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Beaches and Beers.
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- Nov 14, 2002
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Actually... free speech includes that as wellI'm pretty sure there's no right to take pictures of some woman's "chestal area".

Try again.
Actually... free speech includes that as wellI'm pretty sure there's no right to take pictures of some woman's "chestal area".
We don't know if that was all that happened.The only intention here was to point out that the employee confronted the pax about the pic and the pax complied with her request.
That's a good point. In the context described, taking a photograph is arguably confrontational on its own merits. They call it "shooting" pictures, taking "snapshots".Sheesh. When did we become so tech-dependent? What's wrong with a good, old-fashioned, discreet pen and paper to note the name of a genuinely difficult employee?
Really? You cannot imagine scenarios where a passenger can cause a situation just by being unreasonable?What is it that would make a passenger with no weapons a "security risk" on an airplane with a locked cockpit door?![]()
No more than defending a passenger's anger about that decision.Defending the airline employee's decision requires some level of evidence.
Excuse me for buttting in here, however, I believe some here have missed the bigger picture (pun intended) here. The employee in question was at the gate, not identified as a flight attendant. She boarded the plane to confront the pax who complied with her request to delete the pic.
...if US Airways doesn't life the ban on the photographer, that would increase the likelihood that the photographer was in the wrong.
Job descriptions aren't a matter of opinion. They're codified in controlled documents. Warning flight crews of suspected security risks is every airline employee's responsibility, and especially that of the employees who have direct contact with a passenger prior to a flight.
And remember, we're talking about decisions by several airline employees. To believe the photographer, without further information breaking the photographer's way, wouldn't be prudent.
This is a pet peeve, but "free speech" is only a matter of what the government cannot prevent. It has no standing for the actions of a private company, provided that company isn't violating some other law, such as those forbidding racial discrimination.free speech includes that as well
Sheesh. When did we become so tech-dependent? What's wrong with a good, old-fashioned, discreet pen and paper to note the name of a genuinely difficult employee? Or use the phone AS a phone - call yourself and leave a message with the person's name?
Problem solved. Nobody thrown off any flight forced to wake a friend in the middle of the night for a ride, no one-sided blogs, no "security theater" fanatic threads...![]()
Hey! I may be opinionated, but I'm not lacking in common sense.goofy4tink said:I really hate it when you take the words right out of my mouth...so to speak.
Sorry but something seems fishy. I tried our friend Google. The only links go back to the blog quoted by the OP. A blogger who was arrested twice for taking pictures of cops.
DeWitt thought the GA was being rude to several passengers. Dewitt then used a cell phone to take a picture so she could file a complaint. Not sure how her complaint would read. I overheard what the GA said to other passengers and it sounded rude to me. Hear part of a conversation and it could have been out of context.
I'm not sure how she went about taking a picture. Did she cut in line, walk in front of other passengers in order to "get a good shot".
Asked to delete the picture DeWitt could have said no problem. Instead she first tried to prove it wasn't a good picture.
I have no idea how confrontational DeWitt was in taking the picture or in response to the GA when asked to delete the picture.
We don't know if that was all that happened.
That's a good point. In the context described, taking a photograph is arguably confrontational on its own merits. They call it "shooting" pictures, taking "snapshots".
snip
This is, by the way, an airline issue, not a 'security theater' issue. Poor choice of thread title.
This is a pet peeve, but "free speech" is only a matter of what the government cannot prevent. It has no standing for the actions of a private company, provided that company isn't violating some other law, such as those forbidding racial discrimination.
An airline, being a private entity, has significant latitude about when and whether it refuses service to a passenger for "speech".
But the question was whether or not the passenger could board that particular flight. And, that's entirely at the discretion of the airline---even if the picture was taken in what is nominally a "publicly-owned" place.However, the incident where the photograph was taken, the free speech in question, happened inside a publicly owned airport terminal- not the airplane.
Fortunately, citizens do video police and other law enforcement personnel, just as police and other law enforcement personnel video (both overtly and covertly). It ddoes help in adjuducating claims of police misconduct and brutality.