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PhilWright | 6 years ago
Surely the management must have known a week or two ago that the company was about to go under. In that case, stop anyone flying out but still bring people back. By the time they actually cease trading there should be few people left abroad. Some managers in Thomas Cook must have known that people flying out were going to end up stranded and they just let them go.
rlucas|6 years ago
Agreed, if you knew there was 0% hope (say, of flying anyone back a week hence) it would be unethical to keep it going. But if you were trying to keep things afloat and thought you could do, it would be unethical to do otherwise, since stopping new outbounds would 100% doom the firm and strand the overseas travelers.
Scoundreller|6 years ago
If the answer is “close to zero”, we need to rethink this privilege.
greglindahl|6 years ago
human20190310|6 years ago
PhilWright|6 years ago
buboard|6 years ago
bshimmin|6 years ago
differentView|6 years ago
stordoff|6 years ago
Scoundreller|6 years ago
But I doubt they’re happy about that experience.
choeger|6 years ago
unknown|6 years ago
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