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Interesting Article about SWA from Motley Fool....

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One concept that I haven't seen mentioned is STABILITY. I've done the Bogota thing, the Europe thing, and the domestic U.S. thing. More or less a layover is a layover and it can be great or bad mostly based on yourself. But while SWA pay used to be mediocre to good and now is great (relatively speaking) two things seem to stand out for those guy - they mostly ENJOY working for their company, and they have enjoyed phenomenal STABILITY. No furloughs. Ever. No rocket rides (like the late 90s UAL pay rates)to the moon, but no crashes into the dirt (a host of other airlines).

I'd swap Bogota or London for stability and joy/pride in my company/employees...in a heartbeat.

They also now have tons of stagnation due to the AT seniority merger with that young pilot group, and they lost that "family" feeling after the AT guys got worked over by GK in the merger. I think you should "go for it" and sit in a 737 right seat for 15 years doing 5 legs per day for the next 30 years! You're gonna LUV it!


Bye Bye---General Lee
 
I guess legacy airline pilots bid from equipment to equipment, with the resultant training cycles, just to get different layovers? Wow. Got it.

By the way, why did you put quotes around "steak soup" above, like it's not really steak soup? We were actually talking about honest-to-God, no-kidding soup. With pieces of steak in it. You know, mostly liquid food that you eat with a spoon from a bowl. It wasn't a code or anything. What kind of perverted sexual innuendo were you thinking of? What kind of "steak soup" do YOU get on your layovers, General? Inquiring minds want to know.

Bubba

You didn't know that? Here's a clue you NEED, as you get older, you want to work less. That means fewer legs, longer layovers, etc. As you get more senior, at a legacy you can bid larger planes, fly one leg a day to somewhere interesting, and enjoy the layover. People do bid that way. You guys have productive trips mostly, but all have tons of legs, short turn times, and all the things that make people tired. 30 years of that would stink! And, most people would agree with me. Sorry, you're wrong again. Tomorrow, enjoy Reno, San Jose, Las Vegas, Albuquerque, and Midland. Oh, I mean enjoy that for a couple more decades! No thanks. One leg to a great dinner in Germany or Japan is a heck of a lot better, and pays as well or better. (soon will on 757/767, already more on larger widebodies).


Bye Bye----General Lee


PS----never heard of steak soup.
 
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They also now have tons of stagnation due to the AT seniority merger with that young pilot group, and they lost that "family" feeling after the AT guys got worked over by GK in the merger. I think you should "go for it" and sit in a 737 right seat for 15 years doing 5 legs per day for the next 30 years! You're gonna LUV it!


Bye Bye---General Lee
We'll be fine, enjoy your furlough, you're going to LUV it.
 
They also now have tons of stagnation due to the AT seniority merger with that young pilot group, and they lost that "family" feeling after the AT guys got worked over by GK in the merger. I think you should "go for it" and sit in a 737 right seat for 15 years doing 5 legs per day for the next 30 years! You're gonna LUV it!


Bye Bye---General Lee


It's pretty funny that you play the Airtran thing out of both sides of your mouth. On the one hand, we "screwed them over and mostly stapled them," but on your other hand, "Southwest pilots are screwed with stagnation because of all the Airtran people in front of us." Did it not occur to you that those two things contradict each other? And that it's stupid that you actually try to make two separate arguments using contradictory logic bases?

Anyway, just like United and Continental and, of course, Northwest and your Delta, there was an integration list--people plugged in to create one big list. Some peope did better than others. And, just like every other airline, including Delta, as we grow (and people retire), everybody, including juniors move up. I'm surprised that you didn't know how that works, General.

Back to the soup. And I gotta' say that I find it extremely unlikely that a seasoned and professional traveller--nay, a seasoned and professional WORLDLY traveller--like yourself, General, has never heard of steak soup. Why, they even have it in Europe. In fact I bet you could get on your fabulous German layover tonight!

Bubba

PS Have you also never heard of steak salad? :)
 
You didn't know that? Here's a clue you NEED, as you get older, you want to work less. That means fewer legs, longer layovers, etc. As you get more senior, at a legacy you can bid larger planes, fly one leg a day to somewhere interesting, and enjoy the layover. People do bid that way. You guys have productive trips mostly, but all have tons of legs, short turn times, and all the things that make people tired. 30 years of that would stink! And, most people would agree with me. Sorry, you're wrong again. Tomorrow, enjoy Reno, San Jose, Las Vegas, Albuquerque, and Midland. Oh, I mean enjoy that for a couple more decades! No thanks. One leg to a great dinner in Germany or Japan is a heck of a lot better, and pays as well or better. (soon will on 757/767, already more on larger widebodies).


Bye Bye----General Lee


PS----never heard of steak soup.

General, I have to call BS here. Older guys want to fly 12-18 hr legs toward the end of their careers? I know plenty that bid OFF international because it's so hard on their bodies. Basically they've been there and see how bad it is. Granted there are some with 3 ex-wives that stay on the widebody just for the money. NOT the schedules or overnights. Complete BS.

They don't bid into the DC9, but usually look at 4-5hr transcon legs like the Airbus, 737, etc.

Just keep talking. You constantly make points on looking more and more like an idiot.
 
You didn't know that? Here's a clue you NEED, as you get older, you want to work less. That means fewer legs, longer layovers, etc. As you get more senior, at a legacy you can bid larger planes, fly one leg a day to somewhere interesting, and enjoy the layover. People do bid that way. You guys have productive trips mostly, but all have tons of legs, short turn times, and all the things that make people tired. 30 years of that would stink! And, most people would agree with me. Sorry, you're wrong again. Tomorrow, enjoy Reno, San Jose, Las Vegas, Albuquerque, and Midland. Oh, I mean enjoy that for a couple more decades! No thanks. One leg to a great dinner in Germany or Japan is a heck of a lot better, and pays as well or better. (soon will on 757/767, already more on larger widebodies).


Bye Bye----General Lee


PS----never heard of steak soup.


Sorry, had to tackle this again--I'm bored.

First, not "all have short legs." In fact, our average stage length has increased dramatically over the years. Next week, I'm doing a three-day with a total of 5 legs (one-two-two), with decent layovers, and I'm a pretty junior captain. That's my personal preference in a trip. Some people like long hauls, some, not so much. You can bid what you want here at SWA; I think that's called variety.

As far as "all the things that make people tired" go, I believe that if you talk to people who know what they're talking about (not you, of course), you'll find that what most makes people tired is crossing multiple time zones over and again.

Finally, as far as "most people agree with [you]," I'm generously assuming that you meant that as sarcasm. My buddy at AA who flies 757/767 International out of New York does so because it's the junior-most position in the company. He's on the bottom, and got displaced out of his LAX job where he flew only to MIA, JFK, and DFW. What does that tell you?

People bid for what they want and what they can hold. Some like international, while others avoid international like the plague. Some like long hauls, while some hate them. Some like low-paying, easy pariings with long layovers; some prefer dense pairings to maximize pay. For you to say that what you do--one leg to Europe, a long layover, and one leg back (which pays dick, pairing-wise, by the way)--is the epitome of what every airline pilot wants to do, is actually the epitome of arrogance and stupidity. If you like it, good for you; but trust me, it's not what every airline pilot wants. At American, the juniors get forced to do this, because not enough senior pilots want to do it. But keep yappin'--maybe somebody will buy your schtick. I'm sure OYS (where IS that guy, by the way?) will agree with you even if no one else does.

Bubba
 
We'll be fine, enjoy your furlough, you're going to LUV it.

Riiight. Good luck with your current contract talks. You're gonna need it! See you in Hawaii, sometime next decade! Enjoy!


Bye Bye--General Lee
 
" Never argue with an idiot or a fool. They will succeed in bringing you down to their level and then beat you with experience. " - Unknown

" Never argue with a fool; onlookers may not be able to tell the difference." - Mark Twain

How many pages of this so far....?


:)


( I am as guilty as the rest...)

One final thought:

If a certain individual is all about variety, we must wonder what other areas of " variety " they might explore.

To each his own. WHY try to extoll the virtues of one's beliefs over those of another?

Hitler and Door-Knocking-Bible Beaters are just two good examples...and we all love them...

Right?



Whine - OUT
 
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Sorry, had to tackle this again--I'm bored.

First, not "all have short legs." In fact, our average stage length has increased dramatically over the years. Next week, I'm doing a three-day with a total of 5 legs (one-two-two), with decent layovers, and I'm a pretty junior captain. That's my personal preference in a trip. Some people like long hauls, some, not so much. You can bid what you want here at SWA; I think that's called variety.

As far as "all the things that make people tired" go, I believe that if you talk to people who know what they're talking about (not you, of course), you'll find that what most makes people tired is crossing multiple time zones over and again.

Finally, as far as "most people agree with [you]," I'm generously assuming that you meant that as sarcasm. My buddy at AA who flies 757/767 International out of New York does so because it's the junior-most position in the company. He's on the bottom, and got displaced out of his LAX job where he flew only to MIA, JFK, and DFW. What does that tell you?

People bid for what they want and what they can hold. Some like international, while others avoid international like the plague. Some like long hauls, while some hate them. Some like low-paying, easy pariings with long layovers; some prefer dense pairings to maximize pay. For you to say that what you do--one leg to Europe, a long layover, and one leg back (which pays dick, pairing-wise, by the way)--is the epitome of what every airline pilot wants to do, is actually the epitome of arrogance and stupidity. If you like it, good for you; but trust me, it's not what every airline pilot wants. At American, the juniors get forced to do this, because not enough senior pilots want to do it. But keep yappin'--maybe somebody will buy your schtick. I'm sure OYS (where IS that guy, by the way?) will agree with you even if no one else does.

Bubba


Oh, so your buddy is at AA, not DL? Hmmmm. You didnt say that initially. AA currently isn't as strong as it used to be, and their route structure and bases are a bit different than DLs. So, please clarify next time.


One leg days across time zones also means more time to rest. Not like a 4 day am trip of yours with 4 or 5 legs a day. The problem fatigue wise with your trips is you don't usually stop after one long leg, you then add on a LAS and then an ONT. 30 years of that will just suck. Not every pilot wants to do long haul INTL, that is true. But, nobody, as they get older, wants to do multiple leg days. That is the difference. DL has narrowbodies that do transcons, but the vast majority of your trips have 3 or more legs per day, with most having 4-5. You can't get around that, that is your business model, it's what YOU do. That is ok for 10 years, maybe. 30? Heck no. Most legacies offer larger planes, even domestic, with longer stage lengths and easier trips, that are more senior. You just can't say otherwise. To top it off, there is the INTL flying option that many haven fallen in love with. Some people fly 12 day trips in the beginning of one month, and then one at the end of the next, with 35 days off in between. You can't do that.


Long trips pay what over here? I just did a 39 hour 6 day trip, with international override and international per diem. Our pay on my plane beats yours by 2015, and the bigger widebodies pay more. Before you get into your time and a half stuff with your contract, we have the same type of stuff, plus MAC charters all over the world, sports charters, and overtime available if you want it. Your pay advantage is waning, and he way GK has been talking lately, your new contract may not add much more, even though your AT brothers sure would like to get parity. It sure seems fair, right?

As far as OYS goes, I just checked his last post and it was a couple months ago. (according to his profile). Maybe he got fed up of your SWA schtick? Maybe he is doing upgrade training on something bigger? I'll have to give him a call and remind him not to forget about this wonderful place called FI. Do you have any messages I can give him? Nah..... He probably wouldn't care. Say hi to Tanker Clown while you're at it.


Bye Bye---General Lee
 
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