- Dec 8, 2003
- 12,696
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Originally posted by: SampSon
No, it's not ridiculous. You're missing the point. The comsumer expect, hell they even feel entitled, to fares so low that airlines cannot even stay afloat. Sure consumers should get the most bang for their buck, but they shouldn't be able to fly across the country for $99 round trip. The consumers demanding unsustainable fares and the loads of websites that cater to this mentality by searching all flights by the lowest fare first. Then when the service sucks, or they get hit with fees, or the food sucks, or the whole experience just "isn't what it used to be", they actually have the gall to bitch about it. Well you get what you pay for, you want to pay next to nothing to fly, expect next to nothing.your argument is ridiculous. it is no more greedy for a consumer to want the most value for their dollar than it is for a company to want to maximize their profit.
Why? Because you're carrying a grudge when I was arguing with you in another thread? I do throughly apologize for being correct while you are wrong too many times.I've quickly learned that SampSon is a total moron.
No, $320 roundtrip is a realistic price for airline fares. At $103 per ticket, that airline is losing money everytime that jet takes off. The only reason they offer it is because people demand incredibly low prices and there will be someone there to offer low quality product for low prices (think Wal-Mart). So the consumer starts a price war that causes airline companies to lose massive amounts of money just to draw in customers. Sounds like a great deal for the consumer, if you want to fly like cattle.$320 for a roundtrip ticket is nowhere cheap.
Tip for the OP. I use the search engines all the time to purchase my tickets and when I do find one that's really cheap, I buy it directly from the airline's website. Last month, I got roundtrip tickets from DC to Texas for $103 + tax each.
Have you taken an introductor economics course?
Flying like cattle > not flying. Not everyone can afford the luxuries of paying for first-class as a donation to the airline.
