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US DOJ Suing to Block Meger of AMR and US Airways

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No neutral third parties here at LCC, Hatfields or McCoys, pick a side and speak up!!! This self hostage taking talk is BS, you control your future, not some 1989 Hire sad sack AAA pilot crying about his/her bad choices...
 
The irony of this whole thing is that it was Parker who pushed the whole consolidation wave in the first place. Yet now he's getting cut off due to his own underhanded business tactics (undercutting the competition with gimmicks like Advantage Fares and the the like).

I wonder whether Horton is playing the DOJ in this whole deal to unravel the merger.

Talk about getting owned. Parker getting clobbered by his own cheap-suit ways.
 
The Diane Rehm Show had a program about the merger a few days ago.

The U.S. Justice Department took most everyone by surprise yesterday. Along with six states and the District of Columbia, it sued to block the merger of American Airlines and US Airways. The two airlines were just days away from a bankruptcy court hearing which they hoped would confirm their exit plan. The carriers claim their consolidation would benefit consumers by creating a new airline that could compete with rivals that have already merged. But critics and Justice officials say the transaction would result in higher fares, higher fees and fewer choices. Diane and her guests discuss the economic impact of airline mergers.

Guests

Charles Leocha director of Consumer Travel Alliance.
George Hamlin president of Hamlin Transportation Consulting.
Holly Hegeman founder and CEO of PlaneBusiness.com.
Ben Mutzabaugh editor of USA Today's "Today in the Sky" blog.
http://thedianerehmshow.org/shows/2013-08-14/economic-impact-airline-mergers
 
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It's probably true also. Anyway, the whole USAir East group have only brought down this profession by disregarding something they signed up for in the first place. They deserve 1/2 the pay, and they deserve to be miserable.

It goes to show that merging airline lists can either be painful and contentious (US and SW/AT), or one that includes integrity and follows the direction of outside parties (arbitrators) with no conflict of interest. Both of you guy took the wrong direction, and that may haunt you for years. Oh well... I'm really surprised about SWA's decision, after watching a successful SLI (DL/NWA) and a not successful one (AWA/US). Bad move...


Bye Bye---General Lee


General, You have a knack for always homing on the negative. But US Airways pay rates are really not that bad if you consider how proportional they are to their associated work rules and down to earth culture. For example, the work rules at US Air allow east line holders to easily drop flying. It is also easy to fly 25-30 hours or less a month on short call reserve. I know a pilot who flew 30 hours in the last 60 days at US Airways and works full time from home to make double his airline salary—winner.

There is more to the world than money and more to US Airways contract than just pay rates.

I can imagine that it is very easy for you to speak poorly of US Airways because of how they hurt your profession after Doug Parker's hostile takeover attempt succeeded in putting 2 billion dollars worth of debt on your the merged DAL/NWA balance sheet.


The irony of this whole thing is that it was Parker who pushed the whole consolidation wave in the first place. Yet now he's getting cut off due to his own underhanded business tactics (undercutting the competition with gimmicks like Advantage Fares and the the like).

I wonder whether Horton is playing the DOJ in this whole deal to unravel the merger.

Talk about getting owned. Parker getting clobbered by his own cheap-suit ways.

Yes very ironic...

Maybe Horton and the AA board are still motivated to acquire US outside of BK—who knows.
 
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