(no title)
jds375 | 4 years ago
It actually blew my mind when I heard that you could assault someone on a plane and not be instantly banned
jds375 | 4 years ago
It actually blew my mind when I heard that you could assault someone on a plane and not be instantly banned
DeusExMachina|4 years ago
If you punch a person on the street, you get charged. Same if you punch a flight attendant on a plane.
You might even go to jail in both cases. But what you don't get in the first case is to be put on a blacklist that prevents you from using some services. If you punch a person in a supermarket, you are not banned from supermarkets.
What you advocate for reminds of proscription lists in ancient Rome or the social credit system of the CCP.
Aeolun|4 years ago
Uh, I dunno. We definitely banned disruptive people from our supermarket. And we’d happily let other supermarkets nearby know that Mr. X was an asshole that should be treated with extreme caution (and vice versa).
I don’t see why the government needs to get involved with this though. Airlines are perfectly capable of making and sharing such a list themselves.
cromka|4 years ago
If you punch a person in a supermarket, authorities can be summoned to take you away. If you do that on a plane, that can't be done. Planes are safe because things are heavily regulated and expected to go according to an extremely strict plan. Any aberration increases the risk of a catastrophic event.
throwaway9870|4 years ago
Clearly the system has not been abused too much if you are not even aware this is how it already works.
NovemberWhiskey|4 years ago
In the US, airlines are common carriers - which involves certain obligations like published pricing and non-discrimination - but that still allows them the right to refuse carriage on reasonable grounds. You can argue what "reasonable grounds" means, but "criminal history of violent or disruptive behavior onboard an aircraft" seems like it's probably going to suffice.
nickkell|4 years ago
tluyben2|4 years ago
low_tech_love|4 years ago
tremon|4 years ago
Yes, in an ideal world this wouldn't be needed because you could trust the police to handle such cases adequately, but they don't. Hence, where justice fails, you see alternative systems prop up (also see #metoo, cancel culture).
that_guy_iain|4 years ago
Why are aircrafts so special that they need such special rules about banning people who commit a minor crime one time? Remember these crimes are minor crimes. Yet people are honestly thinking the correct level of response for an assualt is the inability to use an entire industry.
Of course Airlines want the power to banish people from the industry and give their hosts and hostesses power that people will be afraid of them and just comply with everything and anything. These people already have a lot of power in the fact not complying is a crime.
But to be fair, this is coming from a country where there freedoms are so limited it's a crime to cross the street in the wrong area.
gregd|4 years ago
Secondly, you're sealed into a tube with 100 other passengers, over the Atlantic ocean on a 14 hour flight. One passenger who cannot control themselves, decides they're going to punch a flight attendant. Now what? You can't just call the police (like you can on the street).
So now, people who are not the police, have to "detain" this individual to keep them from hurting others. The plane has to divert to land so that the person can be handled by law enforcement. The 14 hour flight is now potentially 24-48 hours total, people have missed connecting flights, holidays, work meetings, etc.
So how and why people continue to compare punching someone on the street with punching someone on an airplane, is beyond me. While they're both technically assault, that's where the comparison ends.
tsol|4 years ago
polski-g|4 years ago
Because unlike on the street, you can't pull out a gun and defend yourself.
unknown|4 years ago
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oefrha|4 years ago
Edit: Wait, the original title does have “convicted” in it. Guess it’s the submitter optimizing for outrage.
tsol|4 years ago
runamok|4 years ago
It think the risk is in transparency. If I piss off an airline employee in some way and they decide to punish me in this way with no recourse it's a problem.
AlexandrB|4 years ago
jack_squat|4 years ago
ipaddr|4 years ago
pooper|4 years ago
I hope so but I wouldn't hold my breath. I remember initially the "enhanced" security pat down was "random" which meant they'd pull aside only brown people. Guess what if it is truly random then grandma on a wheel chair should also be subject to the same "enhanced" pat down. Then they did "enhanced" security pat down on grandmas on wheel chairs but I don't see the public demanding (at least not successfully) the removal.
AlexandrB|4 years ago
The whole thing is an opaque mess and includes many false positives. I certainly don't feel any safer flying with the list in place than I would otherwise. To me it seems like another example of post 9/11 security theatre.
henriquez|4 years ago
conductr|4 years ago
Also Let’s not forget stadiums ban people for heckling, booing, or other extreme conduct. You’ll get kicked out of a movie theater for disruptive behavior, etc. The punitive actions shouldn’t be too foreign.
anonymouswacker|4 years ago
Also, take away a person's license for life if they assault someone while driving!
If they're rude in a restaurant/grocery store/etc., just ban them from society forever!
Make one mistake, and you're fucked for life!
nonethewiser|4 years ago
fareesh|4 years ago
AlexandrB|4 years ago
low_tech_love|4 years ago
justsomehnguy|4 years ago
Especially considering nobody has the same first and last name as some other person and government, security and low wage slaves at airlines are never ever make mistakes.
To the glorious days of flying without disturbances!
Aeolun|4 years ago
How about identifying people by their citizenship ID? I’m fairly certain it was made exactly to avoid naming issues.
throwawaylinux|4 years ago
marco_yolo|4 years ago
austincheney|4 years ago
tigershark|4 years ago
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askin4it|4 years ago
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xyzzyz|4 years ago
bitcharmer|4 years ago
Not so much on the plane. Also, you do realise that streets can't crash and kill everyone who was walking on them?
tigershark|4 years ago