WELL;
Someone with a bit of common sense. I didn't ask for Jim to spout his opinions when I posted here: maybe he needs to review the judges very few but true words before spouting again;
We did follow the rules. It did not pay off. Let me give JIM a little history. I work in NY with the USACE. I took the job 3000 miles away from my family due to the economy. My wife (the one kicked off the bird) was walking two dogs on leashes in NV and a Pit Bull came out of no-where and killed a 4 month puppy: now the owner will not take responsibility for this. So; in shock, when she came to NY to visit me she decided not to let a boarder have the other puppy, (the live one) so she brought him (tobi) with her: we had problems in Chicago with her trip to see me and we had problems on the way home. The first problem was with a ticket agent thinking that the dog was not suppose to be flying: no barking issues, no stinky turds, no rabid attributes. Just a agent flexing her muscles. Maybe a dog hater, I do not know. Now she is actually driving home in a rental car as of this minute from LV to Reno with the accused attitude puppy.
I sat next to a cute child with her mother once; the child was apparently scared; cried for three hours; the mother walked the child up and down the isle, but that did not stop the crying. They did not kick her off the plane; many complaints were rendered; she was not kicked off the plane. THE PUPPY WAS BARKING; all they had to do was let the mommy put the carrier in her lap; the puppy would have shut up.
Let's quit trying to be so scared and politically correct and make some common sense rules to work with all. I do not want a dog barking in my ear, but I understand that people have issues with bonding with pets; let's work it out on the airline side.
Give it up Jim: I complained about a wrong doing; I did not ask for your rhetoric and opinion. What if I farted next to you on the plane: would you have me removed?
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