What would have happened if she just blew him off and continued on to where she was going?
He’s already filed the deviation. She’s already going to get violated. Her license is in jeopardy the moment he gave her a phone number to copy.
The FAA is already going to investigate, I’m not sure if it’s worse if she were to say simply, “unable“ and proceed back to falcon field.
I’ve flown out of Falcon Field, to the northeast of the field are mountains and to the south and west are a multitude of airports in a big city. It’s busy airspace. I don’t know who signed her off as a private pilot, she knows how to dial the correct frequency, but she doesn’t know how to talk professionally on the radio. Complete read back of clearances, particularly clearances to land at an airport with multiple runways, is a requirement. She failed to meet several requirements when it comes to communication and when it comes to complying with controller clearance.
What’s missing from the discussion is the geography.
I don’t know where she was in relation to this controller’s class B airspace. Others have said that no loss of separation occurred, well when a controller says climb immediately, a loss of separation has either occurred or is about to occur, so we can’t know that there was “no loss of separation”.
I have never seen a controller react that strongly, but we only know about his instructions, her poor skills, and his telling her to land.
We don’t know where she was, we don’t know what preceded this conversation, and so that makes it impossible to judge whether the controller was out of line or not. The fact that I’ve never heard a controller tell somebody “I’m going to make you land at this airport”, before doesn’t mean he was incorrect, it means the situation was extreme.
Whether he reacted appropriately or not requires more information to determine.