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Airbus and Zodiac Aerospace are working on sleeping places in the cargo hold
Hamburg - The cargo hold could soon become a dormitory, at least in part. Airbus and Zodiac Aerospace are working on places where passengers can sleep in the lower deck of the A330 during long-haul flights from 2020 onwards. There is already a potential customer for the concept. (airlinerwatch.com) Más...Sort type: [Top] [Newest]
How about a nursery area for families with babies or screaming/seat-kicking brats, or perhaps people who bring pets aboard for comfort (not service animals)
there are areas already in place for "those" people.
the areas are called the wings.
the areas are called the wings.
Beat me to it Paul... ;)
It is ignorant to lump human babies traveling with families and "emotional support" pets/animals in the same class. You were a screaming brat at one point maybe you should have rode on the wing or top of the car on family trips.
rwtimmons; if I understand the thrust of your squawk, I *think* that we agree! Did your first sentence mean that we *should* lump children in with emotional support animals?
Actually, most of us learned how to behave in public from an early age, without embarrassing our parents or pissing off an entire airliner full of usually-tolerant people. Or our parents would not have dreamed of inflicting a transatlantic journey on a small child.
The current trend to "express everything" needs to be tempered by the fact that, sometimes, people do *not* care about some spoilt, mis-behaving brat whose parents have clearly delivered a less-than-optimal job of preparing the child to be let looses on an unsuspecting public. When I was growing up, I would have regarded an "emotional support animal" as lunch!
Did I read you correctly?
(discuss?)
Actually, most of us learned how to behave in public from an early age, without embarrassing our parents or pissing off an entire airliner full of usually-tolerant people. Or our parents would not have dreamed of inflicting a transatlantic journey on a small child.
The current trend to "express everything" needs to be tempered by the fact that, sometimes, people do *not* care about some spoilt, mis-behaving brat whose parents have clearly delivered a less-than-optimal job of preparing the child to be let looses on an unsuspecting public. When I was growing up, I would have regarded an "emotional support animal" as lunch!
Did I read you correctly?
(discuss?)
I believe in the streamliner days they used to refer to that as "Steerage."