It depends on what you're complaining about.Squaretail wrote: ↑Fri Jun 17, 2022 8:25 pmIts not the rules that are important, its the knowledge passed on, its knowledge ingrained in the systems that pilots will learn through.
If the complaint is that people need a checkout to switch from a 152 to a 172, or that people don't teach themselves aerobatic, or that you think every pilot should self-study for the ATPL exames (all things I agree with by the way), then it certainly matters if you grow up in a country in which non of those things are allowed.
I was *legally* required to get checked out on every differnt type I flew in Europe, wasn't allowed to get signed off for aerobatics (even with instruction) until I had accumulated 200 hours, and *had* to attend at least an accelerated ATPL ground school which was a waste of time and money.
If you want people to do all those things, then the first thing that should happen, is that it should be legally possible. It's great older pilots were able to do these things. That doesn't mean the younger ones don't want to, it might just mean they can't.
To be fair, Canada is much more open in that regards, but still doesn't allow all the things on the previously mentioned list at present.