Samstag, 15. Februar 2020

Frequent fliers side with woman in seat-reclining beef: We have a right to lean back – New York Post

If the penny-pinching airlines really wish to do something about disputes like these, they would publish a traveler’s guide to great behavior– which would consist of a list of what not to do on an aircraft– however they do not due to the fact that that would cost money.

Nina Burleigh, a writer whose work has actually appeared in The New York Times Travel Section, is also a reclining chair. “I have actually gotten in little tiffs with people over area, but I’ve never ever had a repeat punching scenario– that’s odd and there is probably something incorrect with him. That’s aggressiveness,” she stated.

I have a confession.

Williams, who declares she was injured in the incident, is now

taking legal action against American Airlines for libel and slander after the business told TMZ she knocked over the man’s drink, an allegation she denies.
Paula Froelich

Post writer Paula Froelich, a regular flier– and seat recliner.Circe Hamilton As a frequent flier who’s taken a trip to more than 80 countries mostly in coach, I’ve seen passengers who believe absolutely nothing of bringing a stinky McDonald’s meal on a flight and leaving the odoriferous droppings all around them. They’ll cast off their shoes and socks and lounge with their feet up, pick their noses, brush their hair or file their nails. They care nothing for other individuals’s individual space– however if a traveler reclines back on them, they’re furious with passive aggression. It’s outrageous.

Paula Froelich is the founder and editor of the online travel magazine for women, A Broad Abroad. Instagram @ pfro

“Air travel isn’t a right, it’s a privilege. His revolting habits will ideally ensure that he will have his flying advantages withdrawed.”

OK and then you do it.”But the fact stays– the choice to recline is there. And if the person in front of Williams was reclining in his/her seat– should Williams need to suck it up or pay the punch forward?

That the male slammed Williams’ seat back was outrageous, she included.

My regular flier good friends agree with me. Oneika Raymond, a travel correspondent and creator of Oneika the Traveller, stated,”It is definitely OKAY to recline your seat beyond meal times, and I can’t believe we live in a time where we need to validate doing so– the seats are made to recline!”

I’m a regular flier … and I’m a recliner chair.

At the end of the day, the airlines are the real assholes.

And then there are individuals who take their rage that additional action too far– like the American Airlines guy. The video of him punching Williams’ seat gave me PTSD. I don’t care if he was in the last seat of the aircraft and his own seat didn’t recline. We’ve all been there. In this day and age, you can check in early, select your seat or pay a little more for additional leg space. It’s simply bad preparation on his part.

rel= “noopener”> Williams tweeted Friday. Even Delta employer, Ed Bastian (who probably hasn’t seen a coach seat in decades) mentioned on CNBC’s “Squawk Box”: “I think the correct thing to do is if you’re going to recline into somebody that you

ask if it’s

“@AmericanAir Please avoid placing any blame about what occurred to me on your dreadful airline company with your disrespectful flight attendant! And if I accidentally spilled a beverage on the “guy”– I had NO idea that occurred. Who stated it did @AmericanAir?”

< a href="https://twitter.com/steelersfanOG/status/1228326399821393920"target="_ blank"

I feel like I must be whispering this through a priest hole after the argument that raged through the internet today after American Airlines guest

Wendi Williams posting a video showed a fellow traveler shaking her headrest with repeated fist jabs on a Jan. 31 flight from New Orleans to Charlotte. The viral video was published to Twitter Feb. 8– spawning a myriad of vitriolic argument over whether people ought to or shouldn’t recline in the cheap seats.

< a href="https://twitter.com/steelersfanOG/status/1228326399821393920"target="_ blank"

rel= “noopener”> Williams tweeted Friday. The video of him punching Williams’ seat provided me PTSD. I don’t care if he was in the last seat of the aircraft and his own seat didn’t recline. In this day and age, you can check in early, select your seat or pay a little more for extra leg room. Paula Froelich is the creator and editor of the online travel magazine for women,

A Broad Abroad.

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