Are airlines about to get a free pass from the government?
Picture this: You’re driving 85 in a 65-mph zone, and a state trooper pulls you over. But instead of a $200 ticket, he hands you a warning and a pamphlet on the importance of speed limits.
Picture this: You’re driving 85 in a 65-mph zone, and a state trooper pulls you over. But instead of a $200 ticket, he hands you a warning and a pamphlet on the importance of speed limits.
You can almost feel it when you fly these days. It’s that sense that you’re a second-class citizen with limited rights — or none at all.
Christina Anderson thought her hotel room in Reykjavik, Iceland, was refundable. But when her flight to Iceland was canceled because of bad weather, she made a stunning discovery: It wasn’t.