On Mon, 31 Mar 2008 08:45:44 -0700 (PDT), kyle051777@aol.com wrote:
>
>>
>> And your reasoning is not sound. You say that if you pay them $50 and
>> go on an earlier flight then they can sell your original seat for a
>> flexible fare price and you both win. That is not the case. What if
>> the earlier flight's cheap seats are already sold out? Then the
>> airline is losing money by selling it to you for $50 plus your
>> original fare when they could be getting 3 times that amount of money.
>> What happens if your original flight is not in demand and they cannot
>> sell your seat again?- Hide quoted text -
>>
>> - Show quoted text -
>
>Well, I disagree. I checked the flight that I was scheduled on and
>the flight I wanted to get on and the flight I was originally booked
>on had less seats available then the flight I wanted to go on. So, my
>original flight was in more demand than the one I wanted to change to,
>therefore they would have an easier time trying to sell my seat than
>the seat I wanted to get. I realize this is not always the case but
>that is why I found this particular flight. It didn't really matter
>what time I flew home so I was able to be flexible. So, I highly
>doubt they are going to have a problem selling my seat.
>Thanks for your reply,
Of course, you disagree because you are a nut that is not interested
in anything other than others agreeing with your moronic view of how
airlines should operate. Not the posters, not the airlines, not
anybody. Everyone already knows that, so why don't you just stop this
senseless blathering and try sticking to the agreement you accepted
with the airline or pay the price? |