Coito ergo sum wrote:Cunt wrote:maiforpeace wrote:
Bottom line is that airlines need accomodate obese people, the way they do the handicapped. How do you know that a handicapped person didn't become handicapped due to their own fault, like driving drunk? Why do they deserve more consideration than someone who is obese?
Fuck that. Obese people, or those with large goiters, do not need special accommodations. There is an easier, more respectful way.
It is quite simple, as I see it. (for the future, I mean)
They should charge everyone as a 700kg passenger, and offer discounts for each kilo under you are (including baggage)
This would encourage efficient packing, including packing on the kilos. Not at all discriminatory either, since EVERYONE can apply for the discount.
It costs per kilo to lift shit up in an aircraft. It makes perfect sense to me to charge people by the kilo.
Plus, lots of people are ashamed of their weight, so lots of them would pay full fare, rather than stand on a scale in front of the other passengers. This would make more money for the airlines, and only off those who could afford their vanity.
That's discrimination, though, since minorities, like blacks and hispanics, have higher rates of obesity than whites, so they'd pay disproportionately high fares.
This is reaching. Racism is treating a group differently. The issue is body weight.
I think physics should be the determining factor--everyone is to be weighed along with all baggage and cargo. Once the operating capacity has been reached, short of a margin for safety, then no one and nothing else gets on. And passengers should have to pay based on the percentage their combined body and baggage weight contributes to the total operating cost of the plane.
Coito ergo sum wrote: Moreover, pregnant women would be charged more than the non-pregnant due to their pregnancy, and they wouldn't be obese.
Pregnancy does not make a woman obese. If she still fits in the seat and can still buckle the belt, then she is equal to a non-pregnant passenger. Being pregnant and being obese are separate considerations. Pregnancy does not excuse obesity and obesity is not an obligate factor to pregnancy.
Coito ergo sum wrote:Women have more body fat than men in general, and it's harder for them to lose weight than men, so their ability to reduce their flight costs is less through no fault of their own. However, men are generally heavier than women, and would, of course, be paying disproportionately more than women. And, don't get me started on the Samoans and the Sumo Wrestlers....
Women do have a normal body weight range. Having a higher percentage of fat is not the same as being obese. Normal weight women would still fit comfortably in a seat despite having a higher percentage of their body weight given to fat. So, being female is not an issue. Some normal weight men who are not obese might not fit comfortably in the seat. But I doubt even they would be so physically intrusive on their immediate neighbors as to create an inconvenience or a hazard.