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Ryanair have their terms and conditions and if you break any you pay. I can't see what is wrong with that.
Regarding the few Belgian thugs referred to by Olympian - serves them right.
dereko i was referring to plastic supermarket bags also i might ad that the airport shops are charging for the bags as i described in my postno 22 and not ryanair.
In that case I hope they take over the supermarkets in this country as well, only have this lady shouting 'Women, have your purse out and ready when the checkout total comes up'.As well as having a beady eyed supervisor picking anyone with a largish bag out of the line for 'special attention', they now have a lady who reminds me of old German war movies walking up and down the queue shouting at people to tear off the bottom bit of the boarding card themselves.
Those travelling on business generally don't get to choose the airline.If you don't like it don't fly with them.
Am I going mad or are the ones who complain the most the same ones who keep flying with them? Obviously their stinginess/money grabbing or perceived unfairness isn't enough to undermine the benefit of generally cheaper flights.
The Ryanair equivalent in retail would be the lady shouting 'Schell, Schnell, stack those shelves, and scrub down those floors before you come shopping here'In that case I hope they take over the supermarkets in this country as well, only have this lady shouting 'Women, have your purse out and ready when the checkout total comes up'.
In that case I hope they take over the supermarkets in this country as well, only have this lady shouting 'Women, have your purse out and ready when the checkout total comes up'.
Nope. She is merely saying follow the instructions on the print-out of your boarding pass. Why do Irish people feel they are short changed if they have to do something that maybe a staff person could do ? It really is no big deal and is actually help move things along. It's in everyone's interest to get from A to B as quickly as possible.The Ryanair equivalent in retail would be the lady shouting 'Schell, Schnell, stack those shelves, and scrub down those floors before you come shopping here'
Those travelling on business generally don't get to choose the airline.
http://www.airsafe.com/journal/issue13.htm makes for interesting reading, even if it's an old article.
With Ryanair it may be purely financial but I wouldn't like even 10kg on my head, not to mind Easyjet's ludicrous policy.
Or is this just another excuse to bash Ryanair/Easyjet?
Nope. She is merely saying follow the instructions on the print-out of your boarding pass. Why do Irish people feel they are short changed if they have to do something that maybe a staff person could do ? It really is no big deal and is actually help move things along. It's in everyone's interest to get from A to B as quickly as possible.
THey are chosen because they are cheap.Same difference though - someone is choosing it and for good reason I can only assume.
Of all the flights you've taken, how many times will you have witnessed a bag falling on someone? Of those, how many were seriously injured? Of those would an 8kg bag have made a significant difference to a 10/12kg bag given the distance involved?
Who would you fly with given your safety concerns? Or is this just another excuse to bash Ryanair/Easyjet?
THey are chosen because they are cheap.
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