Benjamin Dover
Well-known member
- Joined
- May 5, 2006
- Posts
- 299
Ben,
DEN and RSW were indeed codeshare cities. What's ATA, Braniff, Eastern, and Pam Am have in common? Short answer. They can't defend someone taking their cities and routes.
Do you really think WestJet and Volaris are just going to hand over their routes after they building them up? Do you really think their governments are going to graciously allow it?
Ben, give me an example of codeshare by a major airline that grew said airlines seniority list. When your done trying I'll give you SEVERAL examples of codeshare that ended up with tprops and rjs on mainline routes.
I appreciate your opinion Ben. Just don't agree with it. Thanks for your time.
Gup
Gup,
I completely agree with you, but there is no way that we will ever vote down our TA (when we have one ...) because of dudes like Benh that SWA has hired over the years. Right from the military to SWA where from day one they have been told that we are the best and we are different, and that much of all the other risks in the industry don't apply to Southwest because we kick their ass.
There are so many dudes on our list that truly believe, like Ben, that ATA was perfect example or codeshare that helped us and believe that future scope and codeshare would be good for us. They have no clue.
For the record, I am also military but I also lived the codeshare reality (and job impact) at Delta prior to SWA. BenH needs to check with a few of his USAF buds at other airlines if he really believes codeshare opens markets that we will just take over ourselves. Very naive but absolutely what GK wants you to believe.
For example, right now we could fly from MCO to San Juan with no other training, rafts, equipment, certification or any other b.s. that naysayers claim are preventing our flights out of CONUS. Airtrain fills their flights on this route every day in a 737-700. So could we.
Obviously Canada would be no issue as well, demonsrated by RJ's taking over mainline flying for Delta into Toronto and Montreal among others. Cetainly if Comair and others can figure it out, we can learn how to fly north of the border.
That being said Gup, I've given up trying to explain the realities of codeshare and job outsourcing to guys I fly with. It will pass, we will codeshare and it will be a long time, if ever, we fly beyond our borders. Word is we fought off RJ's for now. That will change someday too I bet. Just my sad but humble opinon.
BD