AS an F/A you probably look at seniority differently. Your seniority determines the types of trips you fly. Probably the longer international trips go senior. With all F/A's cross trained an all equipment, DOH integration is much simpler.
What you must understand with regard to pilot seniority is that it determines which airplane you fly as well as which seat you occupy, with significantly different pay scales attached to each. And we're not talking an few dollars an hour here. So while an East pilot has more years at his respective airline before the merger, he doesn't have more seniority if he is flying the same seat and type of AC. The East pilot's current and future earnings potential was significantly less even though he had many more years at his company. This is the crux of the problem. There is a large disparity between age/years of service, and what each pilot brings to the merger in terms of seat/fleet and money.
While I agree that the West should put themselves in the East's shoes, the East must also walk in the West's shoes. Something they have been unwilling to do. How do you think a 7 year West captain would feel, who was earning significantly more money than an 18 year East F/O (let's say $50,000 more per year) suddenly have that F/O leap frog over him? How about a 5 year West F/O who was looking forward to his upgrade and $30,000 raise just before the merger, now being leap frogged by a 18 year East pilot who was earning significantly less just last year, and now will see that raise evaporate for another 5 or even 10 years because of the age 60 rule changing to age 65? How do you think he would feel?
The West has always said that through the JNC they will work with the East to improve everyone's pay, benefits, work rules and even job protections. This can all be done without re-ordering a list that was awarded by an arbitrator through a process that the East INSISTED on in the first place. Everyone should step away from the emotion that they are currently so tied to, and start looking at this objectively, in dollars and cents.