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![]() I think the woman should have been stopped at security before she boarded the plane. Maybe the employees that she slipped by were as morally challenged as you and didn't think anything of it. I feel badly for the poor airline personnel that had to deal with this problem. The lady got what she deserved. wrote in message ups.com... JIMinFL wrote: "PocoLoco" wrote in message ... On Sun, 09 Oct 2005 13:18:54 GMT, "JIMinFL" wrote: Bush basher kicked off plane. http://www.wesh.com/irresistible/5066135/detail.html Maybe she'd have been kicked off if she were wearing the same shirt with Kerry/Edwards on it? Ever think of that? I'll bet she would have, but it wouldn't happen. Trash talk is a liberal Democrat thing. It's easy enough to see evidence of that in this NG. All the right wingers are so polite, well mannered, unconfrontational. None of them would ever troll a thread like this through a boating NG, just to get his/her rocks off on dissing a "Bush Basher"...... This woman was interviewed by a local radio station. As always, there are two sides to the question. Yes, she was wearing a shirt that said "Meet the F*ckers". She was wearing that shirt when she bought her ticket, checked in at the gate, sat for an hour or two waiting to board the plane and nobody said a word to her about "airline standards" or whether the shirt was appropriate attire for flying. She claims that she engaged in a personal conversation with one of the stewardesses at the gate, and that nothing was said about her shirt. Apparently after she boarded the plane a couple of women passengers happened to notice the T shirt and complained to the stewardess that they found the slogan offensive. The stewardess approached the passenger, and asked her if she had a jacket she could put on, or some other means of covering the shirt. The passenger agreed to cover the shirt with one of the airline blankets, as she was planning to take a nap anyway. According to the passenger's story on the radio, she covered the shirt with a blanket and went to sleep. While she was sleeping, the blanket "slipped" enough to expose at least part of the shirt. She was kicked off the plane when it landed at in intermediate stop. According to the passenger, the stewardess who told her she would have to get off the plane also assured her she would get a refund for her ticket. (Her fare has never been refunded). As a private business, the airline has the right to set standards for its passengers. The woman was wrong, but the airline brewed a tempest in a tea pot. Had she been given the oppportunity to "adjust" the blanket to restore coverage of the offensive shirt, I think she porbably would have done so. If the airline want to say, "We won't sell you a ticket unless you swear you'll vote a straight Republican ballot in the next election", that would be its right and privilege to do so. |
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