MercuryCobra
MercuryCobra
MercuryCobra

It would hopefully at least stop all this whining about how you “paid for a seat that reclines” (see: paid the extra $10 to choose a seat and somehow thinks that means you’re owed a recliner).

It’s not psycho-analysis. It’s your stated opinion. “Tough to be you,” in this circumstance literally means “I don’t care about your comfort, I only care about mine, and I will act as such.”

My most controversial frequent flyer opinion is that all airlines should board their economy seats like Southwest boards its planes.

As a no-recline absolutist who never reclines his seat even on long haul flights on principle, I am still willing to make some concessions long-haul. If the flight is over 6 hours I’m not going to begrudge someone trying to get a little more horizontal. It also helps a lot that long-haul flights are usually spaced

Glad the masks’s off. There never was any moral or ethical justification; you just think you have a right to make yourself more comfortable and other peoples’ expense and that just sucks for them. It’s literally just “I should get to recline my seat because fuck you.”  

This is both extremely funny and sadly true. If Bernie was committed to class-first leftism a major plank of his platform would be forcing every airline to adopt Southwest’s model for boarding and seat choice and eliminate reclining seats.

I’m a child for wanting to just sit in my seat, that I paid for, and be able to fit there without having someone slam their seat into my knees? But the other person isn’t a child for intentionally vomiting on me when there are plenty of othe roptions for them to take care of their business?

Jesus, when was the last time you flew? How can you honestly believe that A) every international airport flies everywhere you want to go, when you want to go and B) that everyone has access to a major airport that isn’t nearly captured by one or maybe two airlines.

When’s the last time you flew? Because last year I flew nearly four times a month. The only “extra legroom” seats you can pay for are seats designated as such. There’s no such thing as an “extra legroom” standard economy seat; they’re all the same. Nor do you get a discount for taking a non-reclineable seat. Check

It’s funny that you mention that, because many airlines ARE starting to remove reclining seats from their planes for exactly this reason. But planes have a very long service life so unless you’re flying brand new planes you probably haven’t noticed.

Reclining in response to reclining doesn’t actually solve the problem. Because A) at some point someone won’t be able to recline (usually the last row) and B) the biggest problem with reclining is that it hits tall peoples’ legs, and them reclining in turn doesn’t solve that problem.

Air sickness is itself a minor inconvenience. You know what’s not a minor inconvenience? Not being able to exist in the seat you paid for because some jackass decided his air sickness is more important than your legs.

So here’s the odd thing about this debate: I don’t know who you’re agreeing with. Because I think reclining is the absolute height of selfishness: you’e making yourself measurably more comfortable at the expense of someone else. But your phrasing indicates that you disagree with JudgmentalDad. So I’m at a loss at

It 100% is space that I’m using that you are not entitled to.

All the reports indicate that a lot of the blame should fall on the director, who made a series of bizarre decisions that made the VFX almost impossible to complete on time. Including the baffling decision to not have the actors wear mo-cap suits, meaning the team had to do a lot of the rotoscoping, etc. work by hand.

Look I’m not in the business of defending class action lawyers, because some of what they do is shady AF. But let’s not besmirch all lawyers.

The mattress industry is a complete racket and there is basically no good way to shop for one. So I’d be a bit kinder to the consumers, who are trying to navigate an intentionally awful market.

You can use whatever frame you want with the mattress, so no worries there.

I will confess to being one of those Americans who thought Rosamund Pike was American until this comment.

The Good Place is the only TV show that has ever given me an existential crisis precisely because it exposed the fundamental unfairness of any eternal afterlife. I have never been a very spiritual person and had never given the afterlife much deep thought other than a sort of vague notion of heaven and hell. That this