So, I'm sure a lot of you are aware of the news of the man who was forcibly removed from a United Airlines flight because it was overbooked and they randomly selected passengers to be removed.
This, of course, caused a ton of hoopla in the news because the SOP for overbooked flights is to just keep raising the rewards for volunteering until enough people take the deal. In this case, however, instead of upping the bid, they just pulled names out of a hat to decide who was going to stay behind. The man in question refused to comply, stating he's a doctor who needs to return home to honor appointments the next day. In response, the airline called police who forcibly took him out of his seat and dragged him off the plane. Had this been in a movie, it'd be comical satire, but as we all know, reality is often the greatest form of satire.
So, it looks like the majority of the public agrees that United Airlines is in the wrong. Judging by the video, the passengers on that flight were among them. They should have sweetened the deal enough so people can choose to give up their paid-for seat. It's United Airlines' overbooking practices that got them into this mess, so the loss of one's seat should not be forced upon someone. As people have pointed out, the practice of overbooking seems to be unique to airlines. Sports venues, busses, and concerts don't do this. I understand the economics of it, but it seems to be a greedy practice that causes a lot of annoyance on popular routes.
However, of course, you have the other side. I've heard people say "the guy didn't follow the rules" and "the guy should have just given up his seat." While it's true that the guy's stubbornness was probably not the best way to handle it, to say that the guy deserved to be assaulted for not giving up a seat he paid for is ridiculous. There were other things United could have done to not let it escalate it to this point. Overbooking policies like this are horrible, and need to be looked at.
And, of course, you've got the people who find that the guy was an ex-con who served time in 2003. So friggen what? Ugh, I don't know why I bother reading comments on the Internet.
This, of course, caused a ton of hoopla in the news because the SOP for overbooked flights is to just keep raising the rewards for volunteering until enough people take the deal. In this case, however, instead of upping the bid, they just pulled names out of a hat to decide who was going to stay behind. The man in question refused to comply, stating he's a doctor who needs to return home to honor appointments the next day. In response, the airline called police who forcibly took him out of his seat and dragged him off the plane. Had this been in a movie, it'd be comical satire, but as we all know, reality is often the greatest form of satire.
So, it looks like the majority of the public agrees that United Airlines is in the wrong. Judging by the video, the passengers on that flight were among them. They should have sweetened the deal enough so people can choose to give up their paid-for seat. It's United Airlines' overbooking practices that got them into this mess, so the loss of one's seat should not be forced upon someone. As people have pointed out, the practice of overbooking seems to be unique to airlines. Sports venues, busses, and concerts don't do this. I understand the economics of it, but it seems to be a greedy practice that causes a lot of annoyance on popular routes.
However, of course, you have the other side. I've heard people say "the guy didn't follow the rules" and "the guy should have just given up his seat." While it's true that the guy's stubbornness was probably not the best way to handle it, to say that the guy deserved to be assaulted for not giving up a seat he paid for is ridiculous. There were other things United could have done to not let it escalate it to this point. Overbooking policies like this are horrible, and need to be looked at.
And, of course, you've got the people who find that the guy was an ex-con who served time in 2003. So friggen what? Ugh, I don't know why I bother reading comments on the Internet.
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