Yes set standards - how about don't engage in malicious damage or other criminal behaviour... even if you're on the basic wage.
If you are referencing the person who deliberately lifted the luggage above themselves then tried to throw hard, then yes, I totally agree with you.
If you are referencing the average throwing of luggage of the other luggage handlers, then I think it has to reference the price we pay as passengers.
That's a terrible analogy.
Whether you pay $109 or $79, you would expect to be treated respectfully by staff. $109 might get you a meal or checked luggage or more staff per passenger on board, but that wouldn't make it ok for cabin crew to spit in the face of passengers on the $79 flight.
Spit in the face? No; yet I would not expect anything else thou.
It's like, if I were to go yum cha in somewhere like Cabramatta paying $25 per head, I'm not going to expect the wait staffs to pour my tea slowly and put my food down gently, as going to Oncore.
If you look at the Red Bull video, 3 dudes unloading this amount of luggage multiply by the number of flights in 12 hours, only 3 of them. And this is at $22 per hour. I doubt many people here would even last 1/3 of a shift, let alone not being coughty or giving a damn of the luggage .
Then if you look at the video on Virgin, the dude was on his own. Out in the element, on his own, unloading the plane. How many of you won't go kill someone after 1/3 of a shift at $22 per hour?
I'm not saying it's a good thing, or OK for this to happen, I'm just simply asking, we have all packed a heavy luggage to European winter, how would people feel if they were to be in the shoes of these people?
This is a terrible argument to make with regards to Qantas, notoriously the most expensive airline to fly domestically in Australia...
Sure, but if you look at the cost of your ticket, $120 to fly from Sydney to Melbourne, even a taxi ride to the airport costs this much. This is the same as Kmart is making good profit, but do we really expect anything more than garment workers dying when we pay $2.5 for a T shirt?