And my mother is diabetic and carries peanut butter crackers around with her to accommodate HER health needs. Why does one person's needs trump others?
Yes, there has to be another way to ensure that other passengers aren't put out. If one has a severe allergy that needs accommodation such as no nuts on the plane, then they need to alert the airline when making the ticket purchase and the airline needs to alert the fellow passengers- not day of, but in advance so they can plan their food needs accordingly. In the age of internet, there shouldn't be much of a problem making this a reality.
There is literally nothing else your mother could ear aside from peanut butter crackers for her sugar needs? I know those little packages of crackers are convenient. We carry the cheese ones. But there's nothing that would work for her? Nothing?
The point isn't that there isn't other things she could eat. There are other things I could bring too. But we don't know that peanuts will be an issue until we are about to board. So we may not have brought those other things that day.There is literally nothing else your mother could ear aside from peanut butter crackers for her sugar needs? I know those little packages of crackers are convenient. We carry the cheese ones. But there's nothing that would work for her? Nothing?
But if it was your child/husband/mother/father who has this serious allergy then you would have no problem with the request.The airline just announced that a passenger has a severe peanut allergy and asked that people not eat anything with nuts while on the plane. Some people are put off by this. I'm torn. I don't want to have to make an emergency landing if they go into an allergic reaction or the person have an allergic reaction but I also feel that 180-190 people shouldn't be put off for one person. We have peanut m&m's but won't eat them out of courtesy and his/ her safety.
So it's ok to put a child into respiratory distress because mom needs her peanut butter crackers. What a selfish thing to say.Did I say there was nothing else?! I said that's what she carries, and if she were flying and that's what was packed in her purse, and she got a last minute notice like this, she'd be put out. It's not anyone else's job to alter their lives to accommodate other people's needs. Do they request this on public transit? Or do they just not ride on buses or subways?
But if it was your child/husband/mother/father who has this serious allergy then you would have no problem with the request.
You can say all the "what ifs?" that other people may do, but to me, that is not an excuse to just go ahead and do what you want and put a child at risk. If "I" was told that there was a child with a life threatening allergy on the plane, I can only monitor my own behavior and I sure as hell am not going to purposely try and kill a child by eating peanuts when asked not to.I would hope if someone had a life threatening peanut allergy, the airline would email those on the flight before hand so they can make arrangements. Telling people at the gate seems a bit too last minute to me.
What if someone just ate peanuts in the car on the way over? Works in a food factory where peanuts are on their clothes? An autistic child that is in an "only eat peanut butter" phase whose mother now can't take his food on the plane for a long flight/layover?
I would never risk my child's life by trusting 100+ strangers to abide. It would be one long car ride, or a no go.
So it's ok to put a child into respiratory distress because mom needs her peanut butter crackers. What a selfish thing to say.
So it's ok to put a child into respiratory distress because mom needs her peanut butter crackers. What a selfish thing to say.
If me or my child had such a severe allergy that someone 15 rows back eating a granola bar would endanger my life, I would not be getting on a plane. I agree that I would not place my trust with strangers to keep us safe.
There is not recirculated air in those areas.This is the part of the whole argument that confuses me. If the allergy is SO severe that the risk of everyone on the plane (just not those sitting in the near vicinity) can cause a deadly reaction, I would not get on the plane with my child. How about in the airport when someone pulls out peanut butter crackers in the waiting area? Or a Snickers bar? Or the person in line in security with peanut butter breath? You cannot protect against all situations and those would seem to be just as dangerous too.
I would never risk my child's life by trusting 100+ strangers to abide. It would be one long car ride, or a no go.
Most airlines still hand out peanuts. So the chances that you would be getting on a plane that already had peanut oil on the floor and seats is pretty good. I have definitely been on flights where I got on and their were peanuts on the floor. Or a peanut wrapper in the seat back pocket in front of me.
As for those saying that the airlines have other snacks and juice that you could have.... well have you ever been on a long flight were it took them several hours to actually get to the part where they give those out? Or a shorter flight where they never did because of turbulence?
It is my opinion that if the airline and or the passenger with the issue isn't providing some alternative or even enough time for someone to find an alternative to what they have with them then they can't dictate what is eaten on board.