This post was rebutted earlier in my absence, but I still wanted to reply myself. I hope no one minds the backtrack.
SCRawl wrote:Twoyboy wrote:OK, in some respects this argument has turned into a discussion over whether or not he did delay the flight and another on whether or not people are/should be given preferential treatment for prayer over other kinds of actions. But neither of these things matter.
The point of this is that he ignored a request from a flight attendant. At that point, no matter what his friends say he's doing, the flight attendant has to decide:
1) Is there a chance he'll do it again and delay the flight more than removing him would?
2) Is there a chance he'll do it in an emergency and endanger people's lives?
Since she would not have been reasonably assured that the answer to both of these would be "no" without more discussion, she minimised the damage (flight delays and risk) by removing him and sorting it out later.
As I pointed out in an earlier post, every passenger on board that plane might pose the same risk. It is true that the man who was removed demonstrated a greater than average risk, having done so already, but it has been my contention that alternative means of persuasion -- which fall short of de-planing him -- could have been used.
(Of course, it's possible that these means were attempted and, in the eyes of the FA, they failed, but there's no indication of it in the OP.)
Was he actually a threat? Not by the looks of it, but if I'm flying on that plane, I'd appreciate that the airlines policies were conservative.
At what point does being conservative become silly, though? We probably agree that bouncing this guy was, if not entirely appropriate, at least not entirely unjustified. If you're going to eject passengers "just to be on the safe side", then there's going to be a lot of ejecting going on.
Do you think that you could have been assured of the two points above?
Being assured is a rather high standard to keep. You can't be assured of the behaviour of any passenger unless they're dead.
It's an incredibly weak retort to say that every passenger poses a minor risk to delays and security when you agree this passenger posed an increased risk. I think one thing sets this passenger apart from your average elevated risk case: He did it deliberately. He chose his time, he chose to continue his prayers and ignore the FA. He is not just dense or ignorant, he was being obstinate and quite frankly should have understood where this would lead, not that it matters if he does or not.
Now, many people have argued the assumptions, etc. But seriously, who gives a flying fuck? The only thing we need to assume is that everything actually reported in the OP is correct. So we know:
1) He
left his seat to go pray.
2) He ignored the FA's request when we have since heard he is under no religious obligation to continue.
3) He was removed from the flight, but put on a later one.
So the FA had the authority and reason to remove him under the rules. She had limited time (anywhere from 2 - 30 minutes) to make a decision. She knew nothing about this man except for a) he was ignoring her intentionally and b) his friends said he'd be done soon. So her choices were:
1) Leave him on - turns out not to be a problem = all good.
2) Leave him on - decides to pray during takeoff, during flight, during emergency evac, ignores more instructions during emergency, etc = very bad.
3) Discuss now - turns out guy is ok and reasonable = all good.
4) Discuss now - turns out guy is a nutjob, have to remove him anyway = missed flight window discussing.
5) Remove him, sort it out later = small delay for everyone else, guy gets on next flight.
Weighing up these risks, she put the well being of the rest of the passengers above that of the guy ignoring her and had him removed. I can't see how that doesn't seem reasonable.
I like pigs. Dogs look up to us. Cats look down on us. Pigs treat us as equals.
-Winston Churchhill
I think a part of my sanity has been lost throughout this whole experience. And some of my foreskin - My cheating work colleague at it again