Maximilian_Jenius
Super User
Airline Deregulation Act, sponsored by Sen. Kennedy, signed into law by President Carter. Do I need to explain what party they are members of?
I'd say that bill bettered the profession,wouldn't you?
Airline Deregulation Act, sponsored by Sen. Kennedy, signed into law by President Carter. Do I need to explain what party they are members of?
Ok, kinda back onto-off topic here with mesaba... Fact of the matter here is that it doesn't look like they will be around too much longer- What happens if they liquidate? Who gets the flying? I know they have some EAS routes- do those get rebid and in the mean time do not get served?
The scarier thought is what if after a good portion of the pilot group leaves for greener pastures, they hire a bunch of extremely low time pilots that are willing to work anywhere for anything. Then, they survive with a weaker pilot group and now the standard has been set lower. That sets a precedent in the industry and the downard spiral continues. Of course, the other possibility is that the financial hemmoraging continues and they go belly up. Not a good scenario either way. I am really bummed about this ruling and hope the issue of companies using bankruptcy law recklessly becomes a political issue. Somone call Lou Dobbs... this is an attack on the American middle class! BTW, there is informational picketing on Thursday in MSP, DTW, and MEM to support Mesaba pilots.
If people leave in groves the company won't have time to hire & retrain pilots before they go belly up! Think 2-3 days would do it in for them.
Then thats all she wrote for Mesaba!
Spanjers is probably rubbing off a wet one tonight for his victory in court...
And BTW it was actually the Republican Congress/President that made personal bankruptcy harder and corporate bankruptcy easier. Not to mention the complete and total decay of the middle class in the last six years ...
"John and Sally had to sell their home because they couldn't afford payments on their 5,000+ sq. ft./5+ acre house after John lost his job making rubber dog vomit." Who the $@#% needs a 5,000 sq. ft. house?!? :insane:
Assuming they leave before they have jobs lined up. I'm sure they have resumes out, but even if they have interview dates, getting a class can be a slow process.
How's that MAPD application process going btw...![]()
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Maybe you should take a look at the late 70s, when the Democratic party held both houses of Congress and the President. The Prime Rate interest rates got near 20%, and you think they're high now?
Clearly you haven't been keeping up with the posts in the FSA forums.
In a nutshell, I decided against PACE(MAPD) for a multitude of reasons.
Prove it.
Which is it? Protectionism is bad or NAFTA (definately NOT protectionism) is bad?
Didn't stop ya from listing NAFTA and the obligatory Clinton reference ...
The scarier thought is what if after a good portion of the pilot group leaves for greener pastures, they hire a bunch of extremely low time pilots that are willing to work anywhere for anything. Then, they survive with a weaker pilot group and now the standard has been set lower. That sets a precedent in the industry and the downard spiral continues. Of course, the other possibility is that the financial hemmoraging continues and they go belly up. Not a good scenario either way. I am really bummed about this ruling and hope the issue of companies using bankruptcy law recklessly becomes a political issue. Somone call Lou Dobbs... this is an attack on the American middle class! BTW, there is informational picketing on Thursday in MSP, DTW, and MEM to support Mesaba pilots.
Or we could just look back to the early 1990s when Bill Clinton was in office and the democrats controlled both chambers of Congress. They only managed to lay the groundwork for the longest economic expansion in the history of the United States AND trillions of dollars in surpluses which would have eliminated all the national debt on the books.
and both use scare tactics to gain votes from a populace that is borderline not able to think well enough to vote at all. It is truly a sad state of affairs, and it calls into question whether democracy is even viable over the long term.