Might as well title it "The Airing of Perpetual Grievances", and not surprisingly, it completely ignores management's successes over the same timeframe he's targeting...
- LHR purchase from TW
- LatAm purchase from Eastern
- AAdvantage (still the largest program from what I recall)
- Monetizing the investment in Sabre (AA earned far more than UA, NW, or DL did with Galileo or Worldspan)
- Introduction of ticket change fees (integral to the Value Plan he mocks, and a huge revenue generator that almost everyone else matched)
- defeating CO and NW's claims of predatory pricing
- killing off Vanguard, Legend, and several other startups
- rationalizing fare levels and corporate discounts classes (another part of the Value Plan that still exists)
- investment in Orbitz
- avoiding use of the ATSB
- first major airline willing to charge for first checked bag (huge revenue generator, and almost everyone else followed suit)
- AA.Com (lots of innovations in ecommerce that most of you never see because you don't buy tickets...)
Seriously, going back to 1991 for some of his grievances is a bit petty. There's lots management has done wrong over the years, but quite a bit they've gotten right.
AA as an airline survived longer than anyone else before filing for bankruptcy. Southwest still has another 40 years to go before they can beat AA's record. Might not be seen as an accomplishment by many, but when you look at other industries which have gone thru as much radical change as the airlines have, it's a record few companies can match.
The only two other companies I can think of which have been around longer without filing for bankruptcy or merging for survival are Ford and Alaska Airlines...