C'mon now your just arguing for arguments sake.
Not as much as you are.
You seem knowledgable enough about the industry to know that AIRLINES lobbied to have pushback rather than take-off be the accepted metric.
Take-off would be
worse. The airline has no control after they push-back. It makes no rational sense to measure airline performance including time after push-back. None.
Pushing back when they know the plane can't take off for hours is not doing everything right.
Given the parameter that
passengers have set up for deciding what is good and bad,
yes it is.
It is for the airlines image benefit to the detriment of their passengers.
A condition passengers have inflicted
on themselves. That's the point I've been making.
If they want to be allowed to do this then they should be held accountable for such actions when they lead to unacceptable passenger retention on board.
No. That's not rational. Instead: If passengers want airlines to be responsible for take-off, then give them total control over the system. Get rid of the FAA and let the industry monitor itself, if you want the suppliers in the industry to have responsibility for the whole process.
But you don't. You want the FAA. You want our nation to have some control.
Then accept the consequences of that. Accept that only part of the process is the airline's responsibility, and judge the airline
only by that part. That's rational judgment.
Air-traffic controllers can override the policy, and remember they control the aircraft from push-back (not just from take-off). Read up on the legislation and its implementation for more details.
Well they have spoken now and the airlines will just have to make do won't they.
Indeed, and they shall, and passengers will be worse off for it, afaic.
I think you should give the PBoR a good read while your looking for the chapter and section info I asked for earlier. As I read it it does not mandate flight cancellation it merely mandates that passengers be given the right to deplane.
Which prompts airlines to cancel flights. That's the point. The delay introduced by allowing passengers to deplane is so significant that the airline is often better off for myriad reasons.
Stop thinking just about what they law says, and start thinking about what the law does. And again that's what I'm saying the "mob" didn't do. They just forced the law without thinking through what it would cause as a result.