YellowFever
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Yes, you are discriminating against the non-familied people.irvinehomeowner said:P.S. Either the gate person, an attendant or myself have asked passengers to move to accommodate my family so that we can sit with our kids... should I be on the news?
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Happiness said:Yes, you are discriminating against the non-familied people.irvinehomeowner said:P.S. Either the gate person, an attendant or myself have asked passengers to move to accommodate my family so that we can sit with our kids... should I be on the news?
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Ready2Downsize said:They were ASKED. This woman had a boarding pass in hand and was TOLD she was being moved.
I've had people ask me and I've moved. The reason I've been asked is because my family and I were not all together anyway. I could have asked others but it's not that important to me unless it's giving up an aisle seat, especially for a middle seat on a long flight. I have an aisle seat so I don't have to nudge someone awake to get up and use the restroom, so depending on how long the flight is, I might say no in that case.
peppy said:Ready2Downsize said:They were ASKED. This woman had a boarding pass in hand and was TOLD she was being moved.
I've had people ask me and I've moved. The reason I've been asked is because my family and I were not all together anyway. I could have asked others but it's not that important to me unless it's giving up an aisle seat, especially for a middle seat on a long flight. I have an aisle seat so I don't have to nudge someone awake to get up and use the restroom, so depending on how long the flight is, I might say no in that case.
If you say no, it may be deemed as you interfering with the directions of the flight crew. You can get a hefty fine and be asked to leave the plane if you repeatedly refuse the directions of a flight attendant. It's up to the pilot's discretion.
iacrenter said:peppy said:Ready2Downsize said:They were ASKED. This woman had a boarding pass in hand and was TOLD she was being moved.
I've had people ask me and I've moved. The reason I've been asked is because my family and I were not all together anyway. I could have asked others but it's not that important to me unless it's giving up an aisle seat, especially for a middle seat on a long flight. I have an aisle seat so I don't have to nudge someone awake to get up and use the restroom, so depending on how long the flight is, I might say no in that case.
If you say no, it may be deemed as you interfering with the directions of the flight crew. You can get a hefty fine and be asked to leave the plane if you repeatedly refuse the directions of a flight attendant. It's up to the pilot's discretion.
You politely ask the flight crew: "Are you ordering me to change seats or is this a choice?" They will make it clear from that point. This sounds more like a customer service request.
You aren't asking people to move because of race / gender. United Airlines should have called security and kicked the two people off the flight. It is not okay to belittle women on here. Outright disgusting of those two people and outright disgusting of United to actually ask her to move seats (vs. kicking them off the flight).irvinehomeowner said:P.S. Either the gate person, an attendant or myself have asked passengers to move to accommodate my family so that we can sit with our kids... should I be on the news?
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