soccerdad72
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Oct 23, 2012
Surprised I could have missed all of this.
https://www.disboards.com/threads/hey-teacher-leave-those-projects-at-school.3540809/
Enjoy!
Surprised I could have missed all of this.
If I interpreted your comment incorrectly apologies. Respectfully your subsequent comment is quite different from your original comment I can totally understand why others answered the way they answered.I think you might have misinterpreted my point, as did several others. I guess I didn't make it clear. I wasn't pondering the best way to deal with my particular situation. I also was not trying to justify my "rights" to a saved seat. I don't have one. No one on SW does. If a passenger asks to take an empty seat, it's his. That's the rule, the rule is clear, and my husband and I will always abide by that rule.
If I interpreted your comment incorrectly apologies. Respectfully your subsequent comment is quite different from your original comment I can totally understand why others answered the way they answered.
In any case you've cleared up what you were meaning
No worriesYou're right. I wasn't as clear as I meant to be. I shouldn't have lead my post with examples, before concluding that "fair" and "having a right" might not always be considered equivalent terms. I should have just made that point directly to begin with. I can see how that could have been confusing. I appreciate your response.
That's been happening to me A LOT lately and it's so annoying. We had one Air France flight a couple years ago where I selected our seats the day before (four seats all together), then got to the gate and realized I was now sitting by myself 10 rows up from my family who were now in the very back row. Then everyone else at the gate realized they were also scattered all over the plane and it was a hot mess for the poor gate agents. Again on Aer Lingus last week, we had our pre-selected seats changed last minute on 3 out of 4 flights.