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jds375 | 4 years ago

What is with some of the responses in this thread! I understand some cases are not so clear, but if you do something as blatant as punch a flight attendant in the face I think that’s grounds to be put on such a list. There should be a policy so that after a period (or going through some program) you could then be removed from the list though..

It actually blew my mind when I heard that you could assault someone on a plane and not be instantly banned

discuss

order

DeusExMachina|4 years ago

What I don't get, instead, are the people who, like you, find a no fly-list acceptable.

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

> If you punch a person in a supermarket, you are not banned from supermarkets.

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, you are not banned from supermarkets.

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

Most professional sports teams in the US ban fans that fight in the stadiums. In regards to banning people in supermarkets - yes, the store is entirely within its right to ban the customer: https://axislc.com/public/can-a-business-ban-a-customer/

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

An airline is a business - why would a business want to transport a passenger who has a history of criminal misconduct onboard their aircraft? The airlines have a duty to protect their employees, and a duty of care towards other passengers. They also have a rightful interest in running their services on-time and without disruption.

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

You can be banned from driving though if you risk endangering others.

tluyben2|4 years ago

I'm not sure I am in favour of a no-fly list, however, flying (unlike other examples in this thread; walking across the street, going to a supermarket etc) is not a basic human need. You (and many others do) do not need to ever fly in your life to live a happy and fulfilled life, without any pressure (you could never visit a supermarket but that's actually much harder; most people will never fly in their lives automatically anyway). For most people it is a minor inconvenience if they could never fly again and a minority will have to find another job. A list like it would have little or no impact on anything basically for by far most people on earth. So the question is, is having the list so beneficial for enough people (who are in these planes where repeat offenders kick up a stink) to go through the trouble of creating one?

low_tech_love|4 years ago

For each person who punched a flight attendant I bet there are 5 on the list who didn’t come even close to that. The list itself can be used as a threat.

tremon|4 years ago

Around here (NL), notorious shoplifters are banned from certain shopping centres. The shopkeepers keep a list with photo's and share it among them. This is established practice (though I'm not sure how widespread) and isn't even considered a GDPR violation as long as the list isn't made public, since protecting yourself from fraud is a legitimate business interest.

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

So you punch someone in the street, should you be banned from walking on any street anywhere in the country?

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

First of all, assault is not a "minor" crime.

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

A private plane and a public street are indeed very different. Not that I agree with a shared no fly list between all airlines, but if a single airline wants to ban you after an incident it's not that different than Walgreens banning you because you punched an employee

polski-g|4 years ago

> Why are aircrafts so special that they need such special rules about banning people who commit a minor crime one time?

Because unlike on the street, you can't pull out a gun and defend yourself.

oefrha|4 years ago

As always, title is optimized for outage (left out the crucial detail — “convicted”), and people don’t read beyond the title, so there you have it.

Edit: Wait, the original title does have “convicted” in it. Guess it’s the submitter optimizing for outrage.

tsol|4 years ago

Isn't the original title supposed to be used? Hmm

runamok|4 years ago

Pretty serious crime: https://www.criminaldefenselawyer.com/resources/interfering-... Being put on a no-fly list is probably the least of your problems.

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

The whole thing exists outside the regular justice system. Even if the airline employee puts you in the list in good faith, the criteria they used to put you there would be somewhat arbitrary (define "unruly") and not weighed against any kind of precedent for similar infractions. Appeal is also difficult.

jack_squat|4 years ago

The responses in this thread were unusually crazy/crass/rude before moderation apparently stepped in. I dunno if that was a glimpse of "unmoderated HN" or if this topic in particular draws out emotions.

ipaddr|4 years ago

The no fly list was setup for a reason and using it to exclude others reduces the seriousness of the original list to the point where the public will demand it's removal.

pooper|4 years ago

> The no fly list was setup for a reason and using it to exclude others reduces the seriousness of the original list to the point where the public will demand it's removal.

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

Good?

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

What was so serious about the original no-fly list?

conductr|4 years ago

There’s a lot of gray areas too. I recall a flight where the guy across the aisle from me simply could not sit in his seat. Before we even took off they had multiple conversations with him trying to get him in his seat. In the air, he would repeatedly get up and try to lay down to sleep in the aisle. Their talks with him and me being the nearest seat, had me on edge the whole time expecting I was going to have to break up a fight or dodge a rouge fist. I firmly believe this guy needed a probationary period on air travel.

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

Exactly!

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

You can be banned from flying. You dont have a right to fly... it's a contract between airlines and passengers. Airlines ban passengers as they see fit. They dont need the government to ban passengers. They "need" (want) the government to act in the best interests of the airlines.

fareesh|4 years ago

Are all violent criminals on the No-Fly List?

AlexandrB|4 years ago

Do you mean people who abuse their spouse regularly or people who committed a robbery 30 years ago?

low_tech_love|4 years ago

Because it’s literally too good to be true. Anyone would love to believe such a list will work, but measures like these will invariably become more problem than they’re worth. I bet that guy who got dragged out of the airplane some time ago would be on that list very quick. It’s a great list until you find yourself in it because you lost your patience with an attendant for being double booked. “Please calm down sir”.

justsomehnguy|4 years ago

> I think that’s grounds to be put on such a list

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

If you identify people by their first and last name you’ve already committed a huge mistake.

How about identifying people by their citizenship ID? I’m fairly certain it was made exactly to avoid naming issues.

throwawaylinux|4 years ago

Perhaps all convicted violent criminals should be placed on the no-fly list automatically.

marco_yolo|4 years ago

I don't think people are saying an airline shouldn't ban but questioning whether they should be put on a federal list managed by the US government. That's a slippery slope.

austincheney|4 years ago

Not for violent offenders.

xyzzyz|4 years ago

If you assault someone on the street, should you be banned from being on all streets, indefinitely and on the whim of the owner of one of the streets, without any legal recourse?

bitcharmer|4 years ago

Reductio ad absurdum. This analogy couldn't be worse. People on the street have multiple ways to deal with your shitty behaviour, including distancing or removing themselves from the situation.

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

It’s a slippery slope. If you risk the life of all the passengers with your behaviour because you can’t be bothered of following the basic rules of civility you should definitely be in a no-flight list. Following your nonsensical slippery slope, we already put behind bars people that are a danger to the fellow citizens, and in some cases, yes, you are banned indefinitely from all the streets. It’s called “death penalty” and Americans should know one or two things about it. If you ask me, putting someone on a no-fight list makes definitely more sense than killing someone.