I don't get how this is possible (a little bit of a sensitive topic so trigger warning!)

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:My heart goes out to the woman and her family, but honestly, if someone is that large and heavy that multiple flight attendants can’t move her when she literally dies on the flight then they wouldn’t be able to move her either if there was an emergency where all the passengers needed to disembark quickly. This is a major safety issue. People so big and heavy should not be allowed to fly on regular planes. It’s is a hazard to everyone else. If there is enough demand (sadly they probably is) then they can make special planes with wider seats, wider aisles, and perhaps special equipment to help move passengers if need be.


I saw this as a woman who is 4.11 and not overweight at all. Maybe they just need to make ALL airplanes big enough to accommodate all of their passengers.


The article said she was quite obese. And why should the rest of us pay far more for plane tickets to have more dead space on an aircraft because of the few who don’t fit? That’s not fair.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:My heart goes out to the woman and her family, but honestly, if someone is that large and heavy that multiple flight attendants can’t move her when she literally dies on the flight then they wouldn’t be able to move her either if there was an emergency where all the passengers needed to disembark quickly. This is a major safety issue. People so big and heavy should not be allowed to fly on regular planes. It’s is a hazard to everyone else. If there is enough demand (sadly they probably is) then they can make special planes with wider seats, wider aisles, and perhaps special equipment to help move passengers if need be.


I saw this as a woman who is 4.11 and not overweight at all. Maybe they just need to make ALL airplanes big enough to accommodate all of their passengers.


The article said she was quite obese. And why should the rest of us pay far more for plane tickets to have more dead space on an aircraft because of the few who don’t fit? That’s not fair.


Yeah people would absolutely revolt about having MORE space in their seat. I think your fat shaming is clouding your shitty judgement here.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:My heart goes out to the woman and her family, but honestly, if someone is that large and heavy that multiple flight attendants can’t move her when she literally dies on the flight then they wouldn’t be able to move her either if there was an emergency where all the passengers needed to disembark quickly. This is a major safety issue. People so big and heavy should not be allowed to fly on regular planes. It’s is a hazard to everyone else. If there is enough demand (sadly they probably is) then they can make special planes with wider seats, wider aisles, and perhaps special equipment to help move passengers if need be.


And ... here comes the fat phobia...
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:My heart goes out to the woman and her family, but honestly, if someone is that large and heavy that multiple flight attendants can’t move her when she literally dies on the flight then they wouldn’t be able to move her either if there was an emergency where all the passengers needed to disembark quickly. This is a major safety issue. People so big and heavy should not be allowed to fly on regular planes. It’s is a hazard to everyone else. If there is enough demand (sadly they probably is) then they can make special planes with wider seats, wider aisles, and perhaps special equipment to help move passengers if need be.


I saw this as a woman who is 4.11 and not overweight at all. Maybe they just need to make ALL airplanes big enough to accommodate all of their passengers.


The article said she was quite obese. And why should the rest of us pay far more for plane tickets to have more dead space on an aircraft because of the few who don’t fit? That’s not fair.


Yeah people would absolutely revolt about having MORE space in their seat. I think your fat shaming is clouding your shitty judgement here.


Not fun sitting next to oinkers on an airline flight.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:My heart goes out to the woman and her family, but honestly, if someone is that large and heavy that multiple flight attendants can’t move her when she literally dies on the flight then they wouldn’t be able to move her either if there was an emergency where all the passengers needed to disembark quickly. This is a major safety issue. People so big and heavy should not be allowed to fly on regular planes. It’s is a hazard to everyone else. If there is enough demand (sadly they probably is) then they can make special planes with wider seats, wider aisles, and perhaps special equipment to help move passengers if need be.


And ... here comes the fat phobia...

DP
Sorry, not sorry. I HATE fat people. They’re disgusting.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:It really is no different than sitting next to a sleeping person for 4 hours from the safety perspective. They should have placed the deceased woman as far as they could from other passengers to avoid emotional distress but it's really not a safety issue.


No different sitting next to a dead person than sitting next to a sleeping person? Lol


What's different about it? From a safety perspective.


NP, but you’re actually safer next to the dead person. But there’s a huge cultural problem about being near the dead.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:My heart goes out to the woman and her family, but honestly, if someone is that large and heavy that multiple flight attendants can’t move her when she literally dies on the flight then they wouldn’t be able to move her either if there was an emergency where all the passengers needed to disembark quickly. This is a major safety issue. People so big and heavy should not be allowed to fly on regular planes. It’s is a hazard to everyone else. If there is enough demand (sadly they probably is) then they can make special planes with wider seats, wider aisles, and perhaps special equipment to help move passengers if need be.


And ... here comes the fat phobia...

DP
Sorry, not sorry. I HATE fat people. They’re disgusting.


They are human beings just like you and they deserve respect. You are a stunted human being and should be ashamed.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:My heart goes out to the woman and her family, but honestly, if someone is that large and heavy that multiple flight attendants can’t move her when she literally dies on the flight then they wouldn’t be able to move her either if there was an emergency where all the passengers needed to disembark quickly. This is a major safety issue. People so big and heavy should not be allowed to fly on regular planes. It’s is a hazard to everyone else. If there is enough demand (sadly they probably is) then they can make special planes with wider seats, wider aisles, and perhaps special equipment to help move passengers if need be.


I saw this as a woman who is 4.11 and not overweight at all. Maybe they just need to make ALL airplanes big enough to accommodate all of their passengers.


That's not true according to this direct quote from one of the people who had to sit next to her body:

"[It] was pretty heartbreaking to watch,” Ring said on A Current Affair. “They went to try and move her, they brought this chair down ... and tried to wheel her up towards business class, but she was quite a large lady and they couldn't get her through the aisle.”
https://people.com/couple-were-made-beside-corpse-plane-after-woman-dies-midway-through-flight-11685853

Every other article I've seen has repeated that she was obese and hard to move.
Anonymous
They should have put her back where she originally was.
And yes the dead lose sphincter control and pee and poop. I know because I came home from 11th grade and found my dad dead in a chair.
Anonymous
Maybe we can ban the obese from flying soon.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:It really is no different than sitting next to a sleeping person for 4 hours from the safety perspective. They should have placed the deceased woman as far as they could from other passengers to avoid emotional distress but it's really not a safety issue.


Pretty soon after you die you expel what’s is your bowels. Definitely a safety issue.


Not a guarantee.


Ok then. Another stupid lesson Karen needs to seen for herself.


Proof that a lot of the posts here come from bots or shills.
Anonymous
It’s not clear if they asked to be moved or not.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:My heart goes out to the woman and her family, but honestly, if someone is that large and heavy that multiple flight attendants can’t move her when she literally dies on the flight then they wouldn’t be able to move her either if there was an emergency where all the passengers needed to disembark quickly. This is a major safety issue. People so big and heavy should not be allowed to fly on regular planes. It’s is a hazard to everyone else. If there is enough demand (sadly they probably is) then they can make special planes with wider seats, wider aisles, and perhaps special equipment to help move passengers if need be.


I saw this as a woman who is 4.11 and not overweight at all. Maybe they just need to make ALL airplanes big enough to accommodate all of their passengers.


That's not true according to this direct quote from one of the people who had to sit next to her body:

"[It] was pretty heartbreaking to watch,” Ring said on A Current Affair. “They went to try and move her, they brought this chair down ... and tried to wheel her up towards business class, but she was quite a large lady and they couldn't get her through the aisle.”
https://people.com/couple-were-made-beside-corpse-plane-after-woman-dies-midway-through-flight-11685853

Every other article I've seen has repeated that she was obese and hard to move.


It’s a typo (saw should be say in the first sentence). PP is saying they themselves are 4’11” and not overweight, then giving their opinion.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:My heart goes out to the woman and her family, but honestly, if someone is that large and heavy that multiple flight attendants can’t move her when she literally dies on the flight then they wouldn’t be able to move her either if there was an emergency where all the passengers needed to disembark quickly. This is a major safety issue. People so big and heavy should not be allowed to fly on regular planes. It’s is a hazard to everyone else. If there is enough demand (sadly they probably is) then they can make special planes with wider seats, wider aisles, and perhaps special equipment to help move passengers if need be.


I saw this as a woman who is 4.11 and not overweight at all. Maybe they just need to make ALL airplanes big enough to accommodate all of their passengers.


That's not true according to this direct quote from one of the people who had to sit next to her body:

"[It] was pretty heartbreaking to watch,” Ring said on A Current Affair. “They went to try and move her, they brought this chair down ... and tried to wheel her up towards business class, but she was quite a large lady and they couldn't get her through the aisle.”
https://people.com/couple-were-made-beside-corpse-plane-after-woman-dies-midway-through-flight-11685853

Every other article I've seen has repeated that she was obese and hard to move.


It’s a typo (saw should be say in the first sentence). PP is saying they themselves are 4’11” and not overweight, then giving their opinion.


Nothing is free. If they make the seats and aisles bigger to accommodate the few bigger passengers who can’t fit safely into seats and down the aisles in an emergency then that would mean fewer seats total on the plane, which means the airline would increase prices significantly for each of those seats. I know that DC is full of wealthy people who think this is fine, but the rest of the country already struggles to afford flight tickets and couldn’t easily afford to pay significantly more the way that you guys can.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:It really is no different than sitting next to a sleeping person for 4 hours from the safety perspective. They should have placed the deceased woman as far as they could from other passengers to avoid emotional distress but it's really not a safety issue.


No different sitting next to a dead person than sitting next to a sleeping person? Lol


What's different about it? From a safety perspective.


Do most people not poop and pee at death? And also who knows what the person died from, if it's some sort of a virus.



She died as she was walking back to her seat after leaving bathroom. She was obese and too heavy for crew to move any distance.
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