Crosswords5 mins ago
How Often
Do you read about drunks on-board Flight's? should they be Barred from every Airline in the world? & yes it can be implemented through their passport.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.>>>How often do you read about drunks on-board flights?
Given that there are around 3½ billion passenger flights each year, remarkably rarely!
>>>should they be barred from every airline in the world?
No. Many people get drunk in public at some time in their lives but they don't all make a habit of it!
Given that there are around 3½ billion passenger flights each year, remarkably rarely!
>>>should they be barred from every airline in the world?
No. Many people get drunk in public at some time in their lives but they don't all make a habit of it!
I've never experienced it but coincidentally to your question this is in today's mail:
http:// www.dai lymail. co.uk/t ravel/t ravel_n ews/art icle-31 70932/P arty-s- Ryanair -bans-d uty-fre e-booze -board- flights -UK-Ibi za-atte mpt-imp rove-co mfort-s afety.h tml
http://
I've been on a few jumbos where not a single passenger has caused trouble to the stewards. That's out of 400+ people. Apparently this happens quite often.
Of course, there's a place for condign punishments... HGV drivers who kill cyclists should never be allowed to drive again, anywhere, ever. But drunk airline passengers seem to be much less of a problem and don't kill anyone.
Of course, there's a place for condign punishments... HGV drivers who kill cyclists should never be allowed to drive again, anywhere, ever. But drunk airline passengers seem to be much less of a problem and don't kill anyone.
The simple way to avoid drunks on airlines is for airports to stop selling alcohol!
The owners of airports are not airlines, so they maximise any and all opportunities. How else do you explain being able to buy alcohol when you are waiting for a plane.
People get bored and / or nervous waiting for a flight, so they drink, often to excess, and the problems become the airlines’ – not the airports, because the trouble starts when the drunken passenger is confined in a small pressurised tube which exacerbates his or her boredom, feeling of restriction, and the effect of alcohol is increased – a recipe for trouble.
So, let the airlines lobby the airlines to stop selling alcohol, and the problem will disappear overnight.
Of course, it won’t happen – but that is the answer.
The owners of airports are not airlines, so they maximise any and all opportunities. How else do you explain being able to buy alcohol when you are waiting for a plane.
People get bored and / or nervous waiting for a flight, so they drink, often to excess, and the problems become the airlines’ – not the airports, because the trouble starts when the drunken passenger is confined in a small pressurised tube which exacerbates his or her boredom, feeling of restriction, and the effect of alcohol is increased – a recipe for trouble.
So, let the airlines lobby the airlines to stop selling alcohol, and the problem will disappear overnight.
Of course, it won’t happen – but that is the answer.