crash-proof
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jul 10, 2002
- Posts
- 782
Check out thse two money-lovin ho's...who thinks this stuff up? What did she say that was racist?????
*************
http://www.thedenverchannel.com/travelgetaways/2781732/detail.html
Trial Over Flight Attendant's Alleged Racist Rhyme Starts
2 Women Say Rhyme Left Them Feeling Humiliated, Degraded
KANSAS CITY, Kan. --The Southwest Airlines flight from Las Vegas to Kansas City was waiting to depart, when flight attendant Jennifer Cundiff tried to jolly passengers out of the aisle.
Over the intercom, the Argyle, Texas, attendant announced: "Eenie, meenie, minie moe; pick a seat, we gotta go."
Two black sisters on the flight three years ago say the rhyme was racist, and left them humiliated and degraded. Their federal court lawsuit against the airline opened Tuesday in Kansas City.
Plaintiffs Louise Sawyer and Grace Fuller of Johnson County, Kan., say they suffered physical and emotional distress. Their lawyer told the eight-member jury the two were discriminated against -- even though the "n-word" sometime associated with the rhyme was not used.
Cundiff says she had no idea why the rhyme would have been considered racist. She says it was directed at all those who weren't seated, not just Sawyer and Fuller. And she says she'd used it before on other flights, in an attempt at humor.

*************
http://www.thedenverchannel.com/travelgetaways/2781732/detail.html
Trial Over Flight Attendant's Alleged Racist Rhyme Starts
2 Women Say Rhyme Left Them Feeling Humiliated, Degraded
KANSAS CITY, Kan. --The Southwest Airlines flight from Las Vegas to Kansas City was waiting to depart, when flight attendant Jennifer Cundiff tried to jolly passengers out of the aisle.
Over the intercom, the Argyle, Texas, attendant announced: "Eenie, meenie, minie moe; pick a seat, we gotta go."
Two black sisters on the flight three years ago say the rhyme was racist, and left them humiliated and degraded. Their federal court lawsuit against the airline opened Tuesday in Kansas City.
Plaintiffs Louise Sawyer and Grace Fuller of Johnson County, Kan., say they suffered physical and emotional distress. Their lawyer told the eight-member jury the two were discriminated against -- even though the "n-word" sometime associated with the rhyme was not used.
Cundiff says she had no idea why the rhyme would have been considered racist. She says it was directed at all those who weren't seated, not just Sawyer and Fuller. And she says she'd used it before on other flights, in an attempt at humor.


