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How Dare
You?
ChrisCrossings · April 26,
2001
Q: I am a
flight attendant for United Airlines. I have been flying for 13 years
and I love my job and go out of my way to make our customers feel wanted
and happy to have them with us. I resent your
depiction of my profession as uncaring, resentful of my company and
unconcerned! How dare you?
You are diminishing a profession that has long been taking care our people,
saving lives, and putting our customers lives before our own. How dare
you?
Who are you to say that we are uncaring, have our own agenda, and have
no compassion? Have you ever been in a flight attendants jump seat? Have
you ever been the subject of customer abuse? Have you ever been screamed
at? Have you ever been stabbed? Have you ever had your arm broken or nose
broken by a customer? I think not! You have no idea of what it is like
to be a flight attendant in this world of incivility and arrogance in
the air. How dare you even think you know what it is like to be a flight
attendant?
Before you write about my profession I would think you would take a ride
in our shoes. Come along for a long-haul flight and see what is going
on before you belittle an honored profession.
-- John Fortune
A: I'm always a little disappointed when I get a letter like yours
in response to one of my columns. Not because of your opinion - you're
certainly entitled to that - but because the response suggests that you
didn't bother to finish reading the story.
Why? Because you never addressed the question: What, exactly, is the role
of a modern-day air host?
Instead, you asked two other questions: 1) How dare I depict flight
attendants as uncaring, resentful of their company and unconcerned? And
2) How dare I write about being a flight attendant when I've never
been one?
Let me answer your last question first. I have no misgivings writing about
your business without actually having been a flight attendant. I'm often
on the receiving end of indignant e-mails from travel agents who tell
me it's impossible to cover their business without ever having been a
travel planner, and from time to time, I'll get a note from a pilot who
says I can't write about the airline industry without ever having flown
a plane.
Of course, that's nonsense.
Do we demand that journalists covering the legislature hold public office
before they're hired? Does not having been a senator or congressional
representative disqualify them from writing about government?
What about reporters who cover the space program? Do they have to be astronauts
themselves? And how about crime reporters - should they be convicted felons?
I don't think so. Instead, we familiarize ourselves with the facts and
write about the business from an informed perspective. We get as close
to the story as possible.
I'm a little taken aback by your second question, too. I haven't depicted
flight attendants as callous, underpaid crewmembers. Your passengers and
co-workers have. All I've done is repeat the claims and comment about
them, which is what a column like this is supposed to do.
The last thing I would ever want to do is to belittle your profession.
Like you, I'd much rather see an improvement in working conditions and
the elevation of a flight attendant's status to where it ought to be -
not as the second-rate waiters that are used as punching bags by angry
passengers, or as untrained cops making sure air travelers don't misbehave.
In order to do so, however, I think we need to agree on who's to blame
for both the low crew morale and the passenger discontent. It is, without
a doubt, a deregulated and rapidly consolidating airline industry that's
at fault. You should be upset at the folks who sign your paycheck, not
at the customers who are wedged into a substandard economy class seat
as a result of their shortsighted avarice.
Instead of pointing the finger at one another, we should be looking for
ways to fix a hopelessly broken airline industry.
Christopher
Elliott is a travel commentator based in Annapolis, Md. All e-mailed
questions may be edited, condensed or republished at the site's discretion.
ChrisCrossings appears weekly
on this site.
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