Is it April 1st as this must be having a laugh

"Why is this any different to what happens on trains where you see thousands of people who cannot get a seat standing in the aisles, and it happens regularly on the Underground," he said.

as far as I'm aware, trains, both overground and underground, are supposed to stay on the rails, not hit the runway doing 200 mph.
 
I fly regularly for work and theres been a couple of occasions in the past 2 1/2 years that I'm glad I was strapped into a seat.

One fairly heavy landing and the other being some light turbulence which resulted in things floating off the table, then crashing down as the aircraft suddenly dropped then pulled back up again.

Standing- no thanks
 
Yeah because standing for an hour and a half on a flight is comfortable. Are they thick?


Edit : Just read further on....I do think they are.

"We might take out the last five or six rows and say to passengers 'Do you want to stand up? If you do you can travel for free'," Mr O'Leary said.
Right, so say a ticket costs 10 quid.

"Right lads, 6 rows of 6 seats....that's £360 worth of tickets we're losing out by doing this...How much have we made on the extra standing people?


Errrrr, none boss we said they could fly for free" :bonk:
 
You want to see their staff buses...

india-bus.jpg


:lol:
 
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