dnewton3
Staff member
http://www.foxnews.com/travel/2018/02/15...iral-video.html
If this were an adult, would the aircrew not have refused takeoff until the adult deplaned? Or, if the tantrum didn't start until after take-off, and this were an adult, would not that plane would have either turned around to it's origin, or put down in mid-flight plan, and the person to be arrested?
Irony - see this video where an adult female throws her own tantrum, and is removed from the plane.
http://www.foxnews.com/travel/2018/02/16...rnment-job.html
The irony is two-fold. First, she was removed prior to flight, when the kid in the first example was not. Second, in that she was upset because an infant was crying, and she didn't want to have to listen to it. You can even hear the mom apologize and say the kid won't cry all the time ... as if crying for half the flight is acceptable?
I don't care if it's an adult, a child, a special-needs person, an emotional support peacock, or whatever ... you don't have a "right" to inflict society with your issues. If you cannot conform to the expected norm of the situation, then you don't belong there. Have the decency to recognize that your burden should not become everyone's burden.
NOTE: I am delineating the behaviors here, not "disabilities". If you need me to further explain, I will. But I'd like to think that you understand the distinction I make.
If this were an adult, would the aircrew not have refused takeoff until the adult deplaned? Or, if the tantrum didn't start until after take-off, and this were an adult, would not that plane would have either turned around to it's origin, or put down in mid-flight plan, and the person to be arrested?
Irony - see this video where an adult female throws her own tantrum, and is removed from the plane.
http://www.foxnews.com/travel/2018/02/16...rnment-job.html
The irony is two-fold. First, she was removed prior to flight, when the kid in the first example was not. Second, in that she was upset because an infant was crying, and she didn't want to have to listen to it. You can even hear the mom apologize and say the kid won't cry all the time ... as if crying for half the flight is acceptable?
I don't care if it's an adult, a child, a special-needs person, an emotional support peacock, or whatever ... you don't have a "right" to inflict society with your issues. If you cannot conform to the expected norm of the situation, then you don't belong there. Have the decency to recognize that your burden should not become everyone's burden.
NOTE: I am delineating the behaviors here, not "disabilities". If you need me to further explain, I will. But I'd like to think that you understand the distinction I make.