NEDude
yada yada yada
- Joined
- Dec 12, 2001
- Posts
- 1,611
Yup, you're right. My mistake. Silly me. I always get my positive and negative numbers mixed up when I read airline financial publications! VA is in great financial shape!
Since you chose to respond with nonsense and not answer the direct question posed to you, I take it you are just trying to be a flamer.
On a serious note, there is a BIG difference in the financials between a young growing private company, and a long established, stagnant, public company. In the year plus leading up to the United bankruptcy the company was parking entire fleets of aircraft and furloughing thousands of employees.
Virgin is less than five years old, privately held, and expanding at a rate of 35% or greater per year, in the wake of the largest economic slowdown in 70 years. You have no insight into the business plan, mindset of the board of directors, or the kind of ROI the investors are getting. The company continues to grow, two new airplanes arrived in January and a new destination was announced. A new simulator facility opens in SFO in March. A pay raise for flight crews was just announced. Those are not characteristics of a company on the verge of shutting down. They were not the characteristics displayed by United leading up to its bankruptcy either.
Here are some more direct questions, although I am sure I will not get a response from you, just more nonsense. Was United growing significantly in the time leading up to its bankruptcy, or was is parking aircraft and furloughing employees? Do you have insight as to what goes on in the minds of the investors or the board of directors at Virgin America? Do you feel that employees of a growing company, who just got a pay raise, should return to the unemployment line because in your expert opinion things look bleak?