Anonymous Poster
Epic Contributor
- Joined
- Sep 27, 2005
- Messages
- 29,678
I'm all for using my tax dollars for security.
Even more so for helping individuals through uninsurable loss.
Is anyone but me blown away by the airlines saying they need 5-10-20 BILLION dollars given to them to bail them out?
I wish my company could go down for a few days and then get a government handout. If they were in trouble before that it's their own damn fault. Selling tickets at no profit just so they can get market share, buy more planes should not be rewarded, it's just stupid business. I only fly about once a year or so, and my September trip I swear was no more expensive then when I used to fly military standby in 1972!
I certainly agree that the security people should be police, not minimum wage airline hires, but sinking billions into a group of companies just so I can go to the airport and fly out every 15 minutes to the same place seems ridiculous.
If the government has the billions to spare, (that we gave them), if anything I think a special payment to the firefighters, police that have lost their lives in the performance of their duties would be more in order.
And I'm almost totally sure I saw a program on airline safety a year or two ago, and am also just about as sure the cockpit door was open when I boarded my plane.
So am I off base? Am I wrong in thinking the airlines were already ailing and are just using this as a reason to get cash?
If you don't operate your company with sufficient reserves to handle problems, why should you be propped up?
Del
Even more so for helping individuals through uninsurable loss.
Is anyone but me blown away by the airlines saying they need 5-10-20 BILLION dollars given to them to bail them out?
I wish my company could go down for a few days and then get a government handout. If they were in trouble before that it's their own damn fault. Selling tickets at no profit just so they can get market share, buy more planes should not be rewarded, it's just stupid business. I only fly about once a year or so, and my September trip I swear was no more expensive then when I used to fly military standby in 1972!
I certainly agree that the security people should be police, not minimum wage airline hires, but sinking billions into a group of companies just so I can go to the airport and fly out every 15 minutes to the same place seems ridiculous.
If the government has the billions to spare, (that we gave them), if anything I think a special payment to the firefighters, police that have lost their lives in the performance of their duties would be more in order.
And I'm almost totally sure I saw a program on airline safety a year or two ago, and am also just about as sure the cockpit door was open when I boarded my plane.
So am I off base? Am I wrong in thinking the airlines were already ailing and are just using this as a reason to get cash?
If you don't operate your company with sufficient reserves to handle problems, why should you be propped up?
Del