Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^ wouldn’t have
This is what is getting missed. If the person in front of him had been a 300 lb man he might have made some loud, pissy comments, but he for sure was not going to lift a finger. Just another idiot bully.
Anonymous wrote:^ wouldn’t have
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OK, anti-recliners, do you understand that the majority of us are saying that you are exaggerating the effects of a reclined seat? I am tall and I can still use my laptop, can still get up to go to the bathroom, can still eat food, can still read a book, etc with the seat in front of me reclined. You do understand that these seats recline on a pivot, right? 3 inches less space at the top does not mean 3 inches less space at your knees.
You are being as ridiculous as the money-grabbing woman in the video. Oh woe is me, the horrors! My knees! My back! My baby! The dandruff! Lack of air! I can't breathe! Help!
Come on now, tone it down.
You seem to forget that it wasn’t the so-called “anti-recliners” who started this thread. It was a bunch of people claiming it’s simply impossible—impossible!—to last an entire flight sitting upright.
How dare someone point out that my efforts to grab more space for myself are actually taking space away from them! Screw them! It’s my right!! Let them eat cake!
If they want to take away the recline feature on planes that actually doesn’t bother me nearly as much as telling people they may only recline with the “permission” of the person behind them. It’s either allowed or it isn’t.
You are the type who needs an adult in charge to make basic decisions for you, aren't you. The idea of having to use manners and basic common courtesy to handle something so simple is too much for you. That is sad.
Hey douchebag - it's bad manners and immoral to take something that belongs to someone else, period. Demanding that someone else not use a feature because you are too cheap to buy a seat you can fit in is on you.
ie. The world doesn't owe you shit. The world isn't being immoral by not catering to you. You want something - then be an adult and pay for your own shit.
Charming!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OK, anti-recliners, do you understand that the majority of us are saying that you are exaggerating the effects of a reclined seat? I am tall and I can still use my laptop, can still get up to go to the bathroom, can still eat food, can still read a book, etc with the seat in front of me reclined. You do understand that these seats recline on a pivot, right? 3 inches less space at the top does not mean 3 inches less space at your knees.
You are being as ridiculous as the money-grabbing woman in the video. Oh woe is me, the horrors! My knees! My back! My baby! The dandruff! Lack of air! I can't breathe! Help!
Come on now, tone it down.
You seem to forget that it wasn’t the so-called “anti-recliners” who started this thread. It was a bunch of people claiming it’s simply impossible—impossible!—to last an entire flight sitting upright.
How dare someone point out that my efforts to grab more space for myself are actually taking space away from them! Screw them! It’s my right!! Let them eat cake!
If they want to take away the recline feature on planes that actually doesn’t bother me nearly as much as telling people they may only recline with the “permission” of the person behind them. It’s either allowed or it isn’t.
You are the type who needs an adult in charge to make basic decisions for you, aren't you. The idea of having to use manners and basic common courtesy to handle something so simple is too much for you. That is sad.
Hey douchebag - it's bad manners and immoral to take something that belongs to someone else, period. Demanding that someone else not use a feature because you are too cheap to buy a seat you can fit in is on you.
ie. The world doesn't owe you shit. The world isn't being immoral by not catering to you. You want something - then be an adult and pay for your own shit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OK, anti-recliners, do you understand that the majority of us are saying that you are exaggerating the effects of a reclined seat? I am tall and I can still use my laptop, can still get up to go to the bathroom, can still eat food, can still read a book, etc with the seat in front of me reclined. You do understand that these seats recline on a pivot, right? 3 inches less space at the top does not mean 3 inches less space at your knees.
You are being as ridiculous as the money-grabbing woman in the video. Oh woe is me, the horrors! My knees! My back! My baby! The dandruff! Lack of air! I can't breathe! Help!
Come on now, tone it down.
You seem to forget that it wasn’t the so-called “anti-recliners” who started this thread. It was a bunch of people claiming it’s simply impossible—impossible!—to last an entire flight sitting upright.
How dare someone point out that my efforts to grab more space for myself are actually taking space away from them! Screw them! It’s my right!! Let them eat cake!
If they want to take away the recline feature on planes that actually doesn’t bother me nearly as much as telling people they may only recline with the “permission” of the person behind them. It’s either allowed or it isn’t.
You are the type who needs an adult in charge to make basic decisions for you, aren't you. The idea of having to use manners and basic common courtesy to handle something so simple is too much for you. That is sad.
Hey douchebag - it's bad manners and immoral to take something that belongs to someone else, period. Demanding that someone else not use a feature because you are too cheap to buy a seat you can fit in is on you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OK, anti-recliners, do you understand that the majority of us are saying that you are exaggerating the effects of a reclined seat? I am tall and I can still use my laptop, can still get up to go to the bathroom, can still eat food, can still read a book, etc with the seat in front of me reclined. You do understand that these seats recline on a pivot, right? 3 inches less space at the top does not mean 3 inches less space at your knees.
You are being as ridiculous as the money-grabbing woman in the video. Oh woe is me, the horrors! My knees! My back! My baby! The dandruff! Lack of air! I can't breathe! Help!
Come on now, tone it down.
You seem to forget that it wasn’t the so-called “anti-recliners” who started this thread. It was a bunch of people claiming it’s simply impossible—impossible!—to last an entire flight sitting upright.
How dare someone point out that my efforts to grab more space for myself are actually taking space away from them! Screw them! It’s my right!! Let them eat cake!
If they want to take away the recline feature on planes that actually doesn’t bother me nearly as much as telling people they may only recline with the “permission” of the person behind them. It’s either allowed or it isn’t.
You are the type who needs an adult in charge to make basic decisions for you, aren't you. The idea of having to use manners and basic common courtesy to handle something so simple is too much for you. That is sad.
Anonymous wrote:I still don't understand how this is even a question. The person banging the seat is obviously the one who is wrong. Of course he had a right to be frustrated, but at his age, he should have developed coping skills for that by now. "Immoral" to recline a seat? Good lord.
Anonymous wrote:I still don't understand how this is even a question. The person banging the seat is obviously the one who is wrong. Of course he had a right to be frustrated, but at his age, he should have developed coping skills for that by now. "Immoral" to recline a seat? Good lord.
Anonymous wrote:6'3 and 6' poster, are you short-legged? Because I find it hard to believe it's so roomy for you.
Anonymous wrote:Why are people arguing with each other and not holding airlines accountable?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OK, anti-recliners, do you understand that the majority of us are saying that you are exaggerating the effects of a reclined seat? I am tall and I can still use my laptop, can still get up to go to the bathroom, can still eat food, can still read a book, etc with the seat in front of me reclined. You do understand that these seats recline on a pivot, right? 3 inches less space at the top does not mean 3 inches less space at your knees.
You are being as ridiculous as the money-grabbing woman in the video. Oh woe is me, the horrors! My knees! My back! My baby! The dandruff! Lack of air! I can't breathe! Help!
Come on now, tone it down.
You seem to forget that it wasn’t the so-called “anti-recliners” who started this thread. It was a bunch of people claiming it’s simply impossible—impossible!—to last an entire flight sitting upright.
How dare someone point out that my efforts to grab more space for myself are actually taking space away from them! Screw them! It’s my right!! Let them eat cake!
If they want to take away the recline feature on planes that actually doesn’t bother me nearly as much as telling people they may only recline with the “permission” of the person behind them. It’s either allowed or it isn’t.
For the 900th time, just because something is “allowed” does not mean it is the right thing to do. The airlines can’t make that moral decision for you. Only you can.