TrumanSparks
turn left at band aid
- Joined
- Nov 30, 2001
- Posts
- 116
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SWA was allowed exclusivity at Love Field where deregulators specifically denied it at Chicago Midway.
You've been shown Bubba.
No airline was suppose to have a protected airport under deregulation. That was the whole point of it in the first place. But SWA was allowed to slip through. IMHO these de-regulators wanted to let at least one airline have a durable advantage to insure their voodoo BS "political entrepreneurship" [airline deregulation] would be more likely to have at least one success story.
Wright should never have had to get involved. SWA should have been sent to DFW, or Braniff allowed to stay at Love Field and compete directly with them.
Flop, Where does it say that SWA had/has exclusivity to DAL? Does the WA specifically mention SWA? Thanks
It doesn't say anything of the sort about Southwest and exclusivity. Flop just pulled that claim out of his ass. In fact, the WA doesn't mention any airline at all by name, nor place any limits on what airline or number of airlines can fly there. It merely stated that airliners with more than 56 seats could not fly from Love Field to airports in states other than Texas or the surrounding ones (not coincidentally, the ones Southwest was already flying to). The intended and practical effect was to prevent Southwest from being able to expand service from its home airport.
Bubba
I'm not anti swa, so much as I'm opposed to the circumstances that have created the current situation. SWA is hardly a successful airline, so much as it's a lucky airline. I realize for most of the types that end up at swa, being lucky is more than good enough. However, big picture: there's nothing to appreciate about how this industry has been brought to this point.
Ill admit the WA does not specify swa. My word "exclusivity" pertained to the link I posted that mentioned Midway (although that could have been any Airport) They said "no" to a protected airport at Midway because that's the kind of situation that should have been avoided. But that's basically what swa got.
The North Texas airport situation is a real mess. Always has been, always will be. From Braniff's perspective, it never made sense that two cities were forced to use one airport. Especially at a time when deregulation and doing away with the cab was taking place. DAL was supposed to be closed, or DFW never built. Either of those things happen? This is a different looking industry. And the full view of deregulation is a lot more cloudy.
^^^^^^^^ This is what Kahan is speaking to. This is how the WA offered swa protection. SWA got what it needed, when it needed it. But for other airlines it was less desirable. You've asked me to show you proof of that for 10 years. There it is Bubba.
Actually, DFW got what IT needed at the time which was a LACK OF COMPETITION FROM SWA OUT OF LOVE!!!SWA got what it needed, when it needed it.