Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anyone here know any airline lobbyists?
I do
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Trump should have the Feds investigate United for all kinds of different things, depose the executives multiple times for 8 hours each time and then charge them with felony perjury when their answers change slightly. The Feds do this all the time to companies they don't like.
Really? Name a large company where the CEO was charged with perjury? Not saying it didn't happen, but never heard of CEO's going down for much of anything.
Anonymous wrote:Trump should have the Feds investigate United for all kinds of different things, depose the executives multiple times for 8 hours each time and then charge them with felony perjury when their answers change slightly. The Feds do this all the time to companies they don't like.
Anonymous wrote:Trump should have the Feds investigate United for all kinds of different things, depose the executives multiple times for 8 hours each time and then charge them with felony perjury when their answers change slightly. The Feds do this all the time to companies they don't like.
Anonymous wrote:
I agree. I see this all the time. Why are flight attendants and pilots always commuting like this? I thought they rode in the jump seats when commuting, not kicking paying passengers off.
Anonymous wrote:
So why is it 4 bozo United employees, who chose to live outside of their Louisville base, and were using free personal passes to commute to Louisville are more important to get to work than anyone else? Because this is the only way those four can get to Louisville for free vs renting a car and driving together vs actually living where they are based so they don't have to commute via plane?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I see United put out a hit piece on the man. They are eye deep in the shit now. The stock is falling like a dead bird out of the sky.
I don't care who this man is, what he's done. He bought a ticket like everyone else. To be treated like a common criminal is beyond the pale. A good lawyer can fix this.
Agree.
Anonymous wrote:Anyone here know any airline lobbyists?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:why is the passenger's personal info at ALL RELEVANT? should airlines bump customers based on a subjective assessement of what "good reasons" they have for wanting to go on the flight that they booked and paid for?
I'll bite: I think that if it is an unemployed person that person should be automatically bumped first. He or she doesn't have to get to work so they aren't a priority
Do you see how ridiculous this exercise is?
The passenger was the one who brought it up. He told people he was a doctor and had to go see patients.
Someone else could have another reason.
No one is saying his personal information or that of any other passenger is part of the decision making about bumping
So why is it 4 bozo United employees, who chose to live outside of their Louisville base, and were using free personal passes to commute to Louisville are more important to get to work than anyone else? Because this is the only way those four can get to Louisville for free vs renting a car and driving together vs actually living where they are based so they don't have to commute via plane?
From what I understand, this man and his wife initially volunteered to be bumped but didn't understand that the alternate flight was an entire day later on Monday afternoon. So when he realized that the next flight was 24 hours later (which is complete bs on United's part) he said no he couldn't wait that long because he was a dr and had patients to see Monday morning in the Louisville area. This is where the dr part comes in.
I agree. I see this all the time. Why are flight attendants and pilots always commuting like this? I thought they rode in the jump seats when commuting, not kicking paying passengers off.
Anonymous wrote:And just to think, those 4 employees could of drove 4 hours to Louisville.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And just to think, those 4 employees could of drove 4 hours to Louisville.
They also could have driven. They even could've driven. But could of drove?