drron
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Jul 4, 2002
- Posts
- 35,800
And I fully respect your view @CaptainCurtis .
Well I guess we will never know that. But right now I wouldn't want to see either flag badge unless the wearer had the company 'right' to wear whichever one.And I am saddened that this rush to the media and complaint possibly would not have occurred if the flag badge being worn was Israeli. Not entering into a political debate but this reflects the tenor of many media outlets.
Why is that?For what it's worth, the QF uniform doesn't include the Australian Flag and crew are not permitted to wear it on their uniform.
Why is that?
You either have a uniform policy or you don't and stuff quickly turns to s...
We've seen it with sporting codes whether it's one person trying to display something, or teams being forced into wearing something they don't believe in.
It is the flag of Saudi ArabiaI’m not sure which flag is used for Arabic (guessing UAE given EK relationship )
Its no different than painting the plane with YES or pride stripes, or if the guy next to you is wearing a Collingwood shirt or a Holden hat. You might not agree with it but you are not in any Danger from it.
AFF Supporters can remove this and all advertisements
Maybe the Airlines should start serving a spoonful of cement in the food....
Its no different than painting the plane with YES or pride stripes, or if the guy next to you is wearing a Collingwood shirt or a Holden hat. You might not agree with it but you are not in any Danger from it.
Absolutely not! The swastika is illegal. National flags (small ‘n’) are not.It's a massive difference. One is a corporate decision by a company while the other is individual decision by staff. Staff need to abide by company rules. Don't like it? Get a job elsewhere.
What if a hostie wants to wear a swastika pin? That still ok with you?
Agree 100%It's a massive difference. One is a corporate decision by a company while the other is individual decision by staff. Staff need to abide by company rules. Don't like it? Get a job elsewhere.
What if a hostie wants to wear a swastika pin? That still ok with you?
A discussion with HR is one thing, but I think the demands for a sacking is a bit over the top.Agree 100%
I know if anyone did this at my job they would be hauled in front of HR for a please explain.
Absolutely not! The swastika is illegal. National flags (small ‘n’) are not.
That's part of the problem and exactly why some people will feel incredibly uncomfortable seeing it worn by a crew member. When you have pro-Palestinian folks in their thousands waving the flag around and chanting "gas the Jews kill the Jews" the association is made. I think it's easy to understand why people would then feel uncomfortable seeing the flag.The cabin crew weren’t wearing hamas flags.
The use of the palestinian flag has been hijacked. Rather than being able to simply show empathy with the civilian population - in the same way the ukrainian flag does - it has been linked to hamas, violent demonstrations and anti-semitism. The latter three are all abhorrent and rightfully banned.
But the cabin crew were unlikely to be intending anything other than empathy with an unfolding humanitarian crisis, quite separate of any political messaging.
Intent no longer defines acceptability. It's how others feel about that particular action.But the cabin crew were unlikely to be intending anything other than empathy with an unfolding humanitarian crisis, quite separate of any political messaging.
I can’t tell if you’re serious or tongue in cheek. But if what’s acceptable is defined by how others “feel” … the world is going to get pretty darn ridiculous because people are offended by anything.Intent no longer defines acceptability. It's how others feel about that particular action.
Does the 717 fleet even have CSMs?Agree. When I read the news article, the first thought that I popped to my mind is - the concerned pax could have spoken to the CSM on the flight and asked if there is a specific reason as to why a certain FA was wearing a certain nation's flag on their lapel OR ask the FA itself, without being agro or judgy, ask with a genuine interest to see if there is any reasoning/motive behind their gesture etc ...
A bit OT - I get the feeling that some people are a bit touchy these days? Granted different things affect different persons differently ... I mean, there could be something so naive/funny/casual might offend me, but it helps to talk about these things with the person(s) involved or their one-ups, if the person(s) are unapproachable ... I could be wrong and happy to be corrected, but reporting everything to media and making a *news* of it isn't really being neighbourly (?, is the right word, can't find a word to express what I'm trying to say)
I would not have stopped an FA from wearing this flag. I'm sure many of them have ties there. Heck Alan had the aircraft covered in symbols he believed in.