DashTrash400
It's a dog's life
- Joined
- Dec 16, 2004
- Posts
- 449
Yikes, I thought it was a perfectly sensible post. He wasn't proposing to impale babies on spikes, to paraphrase George Carlin... you woulda thought it from some of the responses.
When I'm nonreving I don't complain if I'm stuck between a 400 lb hermaphrodite cowboy from Brazil and an excited Jehovah's Witness while the 3 rambunctious Ugly Monkey's (UM's) behind me kick my seat and five lap kids in the immediate vicinity scream their lungs out....BUT it's still a perfectly valid to question whether that sort of situation becoming commonplace is one of the things that'd make paying passengers fly as little as practical.
The person ante'ing up for a F ticket does have a few expections regarding comfort, service, and yes, decorum. Chances are they're thinking precisely of that screaming kid in Y when they decide to pony up the $. Banning young children from non-reving in F seems to be a perfectly reasonable policy; doing so to paying passengers would invite a lawsuit and unwanted media attention - "Delta hates kids!" - while alienating those well-heeled passengers with well-behaved children.
Anyways...High fuel costs, security costs, depressed yeilds, SWA, and good old fashioned mismanagement are helping airlines fail easily enough...I doubt it's colicky infants pushing them over the edge.
When I'm nonreving I don't complain if I'm stuck between a 400 lb hermaphrodite cowboy from Brazil and an excited Jehovah's Witness while the 3 rambunctious Ugly Monkey's (UM's) behind me kick my seat and five lap kids in the immediate vicinity scream their lungs out....BUT it's still a perfectly valid to question whether that sort of situation becoming commonplace is one of the things that'd make paying passengers fly as little as practical.
The person ante'ing up for a F ticket does have a few expections regarding comfort, service, and yes, decorum. Chances are they're thinking precisely of that screaming kid in Y when they decide to pony up the $. Banning young children from non-reving in F seems to be a perfectly reasonable policy; doing so to paying passengers would invite a lawsuit and unwanted media attention - "Delta hates kids!" - while alienating those well-heeled passengers with well-behaved children.
Anyways...High fuel costs, security costs, depressed yeilds, SWA, and good old fashioned mismanagement are helping airlines fail easily enough...I doubt it's colicky infants pushing them over the edge.