Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:None of this would have happened if United had offered appropriate compensation....
Yep. If United wants to run this like a profit making corporation, they need to pay market price for the seats. You can't pick and choose.
Anonymous wrote:"David Dao, the Elizabethtown doctor who was yanked off an overbooked United Airlines flight Sunday, has had a troubled history in Kentucky.
Dao, who went to medical school in Vietnam in the 1970s before moving to the U.S., was working as a pulmonologist in Elizabethtown when he was arrested in 2003 and eventually convicted of drug-related offenses after an undercover investigation, according to documents filed with the Kentucky Board of Medical Licensure last June. The documents allege that he was involved in fraudulent prescriptions for controlled substances and was sexually involved with a patient who used to work for his practice and assisted police in building a case against him.
Dao was convicted of multiple felony counts of obtaining drugs by fraud or deceit in November 2004 and was placed on five years of supervised probation in January 2005. He surrendered his medical license the next month."
http://www.courier-journal.com/story/news/local/2017/04/11/david-dao-passenger-removed-united-flight-doctor-troubled-past/100318320/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well. United's government affairs person just posted.
You're an asshole too. I hope you get stranded somewhere. And do try to figure out something to do with your life that has a positive benefit. Right now, you're just a waste.
Wow. Would love to see what they're saying now, if anyone can please post a link, or the full quote. Thank you!
Anyone?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
It wasn't an Involuntary Denied Boarding. He had ALREADY boarded. It was an involuntary de-boarding.
You are incorrect. A passenger is not officially boarded until the aircraft door is shut. Please stop spreading misinformation.
Link your source. Thank you.
I'm sorry, what do you do for a living? How many times a year do you fly? Once or twice?
That's what I thought.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
It wasn't an Involuntary Denied Boarding. He had ALREADY boarded. It was an involuntary de-boarding.
You are incorrect. A passenger is not officially boarded until the aircraft door is shut. Please stop spreading misinformation.
Link your source. Thank you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:United is getting hits where it hurts.
Shares down 4% this morning. Board won't ignore that.
Keep selling people!
Ouch!!
Munoz will be gone in a week, I believe.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
It wasn't an Involuntary Denied Boarding. He had ALREADY boarded. It was an involuntary de-boarding.
You are incorrect. A passenger is not officially boarded until the aircraft door is shut. Please stop spreading misinformation.
Please apply some common sense. Normal people consider showing your boarding pass and getting on the plane to be *boarding the plane*. He had already done that. HE BOARDED THE PLANE.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well. United's government affairs person just posted.
You're an asshole too. I hope you get stranded somewhere. And do try to figure out something to do with your life that has a positive benefit. Right now, you're just a waste.
Wow. Would love to see what they're saying now, if anyone can please post a link, or the full quote. Thank you!
Anonymous wrote:"David Dao, the Elizabethtown doctor who was yanked off an overbooked United Airlines flight Sunday, has had a troubled history in Kentucky.
Dao, who went to medical school in Vietnam in the 1970s before moving to the U.S., was working as a pulmonologist in Elizabethtown when he was arrested in 2003 and eventually convicted of drug-related offenses after an undercover investigation, according to documents filed with the Kentucky Board of Medical Licensure last June. The documents allege that he was involved in fraudulent prescriptions for controlled substances and was sexually involved with a patient who used to work for his practice and assisted police in building a case against him.
Dao was convicted of multiple felony counts of obtaining drugs by fraud or deceit in November 2004 and was placed on five years of supervised probation in January 2005. He surrendered his medical license the next month."
http://www.courier-journal.com/story/news/local/2017/04/11/david-dao-passenger-removed-united-flight-doctor-troubled-past/100318320/
Anonymous wrote:"David Dao, the Elizabethtown doctor who was yanked off an overbooked United Airlines flight Sunday, has had a troubled history in Kentucky.
Dao, who went to medical school in Vietnam in the 1970s before moving to the U.S., was working as a pulmonologist in Elizabethtown when he was arrested in 2003 and eventually convicted of drug-related offenses after an undercover investigation, according to documents filed with the Kentucky Board of Medical Licensure last June. The documents allege that he was involved in fraudulent prescriptions for controlled substances and was sexually involved with a patient who used to work for his practice and assisted police in building a case against him.
Dao was convicted of multiple felony counts of obtaining drugs by fraud or deceit in November 2004 and was placed on five years of supervised probation in January 2005. He surrendered his medical license the next month."
http://www.courier-journal.com/story/news/local/2017/04/11/david-dao-passenger-removed-united-flight-doctor-troubled-past/100318320/
Anonymous wrote:"David Dao, the Elizabethtown doctor who was yanked off an overbooked United Airlines flight Sunday, has had a troubled history in Kentucky.
Dao, who went to medical school in Vietnam in the 1970s before moving to the U.S., was working as a pulmonologist in Elizabethtown when he was arrested in 2003 and eventually convicted of drug-related offenses after an undercover investigation, according to documents filed with the Kentucky Board of Medical Licensure last June. The documents allege that he was involved in fraudulent prescriptions for controlled substances and was sexually involved with a patient who used to work for his practice and assisted police in building a case against him.
Dao was convicted of multiple felony counts of obtaining drugs by fraud or deceit in November 2004 and was placed on five years of supervised probation in January 2005. He surrendered his medical license the next month."
http://www.courier-journal.com/story/news/local/2017/04/11/david-dao-passenger-removed-united-flight-doctor-troubled-past/100318320/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well. United's government affairs person just posted.
You're an asshole too. I hope you get stranded somewhere. And do try to figure out something to do with your life that has a positive benefit. Right now, you're just a waste.
Wow. Would love to see what they're saying now, if anyone can please post a link, or the full quote. Thank you!
I think PP was referring to 10:43 post??
Anonymous wrote:None of this would have happened if United had offered appropriate compensation.
Penny wise, pound foolish.
It was a completely avoidable disaster of their own making.