Al Coholic
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jul 7, 2004
- Posts
- 157
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chperplt said:Take your bitching and walk on out of here.
Oh.. The RJ is stealing jobs from the mainline.. Oh.. The RJ has caused the problems of today.. Oh.. You're a putz!
Go blow it out your pie hole buddy. Quit being a drag!!
chperplt said:So, tell me this Einstein. Is the RJ to blame for the US Air payscale?
No...well maybe.
What about the AA payscales?
No
Are RJs to blame for global warming?
Does global warming really exist? Perhaps your've been listening to Randi Rhodes and Al Franken on Air America Radio too much.
or the hemorrhoids I'm sure your suffering from.
Not true, I eat a well balanced diet. This includes pleanty of meats, veggies, fine wine, and an occasional wheat grass shot.
The industry sucks.. It has nothing to do with the equipment. It has to do with piss poor management decisions.
And limp **ck organizations like ALPA.
Don't blame the RJ for taking your job. Boo F-kn hoo. Have some cheese with your wine.
Who said I don't have a job??
The RJ has it's place in this industry the same way your 727, DC9, larger DC9, 757, or 767 do or did.
Not true. The RJ has no rank next to the proven history of the 727, DC9, and 75/76. All of these types enhanced the profession. The RJ and it's current wage and bennie package continues to damage the career. Perhaps this is the economic reality, but nevertheless the damage is being done.
If management can't use it's resources properly... then go piss on them. O.K. It's called Scope. But we're losing that battle. God bless the RJDC.
You think we're not professional pilots because we get paid less?
No. It's not professional because trashy blue collar High School drop-out jobs pay better salaries and bennies.
Are US Air pilots not professional? What about MidAtlantic? Are they not professional because they get paid less than some of us RJ drivers? Remind us of that when you need us for a ride home.
Don't need one. And USAir and the current bankruptcy codes are a topic for later.
I think you've had too many drags in your day.. What a tool.
I suppose you're right. It's great that more 50 seat RJ's are comming into the system. Given the fact that there's huge undercapacity in the network and fuel will probably drop to the mid 20's next week, I toast to the future.
drag said:I'm probably just blowing my pie hole but are you aware that Chicago school bus drivers make more than senior RJ Captains. Second year UPS bag sorters make more than regional F/o's. Cox cable pays installers more than RJ pilots. Driving a garbage truck for the city of Phoenix would be a raise....not to mention being at home a lot more.
I guess I'm just a putz. The RJ has really raised the bar for professional pilots. Ooops, did I say professional? Anyway, flying on LCC's is an upgrade from an RJ flight. Unless you're 4 feet tall. LUV, AAI, F9, and B6 are much better as far as comfort. No doubt there are segments where RJ's fit the mold, however DAL has way overdone the 50 seat RJ.
drag said:The RJ has it's place in this industry the same way your 727, DC9, larger DC9, 757, or 767 do or did.
Not true. The RJ has no rank next to the proven history of the 727, DC9, and 75/76. All of these types enhanced the profession. The RJ and it's current wage and bennie package continues to damage the career. Perhaps this is the economic reality, but nevertheless the damage is being done.
FlyComAirJets said:It is rather astounding fools like drag manage to get themselves dressed in the morning. It is scarey that they fly airplanes of any size. The RJ is not the cause of the industry's problems or the compensation levels -- it's called deregulation. In this era Low Cost Carriers are here to stay, always have been, always will be. There is always going to be the hot airline du juor that catches the media (and consequently, investors') attention. If it isn't JetBlue and Air Tran, it would be ValueJet or People Express. It is a fact of life.
If it gets you off blaming RJ's for the inability of mainline airlines to sustain regulated era pay-work rules-pensions, etc., then so be it but your anger is completely misdirected. RJ's have supplied critical feed into the traditional hub and spoke operations that have propped up (pun intended) the dinosaur carriers for years. Trying to scope out RJ's is the ultimate example of mainline pilots shooting themselves in the foot.
With passenger loads back to 2001 levels and the FAA recently predicting a %100 increase over the next few years, more people than ever will be flying. Which airline they chose to fly remains to be determined. It's called competition. Quit you whining and deal with it.
No Gen. The RJ's are Delta's airplanes too. Only the pilot group decided to discriminate. The passengers don't know the difference.General Lee said:Hey now. He is partially correct depending on where DL places the RJs. Bye Bye--General Lee
drag said:Actually the RJ is a DC-9 with much better performance, same as the E120 was a Convair, or F27, beater. The only difference in the "profession" is that ALPA mainline promoted the creation of alter ego air carriers for the flying that they had performed, but now felt was beneath their "profession." Now Mid Atlantic pilots make less than RJ pilots.chperplt said:The RJ has it's place in this industry the same way your 727, DC9, larger DC9, 757, or 767 do or did.
Not true. The RJ has no rank next to the proven history of the 727, DC9, and 75/76. All of these types enhanced the profession. The RJ and it's current wage and bennie package continues to damage the career.
Delta has F27 pilots and ATR pilots on their seniority list that never "interviewed" at Delta. The only difference between now and then is ALPA National's failure to lead us in the direction of unity.
And Comair guys are wetting their panties over a phantom additional RJ that they took concessions to buy - again, ALPA National should have never let an MEC negotiate in their narrow self interest to lower the profession.
Don't blame the whores, blame the cops that should be enforcing the Constitution and Bylaws.
drag said:This is a fact. I never meant to imply that individual pilots aren't professional. However, what used to be viewed as a "professional career" is now gone
~~~^~~~ said:drag said:Actually the RJ is a DC-9 with much better performance
That's an interesting comment. Funny, I remember being told that RJ's were to replace turboprops on feeder cities. So I guess it's true, RJ's are replacing mainline. Is the better performance in regards to density altitude or cheaper labor?
Chicago school bus drivers make $95,000 and up? Man, where can I sign up for that. Nine months work M-F in just the morning for two hours and then again in the afternoon for just a few hours a day. Then all summer off. Wow! I'm moving to Chicago with all that good pay!drag said:I'm probably just blowing my pie hole but are you aware that Chicago school bus drivers make more than senior RJ Captains.
drag said:~~~^~~~ said:Actually mainline labor is cheaper if you plot out pilot's salaries by the seat mile. And in very real terms mainline is cheaper at US Air. ASA's ATR pilots make between 12 and 30% more than Mid Atlantic' E170 pilots.drag said:Actually the RJ is a DC-9 with much better performance
That's an interesting comment. Funny, I remember being told that RJ's were to replace turboprops on feeder cities. So I guess it's true, RJ's are replacing mainline. Is the better performance in regards to density altitude or cheaper labor?
Drag - what you don't realize is that an RJ is an airplane, like a 767 is an airplane. ALPA should not discriminate. The mainline guys are responsible for this discrimination and for its creation. The Delta MEC negotiated and endorsed the scope loopholes that became ASA and Comair. Clearly in this case the chicken came before the egg.
747 pilots might lament those little 767's that took the transatlantic flying, as you lament the replacement of some 737's with RJ's. The size of the airplane does not matter. What matters is how organized labor negotiates to protect the wages and working conditions of those engaged in the profession.
But the RJ is an airplane. Like any airplane it has a limited market. Mostly it feeds larger airplanes, but there are cases where it can provide hub bypass. Gas prices will drive the market towards larger airplanes, where the cost per seat mile is less. Fuel hurts the RJ is the same way the old generation 737's ad DC-9's are effected, it reduces the number of markets where they makes sense.
So stop worrying and learn to love the RJ. It works feeding larger airplanes, particularly in the days of $2.00 a gallon jet fuel.