Details on Delta TA
#1801
Runs with scissors
Joined: Dec 2009
Posts: 7,847
Likes: 0
From: Going to hell in a bucket, but enjoying the ride .
It's not even debatable whether the DPA survey is biased. It is clearly biased and unless the authors have no familiarity with statistics they would say so themselves. Only Delta pilots who go to the DPA website participate and since not all Delta Pilots go to the DPA website it isn't representative of the pilot group. You can argue how exactly that bias affects results but you can't argue the DPA survey isn't biased...unless you have no familiarity with statistics.
For what it's worth the ALPA survey suffers from a similar bias.
For what it's worth the ALPA survey suffers from a similar bias.

YES!
NO!
MAYBE!
(repeat)
#1802
And who would trust the DPA to honestly report anything that differed from their bluster and tough talk?
Go ahead and reveal everything to the other side, I'm sure John, Heiko and Matt will love you for it. Make the line in the sand as public as the vulnerabilities.
I'm sure DAL management will make their survey results public as well...
Go ahead and reveal everything to the other side, I'm sure John, Heiko and Matt will love you for it. Make the line in the sand as public as the vulnerabilities.
I'm sure DAL management will make their survey results public as well...
#1803
Straight QOL, homie
Joined: Feb 2012
Posts: 4,202
Likes: 1
From: Record-Shattering Profit Facilitator
#1804
Are you familiar with the sunk cost fallacy? It's an economic concept that basically says you should make decisions about a current situation based on what you have already invested in the situation. A classic example of the sunk cost fallacy is the "double your bet" strategy in blackjack. The theory is if you double your bet after each lost hand you will eventually come back to even. The problem is it's a terrible strategy because the odds that you run out of money before winning a hand is not zero. The money a blackjack player has given the casino doesn't change his odds of winning the next hand.
Anyway, from what I can tell your entire argument for contract improvements is (paraphrasing) that you've given enough and you want some specific part of what you've given back. That is a text book example of the sunk cost fallacy.
I've seen you accuse other posters of accepting bankruptcy as a "reset". It wasn't a reset, it was just something that happened. It certainly sucked but it has very little or nothing to do with the next contract. Bankruptcy is the lost hand in the anecdote above. You can double your bet or you can play the odds with the hand you are dealt. In the case of the next contract the odds are favorable.
Anyway, from what I can tell your entire argument for contract improvements is (paraphrasing) that you've given enough and you want some specific part of what you've given back. That is a text book example of the sunk cost fallacy.
I've seen you accuse other posters of accepting bankruptcy as a "reset". It wasn't a reset, it was just something that happened. It certainly sucked but it has very little or nothing to do with the next contract. Bankruptcy is the lost hand in the anecdote above. You can double your bet or you can play the odds with the hand you are dealt. In the case of the next contract the odds are favorable.
This isn't gambling, it's our careers.
#1805
Straight QOL, homie
Joined: Feb 2012
Posts: 4,202
Likes: 1
From: Record-Shattering Profit Facilitator
#1806
Thread Starter
Gets Weekends Off
Joined: Oct 2009
Posts: 3,108
Likes: 0
#1808
I'm not suggesting I be paid back for the $1 million I estimate I've contributed to date to Delta's recovery from bankruptcy. I'm only suggesting that circumstances no longer warrant bankruptcy style compensation and that it should be made right going forward.
This isn't gambling, it's our careers.
This isn't gambling, it's our careers.
The goal in any contract is to get the best deal possible. Whether that deal lines up with your previous investment into the situation is coincidental.
#1809
#1810
Are you familiar with the sunk cost fallacy? It's an economic concept that basically says you should make decisions about a current situation based on what you have already invested in the situation. A classic example of the sunk cost fallacy is the "double your bet" strategy in blackjack. The theory is if you double your bet after each lost hand you will eventually come back to even. The problem is it's a terrible strategy because the odds that you run out of money before winning a hand is not zero. The money a blackjack player has given the casino doesn't change his odds of winning the next hand.
Anyway, from what I can tell your entire argument for contract improvements is (paraphrasing) that you've given enough and you want some specific part of what you've given back. That is a text book example of the sunk cost fallacy.
I've seen you accuse other posters of accepting bankruptcy as a "reset". It wasn't a reset, it was just something that happened. It certainly sucked but it has very little or nothing to do with the next contract. Bankruptcy is the lost hand in the anecdote above. You can double your bet or you can play the odds with the hand you are dealt. In the case of the next contract the odds are favorable.
Anyway, from what I can tell your entire argument for contract improvements is (paraphrasing) that you've given enough and you want some specific part of what you've given back. That is a text book example of the sunk cost fallacy.
I've seen you accuse other posters of accepting bankruptcy as a "reset". It wasn't a reset, it was just something that happened. It certainly sucked but it has very little or nothing to do with the next contract. Bankruptcy is the lost hand in the anecdote above. You can double your bet or you can play the odds with the hand you are dealt. In the case of the next contract the odds are favorable.
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post



