The young son (25 yrs) of a good friend of mine
got a job with Atlas, in the right seat of a 747.
Now, he's got good hands and feet. Specifically
he has thousands of hours of Pitts and Waco
time, operating off a single paved runway with
a frequent strong crosswind.
You know. He's got lots of that unimportant
tailwheel time.
Anyways, I'm enormously fond of this young
and skilled pilot, but I would not describe him
as a "God", as many heavy Boeing drivers think
of themselves.
I really don't think Boeing makes as bad an
airplane as their pilots would have you think.
A Boeing is not a "fire-breathing dragon". You
do not have to be a God to fly one. In fact,
as Peter Martin showed us all, you can have
pretty crappy stick and rudder skills, and do
just fine in one. It's that good an airplane,
and easy to fly.
I know people think I'm pretty stupid compared
to them, and I don't know much about aviation
or engineering compared to them, but IMHO here
is a real fire-breathing dragon:

A data point on fire-breathing dragons: I know
of a CEPE F-104 pilot that holds the opinion that
a Pitts is MUCH harder to land than a -104, which
in turn makes an F-18 look like a baby carriage.
Right, Rocky?