blackened hands and feet.

The New York Post indicated that both doctors and family members were astonished by the destructive and fast-acting illness.

"He is in the worst condition I have ever known or heard of," his sister-in-law Kristen Dean wrote on Facebook. "Even the hospital agrees.

The whistleblower's family indicated Sunday night that he was "giving up his fight" and "refusing to let them do any life saving procedures," reported Time.

However, his mother indicated that she "told the doctor he doesn't know what he wants, I'm sure he wants to live, he's afraid, scared and depressed."

Brian Knowles, the lawyer who represented both deceased Boeing whistleblowers, told Time, "Josh's passing is a loss to the aviation community and the flying public."

"He possessed tremendous courage to stand up for what he felt was true and right and raised quality and safety issues," added Knowles.

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Democratic socialist on the San Francisco Board of Supervisors wants to prohibit security guards from drawing weapons to defend property



Democratic socialist Dean Preston, a member of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors, has announced that he will push legislation to prohibit security guards from drawing a weapon to defend property.

Preston said that people's lives are of greater importance than property.

"Today, I'm announcing legislation to limit use of guns by security guards. We must amend local law to prohibit guards from drawing weapons just to protect property. Human life is more important than property," Preston tweeted.

\u201cToday, I\u2019m announcing legislation to limit use of guns by security guards. We must amend local law to prohibit guards from drawing weapons just to protect property. Human life is more important than property.\u201d
— Dean Preston (@Dean Preston) 1683661754

Preston's proposal drew criticism on social media.

"San Francisco is practically a criminal haven. They have one store after the next closing specifically because of the non-stop theft. And their political leadership is focused on trying to stop security guards instead of the people robbing those stores. Decline is a choice," someone tweeted in response to Preston's announcement.

"I agree human life is more important than property, but everyone has the right to defend their property and their life. So here's an idea… perhaps the criminals who steal other people's property should place a higher value on their own lives, and stop doing crime?" Christina Pushaw tweeted.

"Stop trying to pass more laws to protect criminals. That’s insane behavior. Pass laws protecting law abiding citizens," T.J. Moe tweeted.

According to his website, Preston wants "fundamental change" at all levels of government.

"As a Democratic Socialist, Dean advocates for fundamental change at the local, state, and national levels. He believes everyone deserves a dignified, productive, and healthy life through universal policies like Medicare for All, social housing, and free education," the website states.

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Former Democratic Sen. Claire McCaskill says Jesus would not support 'everyone walking around with weapons of war'



Former U.S. Sen. Claire McCaskill, a Democrat, claimed during a Monday MSNBC appearance that Jesus would not support "everyone walking around with weapons of war."

McCaskill, who served as a senator from Missouri from early 2007 until early 2019, described Jesus as a "peaceful man" and said, "I believe very firmly that Jesus would be shocked at what our country is allowing to happen."

McCaskill's comments came in the wake of a mass shooting in Allen, Texas, on Saturday that left eight victims dead.

People on social media pointed out that McCaskill is pro-choice.

"Now do abortion, Claire," one person wrote in response to McCaskill's comments.

"I think Jesus would take a dim view of abortion on demand, transgender child sexual mutilation and human trafficking too but @clairecmc promotes her own gospel," another person tweeted.

\u201cI think Jesus would take a dim view of abortion on demand, transgender child sexual mutilation and human trafficking too but @clairecmc promotes her own gospel.\u201d
— PattyDixon (@PattyDixon) 1683581869

"For people who love abortion proclaiming anything about knowing what Jesus would think or do is the most outlandish form of self righteousness," someone else declared.

Left-wing California Gov. Gavin Newsom appeared to advocate for gun control in response to the Texas shooting, tweeting on Saturday, "This is freedom?? To be shot at a mall? Shot at school? Shot at church? Shot at the movies? We have become a nation that is more focused on the right to kill than the right to live. This is not what the American people want. Do your d*** job, Congress."

Actor Dean Cain responded to Newsom's post by writing, "I prefer dangerous freedom over peaceful slavery." According to monticello.org, that sentence is a translation of Latin that Thomas Jefferson included in a letter to James Madison.

\u201cI prefer dangerous freedom over peaceful slavery.\u201d
— Dean Cain (@Dean Cain) 1683444227

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Actor Dean Cain deploys Thomas Jefferson reference when responding to gun-control advocate Gov. Gavin Newsom



California Gov. Gavin Newsom appeared to call for gun control in response to news of a mass shooting in Texas on Saturday that left eight victims dead — but actor Dean Cain pushed back against the leftist governor's comments.

"This is freedom?? To be shot at a mall? Shot at school? Shot at church? Shot at the movies? We have become a nation that is more focused on the right to kill than the right to live. This is not what the American people want. Do your d*** job, Congress," Newsom tweeted.

Dean Cain responded by writing, "I prefer dangerous freedom over peaceful slavery."

\u201cI prefer dangerous freedom over peaceful slavery.\u201d
— Dean Cain (@Dean Cain) 1683444227

Cain pointed out to critics that the sentence is a Thomas Jefferson quote.

According to Monticello.org, the words are an English translation of the Latin that Thomas Jefferson wrote in a letter to James Madison.

"'I prefer dangerous freedom over peaceful slavery' is a translation of a Latin phrase that Thomas Jefferson used: 'Malo periculosam, libertatem quam quietam servitutem.' It has also been translated as, 'I prefer the tumult of liberty to the quiet of servitude,'" the site explains.

Cain also pushed back when Democratic Sen. Chris Murphy of Connecticut claimed in a tweet that people do not need an AR-15 to hunt or defend their family.

"You don’t need an AR-15 to hunt or protect your family. You need an AR-15 if you want to kill as many people as possible in as short an amount of time as possible. It's the mass shooter’s best friend. They would be the people most affected by its ban," Murphy tweeted.

"You clearly don't know what you’re talking about," Cain responded.

\u201cYou clearly don\u2019t know what you\u2019re talking about.\u201d
— Dean Cain (@Dean Cain) 1683470515

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'Rolling with laughter at the responses to this tweet': Dean Cain calls it 'utterly ridiculous' that he had to wear a mask while flying to and from Canada



Dean Cain fired back at critics on Twitter who pounced after the actor said that he thought it was preposterous that he was required to sport a face mask while flying to and from Canada.

"Found it utterly ridiculous that I had to wear a mask on the plane - flying to/from Canada," Cain tweeted.

Some on social media pounced on the actor's remark, but Cain fired back.

"Rolling with laughter at the responses to this tweet," Cain wrote.

\u201cRolling with laughter at the responses to this tweet.\n\ud83e\udd23\ud83e\udd23 #triggered #followthescience\u201d
— Dean Cain (@Dean Cain) 1664301866

"If only you thought about others," someone tweeted in response to Cain's initial mask-related post.

"If only you thought for yourself," Cain tweeted in response.

"So cloth masks are your kryptonite? I didn't think you are that weak," someone else wrote to Cain — the actor played the starring role in the 1990's-era television series, "Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman."

The actor retorted, "I couldn't imagine you'd be so stupid."

\u201c@mslalib I couldn't imagine you'd be so stupid.\u201d
— Dean Cain (@Dean Cain) 1664301866

"You should be wearing a mask even without a pandemic," someone wrote in reply to Cain's mask tweet.

"Pot meet kettle," Cain responded.

"Maybe you shouldn't be flying to Canada then. Their country, their choice. Why do you hate people making choices for themselves so very much, Dean?" someone wrote.

"'Hate' is your word. I said 'ridiculous.' Also, the mandate expires in 4 days, because 'science,' Cain replied. "See my point now? #lemming."

\u201c@Elvis_Bob "Hate" is your word. I said "ridiculous." Also, the mandate expires in 4 days, because "science." \ud83d\ude0a \nSee my point now? #lemming\u201d
— Dean Cain (@Dean Cain) 1664260521

Another commenter reacted to Cain's post by writing, "Thanks for keeping the other passengers a little safer, even if you were forced to. Heroes are not born, or caring, or socially-minded, or even all that smart, but federally mandated into service, apparently."

"How did I keep them safer, exactly?" Cain responded.

"Thank you for keeping the immunocompromise people safe it is such a small inconvenience that one does on the behalf of our fellow humans," someone else tweeted.

Cain replied, "Well the science changes in 4 days, so..."

\u201c@jgonsier Well the science changes in 4 days, so...\u201d
— Dean Cain (@Dean Cain) 1664260521

The Canadian government is dropping its air travel masking requirement as of Oct. 1, though the Public Health Agency of Canada noted that, "all travellers are strongly recommended to wear high quality and well-fitted masks during their journeys."

Republican Rep. Liz Cheney loses to Trump-backed challenger Harriet Hageman in Wyoming GOP primary



Incumbent Republican Rep. Liz Cheney has been defeated by Harriet Hageman in the GOP primary for Wyoming's at-large congressional district.

Decision Desk HQ has projected Hageman as the victor in the widely-watched contest.

Cheney, who was one of the 10 House Republicans to vote in favor of impeaching then-President Donald Trump last year in the wake of the Jan. 6 Capitol riot, was ousted from her role as House Republican conference chair last year. She is one of the two Republican lawmakers sitting on the House select committee established to investigate the Jan. 6 episode.

Democratic lawmakers had urged people to vote for Cheney in the GOP primary — Rep. Dean Phillips of Minnesota encouraged people to "please consider temporarily switching parties and voting for Liz Cheney on or by August 16th."

\u201cAfter escaping the Capitol on Jan 6, a few of us huddled in a safe room, glued to a tv in disbelief. It was there that @Liz_Cheney vowed to hold those responsible to account. Her principles transcend politics, and I\u2019m inviting Wyoming Dem and Ind voters to do the same on 8/16.\ud83c\uddfa\ud83c\uddf8\u201d
— Dean Phillips \ud83c\uddfa\ud83c\uddf8 (@Dean Phillips \ud83c\uddfa\ud83c\uddf8) 1659980580

Former Republican President George W. Bush had given the maximum allowable donation of $2,900 to back Cheney in the primary, according to the Houston Chronicle, which noted that Karl Rove also shelled out the maximum donation — Rove served as a senior advisor and as deputy chief of staff to Bush.

Cheney is the daughter of Dick Cheney, who served as vice president during Bush's White House tenure. In a campaign ad for his daughter, Dick Cheney declared, "There is nothing more important she will ever do than lead the effort to make sure Donald Trump is never again near the Oval Office. And she will succeed."

Former President Donald Trump had endorsed Hageman last year while calling Cheney a "warmonger and disloyal Republican" as well as a "RINO," which is an acronym of the phrase "Republican in name only."

"If the cost of standing up for the Constitution is losing the House seat, then that's a price I'm willing to pay," Cheney has said, according to the New York Times.

During an interview last month, Cheney told CNN's Jake Tapper that no matter the outcome of the primary contest, she will "continue to fight hard to ensure Donald Trump is never anywhere close to the Oval Office ever again." In response to a question from Tapper about the possibility of mounting a presidential bid, Cheney said that she would "make a decision about 2024 down the road."

\u201c"I'm going to\u2026 continue to fight hard to ensure Donald Trump is never anywhere close to the Oval Office ever again."\n\n@RepLizCheney discusses the possibility of losing her seat in the House because of her work on the Jan. 6 committee. @CNNSotu #CNNSOTU\u201d
— CNN (@CNN) 1658670064

Actor Dean Norris has a message amid soaring gas prices: 'If you love Capitalism so much then [shut the f*** up]'



Actor Dean Norris has a message for capitalism supporters who are displeased about the sky-high gas prices they have been facing lately: They can just "stfu," Norris said, using an abbreviation for the profane expression shut the f*** up.

"Youre not getting 'robbed' at the pump. You're paying fair market price for a commodity. If you love Capitalism so much then stfu," Norris tweeted on Wednesday.

\u201cYoure not getting \u201crobbed\u201d at the pump. You\u2019re paying fair market price for a commodity. If you love Capitalism so much then stfu\u201d
— Dean Norris (@Dean Norris) 1655274549

The actor, who has played roles in television shows such as "Breaking Bad" and "United States of Al," made the comment as Americans continue to face soaring gas prices. As of Thursday, the AAA national average price for a gallon of regular gas is $5.009.

"This comment is evidence that Dean knows nothing about fair or free markets or economics," RedState managing editor Jennifer Van Laar tweeted in response to the actor's remarks.

"It's not a fair-market price if government purposely creates scarcity to drive up the price," tweeted David Harsanyi, a senior editor at the Federalist.

Someone else responded to Norris's post by tweeting, "yeah those gas prices determined by the market that's totally free and not at all distorted by government."

"Another dimwit leftist rich actor spouting stupidity," someone else declared.

The Biden administration has been largely blaming Russian President Vladimir Putin's invasion of Ukraine for high fuel prices. The president recently issued a letter putting pressure on the leaders of major oil companies — according to Axios, the letter was directed to the leaders of ExxonMobil, Chevron, BP America, Shell USA, Phillips 66, Marathon, and Valero.

"Your companies and others have an opportunity to take immediate actions to increase the supply of gasoline, diesel, and other refined product you are producing and supplying to the United States market," Biden said in a the letter. "The lack of refining capacity — and resulting unprecedented refinery profit margins — are blunting the impact of the historic actions my Administration has taken to address Vladimir Putin's Price Hike and are driving up costs for consumers."

In a statement supplied to TheBlaze, a Chevron spokesperson said that "what we have seen since January 2021 are policies that send a message that the Administration aims to impose obstacles to our industry delivering energy resources the world needs."

Exxon issued a statement that noted, "government can promote investment through clear and consistent policy that supports U.S. resource development, such as regular and predictable lease sales, as well as streamlined regulatory approval and support for infrastructure such as pipelines."

Biden Minimum Wage Czar Demands Federal $15 Wage, But Students Under Him As Dean Make $13.50

While a top-Biden nominee calls for a $15 minimum wage on a federal basis, he does not call to pay students at his college the same rate.