No, the ridiculous part is looking in the mirror and thinking that the regional pilots had nothing to do with it.....
The regional pilots only accepted the scraps that you threw at them. They had absolutely no part in the decision to outsource your flying.
Take USAir for example....they had the best scope in the business. Management slowly ate away at it
Management can't eat away at it if you vote no. The legacy pilots made the bad decision that other things were more important to them than scope. A stupid decision, but not one that ALPA made for you.
ALPA should have never allowed anything above 70 seats to be flown anywhere except mainline.
See, there you go making the same mistake again. Once you put a seat restriction on it and say that that number of seats is acceptable, then you're putting the issue of scope out on the table for negotiations. This never should have been done, period. All legacy scope should look like the old Braniff scope clause:
"All flying for Braniff Airlines will be conducted by pilots on the Braniff Airlines pilot system seniority list."
Period. End of story. Not negotiable. Once you get away from that, you can never turn back and it only gets worse as time goes on.
At this time, in the ALPA operations manual, there is nothing preventing Mesa from flying A320's for United, except their scope clause. If something wiped out their scope, I am sure ALPA national would have nothing to say.
First, there's no such thing as an "ALPA operations manual." Second, scope doesn't get wiped out unless pilots vote for it to be wiped out. Every scope clause in existence at the legacy carriers was voted on by the pilots at that airline. You can keep trying to deflect the blame, but it always comes back to the pilots at the legacies that voted for it.
They need to step up to the plate and put a limit on that.
The ones that need to step up to the plate are the mainline pilots who think it's acceptable to give up scope for a few extra bucks on the payrates. Look, I actually agree with you that the ALPA President should refuse to sign any more contracts with scope concessions, and I disagreed with Duane about signing most of the concessionary contracts over the past 6 years that completely sold out scope language. However, it doesn't pass the smell test to blame ALPA for your own decisions on this subject. It certainly would have been nice for Duane to have said no, but when it comes right down to it, the blame rests solely with the people that were responsible for voting on their own contracts.