Right. No one in this country should ever be inconvenienced. If they are, they should be compensated. That's how we roll.
I kind of think bodily dragging a man from his seat after he already boarded, smacking his face onto chairs, is more than "inconvenienced".
We've allowed a monopoly with these airlines. We have allowed this situation where paying customers are at the mercy of a corporate entity so gross delays during which people are locked on a plane and denied air conditioning, food or functioning toilets, denial of flights they purposefully oversold so they can squeeze every last dollar out of the customer and providing cramped, unbearable seating, again so they can squeeze every last dollar out of us, are totally tolerated and allowed. And this is called inconvenience and people who resist it are described as having a temper tantrum.
And to top it off, some actually approve of what amounts to almost a police state of having LE physically enforce a corporation's quest for profits.
How did this happen?
I think of my experiences flying internationally and how different they are. I was actually
allowed to fly in the cockpit, and LAND while in it, on a commuter plane from Seville to Madrid in 2008 because I had been terrified during the flight due to stormy weather (and I was a very fearful flier) and they were trying to make me feel calm. And this was
post-911. The pilots were joking around with me, making fun of my accent, so relaxed and reasonable. (It was incredible. I flew in their jump seat? with all these crazy seat belts and landing was like a Disney ride. Beautiful.) Prior to that, a flight attendant came up to me, asked if I was ok (I looked terrified) and talked to me for a long time. She explained that most flight attendants in Spain had psych training!
The minute we crossed into American airspace on our trip back to the US, (different airline, different nation) flight attendants told us we could not continue to stand around talking with people we had met and had to take our seats due to regulations in the US.
At customs in Boston we were met by unsmiling customs agents and dogs. Customs agents brusquely demanded to know why we had been in Amsterdam. (One leg of our trip). It was a cold experience especially coming from the relaxed and accommodating airport and airline experiences in Europe, although I realize that has nothing to do with the airline, but the overall difference in experience is marked to me.
I wonder if this incident here will be the tipping point for us where we demand to be treated humanely regardless of the expense that would cause to corporate airline profits.