Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DH's friend was on the flight that Sully landed on the Hudson. He was sitting in the very last row. He said the passengers were pretty calm and orderly, even as the plane started to fill up with water in the back. The passengers went onto the wings of the plane to be rescued.
Don't count out Americans in coming together.
They didn’t have the option of taking their carry-ons out with them. Who knows what might have happened if they did.
They were told to leave them and they did. What is your problem?
What were they going to do, swim with them? These are two completely different scenarios and you know it.
You are weirdly aggressive and fixated on luggage. Maybe see someone for that to get it fixed.
Our friend, who’s also over 6 ft, said the plane landed at a tilt with the nose up higher than the back and the very back started taking on water. He was in the last row. He said the people were very quiet and calm as they exited but they were also super slow that by the time it was finally their turn in the last row to start moving forward to get out, the water had come to his shoulders and he was helping hold someone up.
You think people wouldn’t panic in this, but they didn’t. Die mad about it I guess.
Anonymous wrote:
If cabin crew wastes precious time subduing or restraining especially unruly passengers, those are precious seconds slipping away that will make it all the more likely that people will die. What happens in those types of situations? Is there a protocol?
Anonymous wrote:Not a chance! I'd love to live in Japan. I can deal with having no community because I'm not Japanese. Americans aren't very community minded anyway. I just want to be somewhere that people follow rules (reasonable ones--I'm not a total fascist) and don't disrespect public spaces so much.
Anonymous wrote:Just reading the articles about how miraculous it was that 360+ passengers were evacuated so quickly. I wonder if an flight full of American passengers would fair as well? On one hand, the plane on the hudson was a good example of people cooperating and following orders. But that was 2018. It feels like people are behaving badly on planes post-COVID. I was on a flight yesterday and was mortified by how a passenger was talking to a flight attendant. Of course, I would hope an emergency situation would bring out best in us all, but could totally see US passengers pushing and/or trying to take luggage with them, slowing down the whole process. Thoughts?
hhttps://www.cnn.com/2024/01/03/asia/japan-airlines-collision-passenger-accounts-intl-hnk/index.html
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s shocking to think that Americans would block the aisle in an evacuation to get their luggage from overhead, yet that is what they would do. Conversely other Americans are not confident or active enough to just push past. So we would have Doug from Omaha holding up the evacuation in the aisle because he MUST bring his bag, while everyone behind him just stands there looking dumb and not taking action.
I’m the FA from above. It’s not just Americans, Canadians are almost worse! Especially on Canadian-bound US-departing flights. It’s like they have something to prove. Certain Europeans tend to be pretty awful, too. Asian passengers are the most cooperative and well behaved pax.
Funny that Asians are great on planes but horrible tourists off the plane.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just reading the articles about how miraculous it was that 360+ passengers were evacuated so quickly. I wonder if an flight full of American passengers would fair as well? On one hand, the plane on the hudson was a good example of people cooperating and following orders. But that was 2018. It feels like people are behaving badly on planes post-COVID. I was on a flight yesterday and was mortified by how a passenger was talking to a flight attendant. Of course, I would hope an emergency situation would bring out best in us all, but could totally see US passengers pushing and/or trying to take luggage with them, slowing down the whole process. Thoughts?
hhttps://www.cnn.com/2024/01/03/asia/japan-airlines-collision-passenger-accounts-intl-hnk/index.html
Heeeeeelllllll no. Most Americans are selfish, contemptible people who only think of themselves. A good percentage are also just plain, outright cruel. It pains me to say this about my country but I truly feel this and witness it all the time. Just look how people talk on here. And more painfully than how they say it, the things they believe. It's truly awful a lot of the time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DCUM would first form a committee to elect a subcommittee that would determine the most optimal way to deplane.
I disagree. I’ll tell you the best way. I went to school in Boston and DH is biglaw.
The DCUM plane would evacuate flawlessly because there’s nothing like that DCUM moment where all the PPs are in agreement because the OP is a sh*tshow.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DCUM would first form a committee to elect a subcommittee that would determine the most optimal way to deplane.
I disagree. I’ll tell you the best way. I went to school in Boston and DH is biglaw.
Anonymous wrote:Just reading the articles about how miraculous it was that 360+ passengers were evacuated so quickly. I wonder if an flight full of American passengers would fair as well? On one hand, the plane on the hudson was a good example of people cooperating and following orders. But that was 2018. It feels like people are behaving badly on planes post-COVID. I was on a flight yesterday and was mortified by how a passenger was talking to a flight attendant. Of course, I would hope an emergency situation would bring out best in us all, but could totally see US passengers pushing and/or trying to take luggage with them, slowing down the whole process. Thoughts?
hhttps://www.cnn.com/2024/01/03/asia/japan-airlines-collision-passenger-accounts-intl-hnk/index.html
Anonymous wrote:You know some people would be trying to livestream it too.
Anonymous wrote:Even if Americans might all make it off the plane, it wouldn’t be without nastiness, words, swearing, shoving, and people rooting through bags to grab stuff first.
If cabin crew wastes precious time subduing or restraining especially unruly passengers, those are precious seconds slipping away that will make it all the more likely that people will die. What happens in those types of situations? Is there a protocol?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DH's friend was on the flight that Sully landed on the Hudson. He was sitting in the very last row. He said the passengers were pretty calm and orderly, even as the plane started to fill up with water in the back. The passengers went onto the wings of the plane to be rescued.
Don't count out Americans in coming together.
They didn’t have the option of taking their carry-ons out with them. Who knows what might have happened if they did.
They were told to leave them and they did. What is your problem?
What were they going to do, swim with them? These are two completely different scenarios and you know it.