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WN will do anything for a buck

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be-400xpdriver

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 1, 2005
Posts
366
JACKSONVILLE, Fla.—Bored on a hot summer day, three Florida youngsters were just sitting around when one sent a text message to another with an adventurous idea. "Hey do you want to go 2 Tennessee today," the message read.
"Sure," the other responded.
Not even old enough to get a driver's license, they took a taxi to the airport Tuesday, bought tickets with baby-sitting money and—unbeknownst to their parents, the three (ages 15, 13 and 11)—boarded a Southwest Airlines flight from Jacksonville to Nashville, according to a TV news account of the incident.
Nobody asked a question. Nobody asked for identification.
Not the taxi driver. Not the ticket counter. Not security officials or flight attendants or other passengers. So when they landed in Nashville with just $40 left and their destination, Dollywood, still hundreds of miles away, they finally called home.
The jig was up.
"I just wanted to fly," 15-year-old Bridget Brown, told WJXX-TV in Jacksonville. "I had the money."
Now their parents are wondering how the trip was possible.
Southwest Airlines said in a statement that the company's policy on minors is similar to other carriers in that it covers children ages 5 through 11 traveling alone, and that the 11-year-old in this case was accompanied by two older companions. The Transportation Security Administration does not require anyone under age 18 to show identification.
It is still unclear if any of the three should have been allowed to purchase tickets. A Southwest spokesman did not immediately return a message seeking comment on that issue.
Messages left by The Associated Press on Friday at the families' homes were not immediately returned.
In an age of heightened security and terrorism threats, some are concerned that three youngsters could so easily board an airline without parental consent.
Richard Bloom, an aviation security expert at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University in Daytona Beach, Fla., said while this incident amounted to a childhood jaunt, it highlights legitimate safety implications.
"The moral of the story is, at least in other parts of the world, young people are engaged in weapons, planting bombs, testing security," he said. "The point is terrorist groups, insurgent groups, other kinds of transnational groups, what have you, they read the papers, they watch TV, they look at the security lapses. And they take that information as they develop their own terrorist operations and anti-government operations."
The three youngsters certainly had no problem hopping a flight.
Brown, with the $700 she had saved, took her 11-year-old brother Kodie and 13-year-old friend Bobby Nolan III to the airport. She said she purchased the three tickets at the Southwest Airlines counter without any problems from the clerk.
"He said OK and told us how much it would be and then we paid him," Brown said. "Then he put the flight things on our bags, and then he said, 'You better run because you might miss your flight.'"
No issues at security, either.
"We just took our stuff out of our pockets, took our shoes off and walked through it," Nolan told the TV station. "And they didn't say nothing."
The three arrived in Nashville and, realizing their plan was flawed, finally 'fessed up.
Their parents thought they were merely out playing and had left messages on their cell phones. When they found out they were in Nashville, they were stunned and scared.
Nashville airport spokeswoman Emily Richard said the children never left the airport property and were immediately rebooked on return flights. Southwest said it has refunded their airfare.
The parents are just glad their children made it home safely.
"I never would have dreamed my kids would have got on a plane without me or their mom," James Brown said. "But they did. It was very scary, very scary. Luckily, they're OK."





http://www.denverpost.com/ci_15768586
 
Now I have to admit I wasn't exactly splitting atoms when I was a kid but how stupid do you have to be to buy a ticket without the funds to get back home?
 
Should have kept the money AND charged them for the return flight. And the parents should make the girl pay for the return ticket.

But the fact is that these 3 kids and their families will prolly have lifetime travel benies from now on.

Gup
 
Way, way back in about 8th grade or so, we all had to take a basic laws & civics class. I recall something about financial dealings & contracts entered into with minors were not valid, and the parents could demand a refund of all monies if a business entered into a financial agreement with a minor. I don't recall the specifics, though, but there were exceptions if the product was a consumable... I think. (I just don't remember the specifics). Something about if a child bought a candy bar and ate it, no refund was due, but if a child bought a car and drove it, 100% refund was due with no allowance for wear & tear, loss of value, etc.

So... maybe SWA refunded the money because they realized that legally they weren't allowed to enter into the agreement in the first place? Or, is airline travel considered a consumable product from a legal standpoint? I don't know the answer.

On another note, how did kids today become so sheltered? I remember in the 70's and 80's being MUCH more independent than kids today (traveling alone without any Unaccompanied Minor programs on connecting flights across oceans, going out to play and not coming home until the street lights came on, using buses and trains to take day trips in the summer to nearby cities & amusement parks).
 
Southwest doing anything for a buck?

No kidding? They even charge their employees to work there.
I sure hope the feds are taking a good look at this shabby operation. They need to be shut down NOW!
 
Now I have to admit I wasn't exactly splitting atoms when I was a kid but how stupid do you have to be to buy a ticket without the funds to get back home?


That is what parents are for! :laugh:

Just my opinion!

ps. The parents should take the money they used for the tickets and put it thier college fund since they obviously have too much free cash to play with!
 
On another note, how did kids today become so sheltered? I remember in the 70's and 80's being MUCH more independent than kids today (traveling alone without any Unaccompanied Minor programs on connecting flights across oceans, going out to play and not coming home until the street lights came on, using buses and trains to take day trips in the summer to nearby cities & amusement parks).

Maybe it has something to do with all the Amber Alerts and every time you turn on CNN, there's a kid snatched from some trailer park in Florida. The media has conditioned the public that the world is a dangerous place for children. Are there really more instances of child abduction now than there were 30 years ago? I doubt it. In fact, there's probably LESS due to quick dissemination of information nowadays. I used to do many of the things you listed when I was a kid and not even think twice. Now, whenever I see a 9 year old walking home from school alone, I shudder to think how quickly the child could disappear in this "sick" world we live in. Never underestimate the power of perception.
 
Maybe it has something to do with all the Amber Alerts and every time you turn on CNN, there's a kid snatched from some trailer park in Florida. The media has conditioned the public that the world is a dangerous place for children. Are there really more instances of child abduction now than there were 30 years ago? I doubt it. In fact, there's probably LESS due to quick dissemination of information nowadays. I used to do many of the things you listed when I was a kid and not even think twice. Now, whenever I see a 9 year old walking home from school alone, I shudder to think how quickly the child could disappear in this "sick" world we live in. Never underestimate the power of perception.

I read somewhere recently that there are an average of 3 child abductions per year in the U.S. not committed by a family member or friend. 3 out of 300,000,000.

I also found that most crime statistics (murders, car theft, etc.) are less than half today what they were in 1972.

So why do we all think we live in a much more dangerous society than when we were kids? (I think you already answered this question.)
 
It's easy to control a society that lives in fear by offering them solutions to manufactured needs arising from that fear.

When people find out I don't have a cell phone the immediate response is "OMG... what if there's an emergency!"

Create the fear...create the solution.

The solution always being a means to an end to line someone's pockets, manage your behavior, or both.

Like Lemmings to the Sea....And Sheep to the slaughter.



YKMKR
 
I read somewhere recently that there are an average of 3 child abductions per year in the U.S. not committed by a family member or friend. 3 out of 300,000,000.

I also found that most crime statistics (murders, car theft, etc.) are less than half today what they were in 1972.

So why do we all think we live in a much more dangerous society than when we were kids? (I think you already answered this question.)

Dude. 3 child abductions per year.... 3 out of 300,000,000? There are just over 300 million people in the U.S. but there weren't 300,000,000 abductions last year... If you start out with these kinds of mismatched statistical comparisons then how can we accept your statistical analysis of 1972 compared to today?
 

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