autofixer
Veteran
- Aug 20, 2002
- 1,804
- 241
[blockquote]
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On 1/19/2003 10:24:36 AM ISN wrote:
Think about it, 6 years from now ALPA announces a strike date. Company says go ahead make my day, we will keep the doors open using contract carriers! RJ’s, 90 seaters.
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[/blockquote]Six years from now the small jets will be well on their way to the ash heap of history. Their high cost will kill them--after they are used for their intended purpose of destroying labor at the airlines.
I contend that if small jets were so great, why is Southwest avoiding like the plague or like they do hubbing? Small jets will be just another in a thousand mile long line of airline management ineptness.
When the history books are written in a hundred years, the likes of Crandall, Wolf, and yes, Dave, will be listed right up their with the robber barons of the 19th century. My goodness, one only needs to go to the Biltmore House in Ashville, NC, to realize why the railroads went broke. The railroads could not see the need to adapt to the competion that was arising from a new technology--the automobile. The airlines can not see the need to adapt to a new technology that is arising--electronic conferencing and communication. The soapbox is now available.
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On 1/19/2003 10:24:36 AM ISN wrote:
Think about it, 6 years from now ALPA announces a strike date. Company says go ahead make my day, we will keep the doors open using contract carriers! RJ’s, 90 seaters.
----------------
[/blockquote]Six years from now the small jets will be well on their way to the ash heap of history. Their high cost will kill them--after they are used for their intended purpose of destroying labor at the airlines.
I contend that if small jets were so great, why is Southwest avoiding like the plague or like they do hubbing? Small jets will be just another in a thousand mile long line of airline management ineptness.
When the history books are written in a hundred years, the likes of Crandall, Wolf, and yes, Dave, will be listed right up their with the robber barons of the 19th century. My goodness, one only needs to go to the Biltmore House in Ashville, NC, to realize why the railroads went broke. The railroads could not see the need to adapt to the competion that was arising from a new technology--the automobile. The airlines can not see the need to adapt to a new technology that is arising--electronic conferencing and communication. The soapbox is now available.