Originally posted by Pura Vida:
Anybody who thinks that Cabotage is not a threat to domestic U.S. jobs is a complete and total dumbass. You have your head so far up the Republican party's rear end that you are nothing more than a bought and paid for puppet...just like Bush - our illegitimate president.
I disagree.
Look into what
Cabotage means. The real US jobs' concern is
relaxing nationality/ownership laws. That is the major goal of the EU and that is where the threat to US jobs exists. There are plenty of other threads where this has been mentioned, but if the EU gets this concession, they will then push for labor laws to be relaxed. Then, US jobs are in jeopardy.
Cabotage is the "eighth freedom" right to begin a flight in one country that flies to a different country and continues service, with the right to pick up passengers in that second country, and continue to a second destination.
Break of gauge rights included in that freedom would allow the airline to downsize the aircraft, if appropriate. This does not mean that the service will be able to continue to a third, fourth, or fifth destination.
So, is cabotage going to kill US jobs. NO. But, allowing Richard Branson to own a majority of a US airline, with a relaxation of the current US labor laws would threaten jobs in the US.
Branson made a deal in Australia which allowed him to own an airline there; however, the airline has to employ Australian nationals for labor needs. If he owns an airline in Australia, and Virgin can fly to Australia, then why would cabotage make a difference in Australia? It doesn't. And, because the government there required him to employ Australians, jobs were created, not lost. We must require the same in the US, although that is not what has been proposed.
The General has pointed out that "it is not likely for his mother to be taking a flight on Aeroflot from NY to LA" --- or, however he puts it. And, I'm pretty sure he's right.
Keeping our current labor laws intact, or even making them tougher, is paramount. I won't get into the political debate other than to say that both parties have been deeply involved in the current movement of
open skies. I don't like the current trend in the ongoing negotiations - and will vote appropriately to prevent a loss of jobs in the US - to the extent that it is possible.