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Old 04-04-2018 | 04:54 PM
  #35  
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Egg320
Jet Jockey Junkie
 
Joined: May 2015
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From: F.O.
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Originally Posted by Andy
I don't understand the Open Skies Agreement? CLEARLY, I'm not going to post an 11 year old article that was touting the Open Skies Agreement before it even came into effect. And the 'author' of that article is an international consulting company that is paid by clients with an agenda. But it's really nice that you would post that garbage which doesn't take into account the relative market size of US domestic aviation vs European domestic aviation.

Rubbish? What are you - a foreign national who landed a job at SkyWest and is trying to get on with an airline here in the US that pays better? There are lots of foreign nationals who come to the US to fly - another data point as to the much larger size and better working conditions of the US air market vice Europe and the rest of the world.

Norwegian peddles two cabins (classes of service): Economy and Premium. One can clearly see that on their booking website, where they clearly label each product as a different cabin. Premium Economy, for those airlines that have that product, do not list it as a separate cabin from economy.
Premium seating is priced ~3x the price of Economy seating; too great a disparity to mistake it as premium economy.
They also include lounge access to those that buy Premium class seats - a perk not associated with any economy bookings, only business or first class bookings.
If, as you are arguing, this is Premium Economy, why doesn't Norwegian use the term, Premium Economy? Because they clearly want to sell it as pseudo Business class.

Research - using an 11 year old article written by an EU-based consulting company peddling a client's point of view to justify your opinion is NOT research.
Better working conditions...HAHAHAHAHAHAHA!!!!!!!

No paid leave (Europe 5 to 6 weeks a year) plus days off, rubbish medical insurance, no sick days where you still get paid, can be fired at the drop of a hat (much better protection in Europe, Aus, NZ etc..) On this front Europe wipes the floor with US working conditions

A seniority system that benefits the airlines, not the employees except the top 1% in base.

Seniority forces you to stay where you are because if you leave for another airline you start at the bottom. What other industry on earth forces you to do that?

Would a senior network engineer at say Microsoft leave for Google and start on the help desk....ERRR NO!!!

Best working condTions.....HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!!!!

In the western developed nations US working conditions are considered some of the worst in the world....

HAHAHAHAHA....I cannot stop laughing!
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