>>58041Do you actually believe this, or are you being contrarian for the fun of it?
>It was his duty to comply, and he refused to.Except it wasn't. They weren't detaining him, and he was legally in the right to be in that seat he had paid for, and the airline had no legal justification to remove him. If they aren't arresting you the police have no right to touch you unless they think you're actively endangering yourself or others, or committing a crime. None of which was applicable and why the officers were suspended, and the department condemned their actions.
>Hell even waiting for them to call the police is just childish and wasting everyone's time.Yep, just let everyone just walk all over you, doing the wrong thing, great way to live as a doormat.
>>58044>It's on the airline if they choose to overbook their flights.They actually didn't, though. You don't fly much, do you? Overbooking is handled before/during boarding, not after you've been boarded, and those overbooked are usually in "Standby" seats for if anyone doesn't show up. In this case they'd already fully boarded and then decided to bump 4 so they could transfer a flight crew.
> If nobody's willing to work around their awful business practice the company needs to be sympathetic, not beat them up.Right, or keep sweetening the deal to get someone to agree to participate.