No but common sense says a doctor can't be the first to be kicked off. Just re roll the dice and assault the next ticket holder.lol, so you want them to ask every passenger where they are going and what they are doing then rank it. just lol.
No but common sense says a doctor can't be the first to be kicked off. Just re roll the dice and assault the next ticket holder.lol, so you want them to ask every passenger where they are going and what they are doing then rank it. just lol.
I think it's insanity.
I knew people here would justify it. Lol.
They handled it so badly, i really hope they get rinsed somehow, but i doubt it will be in the courts, there must obviously be a clause allowing them to assault people off their plane.
Sadly not many really care either, cheap air travel is scarce. Lol again.
that isnt common sense, common sense says you roll the dice and that's that. They cant verify anything. Oh sorry couldn't kick the last person off hes more worthy than you.No but common sense says a doctor can't be the first to be kicked off. Just re roll the dice and assault the next ticket holder.
A lot of the world is shocked yes.for a start it wasn;t united who removed him or beat him up.
doesn't make it right, but are you shocked how airport security reacted in america?
I'm fairly sure any reasonable person would advocate that. If you're randomly selecting paying customers to chuck off a plane just so you can get your staff somewhere then doctors (or patients) on their way to surgery should have immunity obviously.him being a doctor with somehwere to go, is utterly pointless part of the story. It is meaningless. Or are you advocating some sort of ranking system on who needs it most.
I disagree. That's exactly what they should do, instead of order a random beating lol.that isnt common sense, common sense says you roll the dice and that's that. They cant verify anything. Oh sorry couldn't kick the last person off hes more worthy than you.
just lol, please show me where they ordered a beating, are you perhaps shocked as you are reading what you want to see. rather than teh actual situation.I disagree. That's exactly what they should do, instead of order a beating lol.
no but they asked for him to be removed so they are responsablefor a start it wasn;t united who removed him or beat him up.
doesn't make it right, but are you shocked how airport security reacted in america?
It's a joke man relax.just lol, please show me where they ordered a beating, are you perhaps shocked as you are reading what you want to see. rather than teh actual situation.
This isnt a life or death situation, this doctor wasnt needed urgently.
Why did the doctor make a run to get back on the plane though? Surely after getting thrown off you would just walk away? Maybe it was the adrenalin.
The airlines can throw anyone off however for any reason I believe.
Must be rather degrading to get manhandled off a flight like that, I see the security guy who dragged him away has been suspended already which is the rather tragic side to social media if the guy was just following rules/orders.
Airlines can't throw people off a plane for any reason, they are prevented legally from removing people from a plane for reasons of overbooking. They can prevent you boarding a plane for overbooking but once seated they can't.
My guess is from the way the guy was acting he had a pretty severe concussion when he got back on the plane, he was acting extremely strangely and if it's true that he's a doctor working in the states I can't believe that is his normal state or anything like it.
Not really, following an illegal instruction and attacking someone is your responsibility. Even if you do manhandle someone you can do it in a way that won't cause a seemingly bad concussion. I mean this was three HUGE guys. People resisting can be stronger and harder to control than they seem, but ultimately persistent restraining force would wear the guy down in only a couple of minutes of struggling. At no time did they have to get violent enough to knock the guy out. This wasn't a terrorist, this wasn't a rapist or murderer, he wasn't accused of anything, the airline just wanted him removed and they had at no stage any right to do what they did to him.
Have you got a source on that? Because that's the absolute crux of the matter.
Yes. The captain is in charge of the aircraft. And if he or she decides that someone needs to be offloaded, that command has to be obeyed. From the moment that the unfortunate individual in this case said, "I'm staying put", he became a disruptive passenger.
you dont seem to be portraying at a joke with your otehr comments, that dont line up with what actually happened.It's a joke man relax.
This is interesting. I think it's BS the way they handled it (they should pay through the nose via auction to entice people off the plane given the profits they make from overbooking), but the below (from what I'd call a decent source) suggests that the Captain has overall charge of the aircraft and a right to say that people have to get off regardless of circumstance. Not saying I agree this is ethically/morally right, but if it's legally the way it is handled, then United did nothing wrong legally.
Can an airline really treat passengers like this? - by Simon Calder, travel correspondent for the Independent
Yes. The captain is in charge of the aircraft. And if he or she decides that someone needs to be offloaded, that command has to be obeyed. From the moment that the unfortunate individual in this case said, "I'm staying put", he became a disruptive passenger.
From that moment he was disobeying the captain's command. Officials were legally entitled to remove him, and as the videos show, he was dragged from the plane. It appears from the evidence that the law was broken - by him, not by the airline. But I would be surprised if United pressed charges.
Does it happen often?
No - normally airlines handle cases of too many passengers for the available seats much better than this, and generally do so at the gate. First, the airline asks for volunteers. The idea is that everyone has their price: an amount of cash, travel vouchers or other bribes such as a round trip anywhere the airline goes.
Flexible travellers, including me, actively pursue overbooked flights to keep our travel costs down.
So what went wrong here?
It appears to have been a series of errors. A group of flight crew needed to be in Louisville, properly rested, in order to operate the next morning's plane. Had they not been able to get there, then many more passengers would have had their plans messed up. The big mistake the airline made was allowing all the fare-paying passengers on board, and then trying to entice enough people off.
It would have been far better to conduct the auction at the gate; physically preventing someone boarding is less harmful than dragging them kicking and screaming from their sea
Must be rather degrading to get manhandled off a flight like that, I see the security guy who dragged him away has been suspended already which is the rather tragic side to social media if the guy was just following rules/orders.
But surely the no show has still paid for the ticket, so the airline are not losing any money so why do they need to fill the seat anyway?
They're not losing money, no. What it does is allow them to sell the same seat twice. :/
Apparantly they offered $800 and free hotel to anyone who would get off the plane..I would have jumped at that!
That's chump change to a doctor though and iirc he had work in the morning wherever he was travelling.
the bloodied passenger was his own fault for ressisting as far as i can see.
for a start it wasn;t united who removed him or beat him up.
doesn't make it right, but are you shocked how airport security reacted in america?
We probably shouldn't accept tyranny just because it's written in the Ts and Cs.