Re: Approaches for dealing with 'electronic devices off'
My point is that people who argue "do it because that's the rules" are the kinds of people that authoritarianism relies on.
Which was the context in which I was replying.
I haven't disagreed with what "the rules" say.Not at all. jb is quite correct. The law is the law and the law states these devices must be turned off. It's the same as speed limits. They are set where they are set and that's the law. Whether you think you can drive faster is irrelevant.
My point is that people who argue "do it because that's the rules" are the kinds of people that authoritarianism relies on.
The debate around electronics being on/off is not whether the law should be obeyed (it must be), but around who feels they want to enforce that, and why.
Which was the context in which I was replying.
Would you ask them to stop reading a book ? Snoozing ? Talking to the person beside them ?I know a phone should be switched off in flight, but am I personally going to ask a passenger to turn it off if she isn't impeding my exit? Probably not, I'd leave that to the cabin crew. Would I ask a passenger to turn off a phone if they were sitting by an exit? Absolutely.