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SWAPA "AIP reached with Company"

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...and you just proved my point. Is this you in the video....or your sister perhaps???:laugh:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?t=1&v=nU5cMZymSr0

In case you need help with some comprehension, the bear does not understand english and will never understand...just like you will never understand...

Phred



Very funny, but the poor Gal clearly represents the pilots after they signed that industry leading deal. It's a clear representation of what you will be doing in front of the company and an arbitrator/judge, when they start excercising what YOU gave them.
 
Very funny, but the poor Gal clearly represents the pilots after they signed that industry leading deal. It's a clear representation of what you will be doing in front of the company and an arbitrator/judge, when they start excercising what YOU gave them.

Yup.

.:puke:
 
So you are talking like the company does . You think there is good codeshare and bad codeshare .

I think you just made the Christmas card list of every airline CEO

Is your current codeshare sustainable? No. You'll lose it eventually. You're too expensive, have stale cabin service, and you have one (1) airplane type. Not only is it not the ideal airplane type, you can't get an etops flt off the ground. Vote this down, get a reality check, get some code share plans that will benefit you.
 
Crawl back in your hole. The folks that actually know what it's like to fly their own code are having a professional discussion here.

Youre having a discussion all right. Interesting reading to say the least. You guys are a joke. Easy come, easy go
 
Youre having a discussion all right. Interesting reading to say the least. You guys are a joke. Easy come, easy go
Actually the ironclad scope didn't come easily, it cost us dearly. My hope is it won't go easily either. Most are willing to fight for it just like was done during last section 6 when it was tightened even more.

You think the right decision is to cave on scope. YOU ARE UNEQUIVOCALLY WRONG AND MISGUIDED!

I'm just mystified and absolutely baffled that someone that proclaims to work under a CBA that allows:

223 - 76 seat RJ's
102 - 70 seat RJ's
125 - 50 seat RJ's

would come here and preach SWA pilots that they should loosen scope language. How is that working out for you? Is it going so well that you think everyone should give it a try?

In a word, unbelievable.
 
You know Howie, you might consider not acting like a d!ck for a few posts and embrace any competing idea to voting in what you're faced with right now?? Because it's going to be a lot less fun for you to look up exact RJ/outsourcing numbers the rest of us live with if your coworkers vote this in. Make any sense to you at all?
 
You know Howie, you might consider not acting like a d!ck for a few posts and embrace any competing idea to voting in what you're faced with right now?? Because it's going to be a lot less fun for you to look up exact RJ/outsourcing numbers the rest of us live with if your coworkers vote this in. Make any sense to you at all?
No, that makes no sense to me at all!

All my energy going forward is to convince each and every voter how shortsighted voting away scope would be. If that includes pointing out the missteps of those that have gone before us then so be it.

You seem to want SWA to fall into the same trap that stifled growth at every legacy airline so you can revel in their misfortune. Just because your fate has been sealed, doesn't mean the rest of us are doomed to repeat that history.

SWAPA still has great scope in the CBA, it hasn't been bargained away YET. I implore everyone to view this from a long term lens and see the pitfalls for what they are. It is still a choice for SWAPA members. Please choose wisely.
 
SWA has always had a lot of help, and it will always need a lot of help. You would be smart to steer it toward a situation that is beneficial.
 
SWA Bubba told me the other day, over hot dogs and an Extra large Diet Pepsi, that he thought someone in SWAPA had a 'master plan' regarding this scope.
 
SWA has always had a lot of help, and it will always need a lot of help. You would be smart to steer it toward a situation that is beneficial.
Your theory that SWA wouldn't be around without the "manna from heaven" is understood by everyone familiar with your posts.

Trust me, in this situation the pilot group needs nothing from anyone in order to make the right call. That being said, your false narrative that selling scope is a smart move is completely transparent. There is no need to fall victim to your "misery loves company" mindset.
 
Your theory that SWA wouldn't be around without the "manna from heaven" is understood by everyone familiar with your posts.

Trust me, in this situation the pilot group needs nothing from anyone in order to make the right call. That being said, your false narrative that selling scope is a smart move is completely transparent. There is no need to fall victim to your "misery loves company" mindset.

D Neeleman has started two airlines in the time that SWA decided it was too good to listen to him. UAL just tied up with his Brazilian airline. That could have all been growth or increase that involved SWA
 
D Neeleman has started two airlines in the time that SWA decided it was too good to listen to him. UAL just tied up with his Brazilian airline. That could have all been growth or increase that involved SWA

Actually, it was three airlines that Neeleman started since leaving Southwest: Westjet, JetBlue and Azul. Although listed as a "founder" of WestJet, Neeleman's contribution was less substantial, and he left under undisclosed circumstances two years into its existence. He then started JetBlue, and eventually was replaced as both CEO and then Chairman for lackluster performance. He then started Azul, which is his current gig.

So in his career, he was "asked to leave" two, and possibly three airlines, and this is the guy you thought would do great things at Southwest? So what that he likes and pushes codeshare--so would all major US airline management teams, including Southwest. Why not?--it makes them money by utilizing cheaper labor than their own pilots. Not to mention, Neeleman is against unionization, which is the reason he was able to have his way so much, often to the detriment of his own labor force.

So tell me again why you like him so much, Flop. Is it his his anti-union views? How about his continual push to outsource his employees' work? Perhaps it's just his track record in general, jumping from airline to airline.

Hey, maybe you guys at United should hire him.

Bubba
 
Bubba these other airlines in other countries are going to grow or get started whether or not SWA is affiliated. They'll be affiliated with another airline and they'll do better for it. I don't particularly like DN, but I appreciate the airlines he's been a part of. Smart, organic and inclusive growth. No Texas airport bs. No problems with class2 or etops they get the work done.

You need to vote no, but you also need to consider limitations
 
Bubba these other airlines in other countries are going to grow or get started whether or not SWA is affiliated. They'll be affiliated with another airline and they'll do better for it. I don't particularly like DN, but I appreciate the airlines he's been a part of. Smart, organic and inclusive growth. No Texas airport bs. No problems with class2 or etops they get the work done.

You need to vote no, but you also need to consider limitations

Not sure you know what "organic growth" means. Neeleman's (and other majors, for that matter) penchant for codeshare and farming out flying to cheaper operators is growth that is the exact friggin' opposite of "organic." Sure it grows the company's bottom line, but it does so while leaving your own workforce stagnant. On the other hand, actually hiring more employees, and doing all your growth flying yourself, IS growth that is "organic" in nature. That's what we prefer, and our current scope clause requires it. Our position is that any flying that we're capable of doing, should be done by us.

Bubba
 
D Neeleman has started two airlines in the time that SWA decided it was too good to listen to him. UAL just tied up with his Brazilian airline. That could have all been growth or increase that involved SWA

More bragging about codeshare


Love you man How about giving up some 737 or A319s.
 
Not sure you know what "organic growth" means. Neeleman's (and other majors, for that matter) penchant for codeshare and farming out flying to cheaper operators is growth that is the exact friggin' opposite of "organic." Sure it grows the company's bottom line, but it does so while leaving your own workforce stagnant. On the other hand, actually hiring more employees, and doing all your growth flying yourself, IS growth that is "organic" in nature. That's what we prefer, and our current scope clause requires it. Our position is that any flying that we're capable of doing, should be done by us.



Bubba


In fairness, jetBlue - with 42 airline partnerships - has an upgrade time of under 3 years right now.
 

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