View Full Version : Leisha Hailey was kicked off plane for lesbian kiss
http://www.heraldsun.com.au/entertainment/confidential/the-l-word-star-says-she-was-kicked-off-plane-for-lesbian-kiss/story-e6frf96o-1226147905568
I'm not big on PDAs. Never have been.
But I don't think everyone has to be like me.
Yet there is a line that shouldn't be crossed.
However, the problem is the line is different for everyone.
And it is in a different place depending on whether you are gay or straight.
Since the airline claimed the issue was one of degree I decided to give them the benefit of the doubt. If the degree of PDA was the problem for this airline or really for any airline, then surely heterosexual couples have had their fair share or at least SOME share of incidents where they stepped over the line. So I googled heterosexual couples tossed off planes for excessive kissing and got more stories about gay couples. I tried a different approach and googled has a heterosexual couple been admonished for overly sexual behavior and didn't put any more information just to see what issues hetero couples have surrounding PDA. But I just got more stuff about homosexuals.
It's hard to accept the airlines claim that it wasn't about gender.
What do people think about public displays of affection and the different standards for gays and straights?
The_Lady_Snow
09-27-2011, 07:45 AM
Yeah see I don't get this if one has to listen to the 3 college girls behind them yip and squeal about their drinking and how they lost their phone in the ocean than certainly I can kiss my partner if I chose. If I gotta listen to someone's spoiled ass crying 4 year old crumb cruncher who's disrupting my music time I as a paying customer I should have the right to cuddle up to my boy:girl on the plane..
Dominique
09-27-2011, 07:45 AM
I heard this on the radio. Of course the shock jocks were having a field day with the story.
Airlines employ alot of *folks like us* i/e meaning alot of diversity amongst them. Although they do ask their employees to conduct themselves properly. Very strict codes of conduct. So I have two sets of thought on this.
The passengers were misbehaving so inappropiately, and wouldn't listen to reasoning, therefor had to go.
Or, far stretch but possible. They were an embarressment. PERIOD. plain and simple. (Snow, I mean beyond the cuddle or the kiss, or even both)
Sometimes people get so full of themselves.
theblueone
09-27-2011, 07:47 AM
I honestly believe that it was because the PDA had probably gone too far. I mean that's great that you're in love or whatever but I don't want to see full on groping from anyone in close quarters. Like they said this is a "family company" I don't think they meant any harm towards gays/lesbians I think what they meant was probably you should take it down a notch because there's kids around, which they probably could have said.
I'm all for PDAs, like hand holding a quick kiss.
Apocalipstic
09-27-2011, 08:07 AM
Taking the Green Day altercation into account, I wonder of the economy is catching up with Southwest and the flight attendants are over tired? To me that would have to be the most difficult job ever!
That said, I was not there and I have no idea what happened.
I certainly have been around obnoxious people on all sorts of different airlines and try to just focus on my ipod and book and get in my own zone...but it can be difficult for sure. I don't remember ever complaining about another guest though. I just suck it up and deal. People are so whiny.
Do I think I should be able to hold hands, kiss etc? Sure. Completely make out? Not the place for it.
Will I be boycotting SW? No.
theblueone
09-27-2011, 08:13 AM
Well if they wanted to be really annoying and make a statement about it all, instead of tweet whining they could have just pissed in the aisle and then exited.
I totally agree that no-one needs to see excessive displays of affection in public places. I just feel the rules need to apply to all. It seems to me heterosexual couples are given a free frolicking pass. I have certainly been unable to find incidents where heterosexual couples were even admonished by airlines let alone thrown off airplanes
This reminds me of something that happened while I was playing a game on BFP the other day. Buzz Words is the game. I am all for not using derogatory terms for ethnic groups. However, the word “kike” is acceptable in this game while a variety of other ethnic slurs are not. One cannot help but feel discriminated against in cases such as this. If no disparaging terminology is acceptable then none should be accepted. If disparaging terminology is accepted then it should be accepted across the board. I felt worse about the fact that some or should I say at least one disparaging term is accepted while others are rejected than I would have been had all derogatory terminology been allowed. At least then it wouldn’t have felt like purposeful, selected, willful prejudice against one group.
I know it is a stretch to connect this to what happens regarding public displays of affection. However, I feel the rules for all paying customers should be the same. It’s that equity thing again. I would be just as happy, perhaps in some cases much happier, if there were no public displays of affection allowed at all. But to me it is grossly unfair to have a certain segment of the population forced to not only refrain from kissing their partner in public but to be forced to witness others exercising their right to do just that.
Apocalipstic
09-27-2011, 08:18 AM
Do we know what their policy is on heterosexual people making out on planes? I would be grossed out (or turned on depending lol) either way.
I agree that a racial slur is a racial slur and should not be tolerated.
theblueone
09-27-2011, 08:18 AM
Heterosexual couples don't get kicked off the plane for PDAs because they're so miserable with one another they can't even look at each other. LOL
Do we know what their policy is on heterosexual people making out on planes? I would be grossed out (or turned on depending lol) either way.
I agree that a racial slur is a racial slur and should not be tolarated.
I don't know their policy but I cannot find any incidents of heterosexuals being thrown off planes for kissing or any sexual misconduct. Not saying it doesn't happen, just saying i googled and googled a variety of ways without luck. No matter how many times I put in heterosexual couple and heterosexual public displays of affection or heterosexual excessive displays of kissing or heterosexual overly sexual behavior I got links to homosexuality. Interesting quirk of google perhaps.
apretty
09-27-2011, 08:49 AM
Since they probably weren't fucking it was about "they gay".
Nadeest
09-27-2011, 08:58 AM
I don't mind PDA's, in fact, enjoy them, but......... the rules should be the same for everyone, whether straight or gay. It sounds as if things could have been handled better on both sides of the dispute. I do find it interesting, though, that the Southwest attendants claimed that this was a 'family airline' when the airline claims that it is the official airline of the Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation.
I need more info on this. I haven't seen anything saying whether or not they were having a slobber fest or if they were just being cuddly. I know I'm not big on PDA but if a couple is cuddling and being affection I don't see how that would be offensive but if they were trying to swallow each others tongues then that would annoy me as well I don't care who is kissing who. I might ask them to tone it down a notch before kicking them off of the plane though.
I need more info on this. I haven't seen anything saying whether or not they were having a slobber fest or if they were just being cuddly. I know I'm not big on PDA but if a couple is cuddling and being affection I don't see how that would be offensive but if they were trying to swallow each others tongues then that would annoy me as well I don't care who is kissing who. I might ask them to tone it down a notch before kicking them off of the plane though.
All the information seems to be different depending on whether you are leisha hailey or the airline. I haven't read anything from an impartial source. If indeed there is one.
Apocalipstic
09-27-2011, 09:10 AM
Mayeb some other passengers will speak out.
Mayeb some other passengers will speak out.
Perhaps. But if they are the same passengers who complained it might not be an unbiased account.
Not sure there will be one though. An unbiased account i mean. Maybe there's no such thing anyway. Depends where you stand on PDA, homosexuality and probably a number of other factors i can only imagine. I guess like much of life, it's not going to cooperate and be a black and white thing.
EnderD_503
09-27-2011, 01:59 PM
I agree what with some posters have said about the report on this being really fucking vague. It all comes down to what the airline considers "excessive" and what the couple was actually doing. What is "excessive," and, like the OP said, is "excessive" the same for heterosexual and queer couples?
The way I read the article in the OP, it makes me think that both sides were "right" to some extent. I didn't know who Leisha Hailey was until I read the article (I've never watched the L Word, really), but once I saw she was a celebrity of some sort it made me question her testimony more than I would of had they been a non-celebrity couple. Celebrities often seem to be really attention-grabbing, anything for the headlines type of people. It wouldn't be totally surprising, to me anyway, for a celebrity to think the rules didn't apply to them and then scream discrimination when someone subjects them to the same rules as everyone else (Paris Hilton and her drunk driving, celebrities in rehab, celebrities generally behaving horribly in public and expecting that the law exempt them from equal treatment). This "above the law" mentality isn't uncommon.
That being said, I also think there was more than likely a rather big tinge of homophobia going on with passengers reporting these supposedly "excessive" (again, wtf is excessive?) activities. I'm originally from Ontario, but have frequently in another province and even out of Canada for various periods of time. Because of that, I've spent a fair amount of time on planes and during that time I've been annoyed a number of times by heterosexual couples deciding to have a heavily gropey make-out session two centimetres from my face while waiting in line to get off the plane. That seems to be their usual chosen spot for said make-out sessions. Besides people rolling their eyes or looking away, no one has said shit and the flight attendants didn't say shit either...and really there's no reason to. Granted, they were never an American airline (and Europeans tend to view public displays of affection differently), but still, I've never heard of heterosexuals being kicked off planes for public displays of affection (when did we start abbreviating that, btw?).
That said, it seems like the actress made a gigantic scene after the flight attendants approached her, which probably didn't help matters. Imo, there's a difference between silencing yourself/not being heard when you're being discriminated against, and waiting for a time/place where you will actually be properly heard and make a difference (for example, waiting until they were in a position to make a formal complaint or take it to court). I don't think making a scene on a flight waiting to take off was conducive to getting her point across that this was more than likely a case of homophobia.
So yeah, I think it was definitely a homophobic call simply because it seems that heterosexual aren't held up to the same standard of what is "excessive" or not on airlines (and in society, for that matter). Even if this couple was being excessive, why were they called out if heterosexual couples are not? The rules need to apply to everyone if they're going to be there at all. It just shows prevailing public mentality of homosexuality being more "perverse" by its very nature than heterosexuality.
SoNotHer
09-27-2011, 02:31 PM
kicked off[/U] planes for public displays of affection (when did we start abbreviating that, btw?).
Agreed, and therein lies the problem, regardless of the bad behavior on either side.
And yes, EnderD, I would have thought a PDA was a variation of a PDF before I read this thread . :-)
LeftWriteFemme
09-27-2011, 03:10 PM
Can I say one phrase..........the mile high club. Straight people don't get thrown off planes enough to discourage membership.......my 2 cents
Apocalipstic
09-27-2011, 03:19 PM
Can I say one phrase..........the mile high club. Straight people don't get thrown off planes enough to discourage membership.......my 2 cents
Though, with speck sized bathrooms on planes these days, I think most mile high stories may be anecdotal.
Janny
09-28-2011, 12:16 PM
Come on. You know the airlines are nickeling and diming us for everything. If you don't pay your $50.00 Lesbian Fee...you're off the plane! ;^)
EnderD_503
09-28-2011, 04:28 PM
Ok, so I was reading Metro on the way to school this morning and saw an article about this where they give a little more info. I suck at the Metro website so I'll just type up the article, it's short anyways.
Kicked off for Smooching
-> L Word actress says she was removed from plane for kissing partner
The publicist for a lesbian actress and musician who says she was escorted off a flight for "one modest kiss" of her partner says the encounter was not a stunt for her band's upcoming breast cancer awareness tour.
Leisha Hailey, best known for playing Alice Pieszecki in the now defunct Showtime lesbian life drama The L Word, asked her Twitter followers to boycott Southwest Airlines after the encounter Monday.
The airline responded that Hailey's display of affection was excessive and drew customer complaints.
The actress and her partner, Camila Grey, denied in a statement released yesterday that the affection they showed toward each other was inappropriate.
"We want to make it clear we were not making out or creating any kind of spectacle of ourselves, it was one modest kiss," the written statement said.
Hailey and Grey acknowledge they became upset after the flight attendant reprimanded them. They said the attendant told them that Southwest is a "family airline."
"No matter how quietly homophobia is whispered, it doesn't make it any less loud," the statement said. "You can't whisper hate. We ask this airline to teach their employees to not discriminate against any couple, ever, regardless of their own beliefs."
Hailey and Grey said they plan to file a formal complaint with the airline."
More and more I'm inclined to agree with her... that this was moreso a case of homophobia than excessive public displays of affection (and again, nobody seems to be going into detail except for Hailey herself who says it was one kiss...if that isn't the case, then why isn't anyone saying anything to the contrary beyond "the customers said it was excessive." If it was excessive, then they should be able to say what exactly happened, if it caught their attention so much.
Quintease
09-28-2011, 05:37 PM
This was the same airline which kicked off a man for wearing baggy pants?
Clearly lesbians and scruffy men aren't the kind of custom they want in their plane, so why not get a bad name for themselves as judgemental idiots to attract the 'right' kind of customer..
Sometimes when people have an idea of how things are, they don't notice when their ideas are flawed. Gayers are sexualised just by existing, therefore, when we hold hands, kiss or have a snog fest, it is much more obvious to these small-minded 'family' oriented bigots than any heterosexual shenanigans.
I hope enough people see the wrong in this to damage their profits.
EnderD_503
09-28-2011, 05:49 PM
This was the same airline which kicked off a man for wearing baggy pants?
Haha, yeah I think so. Heaven forbid you sag your pants on a fucking airplane.
Gayers are sexualised just by existing, therefore, when we hold hands, kiss or have a snog fest, it is much more obvious to these small-minded 'family' oriented bigots than any heterosexual shenanigans.
Gayers? :lol2:
But yeah, that's pretty much it, I think. If you think about it, who are the public more likely to notice giving each other a "modest kiss," Joe and Jane Hetero, or two gay dudes or two lesbians. They are used to hetero couples showing each other affection in public, because it's something you expect of a "proper family unit," so they don't notice it, or see it as "normal." Hell, kids see it on Disney all the fucking time. But when it comes to queers they still haven't quite gotten Freud's "homosexuals be perverts" crap out of their heads yet (gee, they're slow on the uptake...) and so don't see queers as any other couple sharing a kiss in public. Instead they see...zomg ze deviantz be corrupting ze childrenz!
Gemme
09-28-2011, 05:58 PM
This was the same airline which kicked off a man for wearing baggy pants?
Clearly lesbians and scruffy men aren't the kind of custom they want in their plane, so why not get a bad name for themselves as judgemental idiots to attract the 'right' kind of customer..
Sometimes when people have an idea of how things are, they don't notice when their ideas are flawed. Gayers are sexualised just by existing, therefore, when we hold hands, kiss or have a snog fest, it is much more obvious to these small-minded 'family' oriented bigots than any heterosexual shenanigans.
I hope enough people see the wrong in this to damage their profits.
That guy was Billie Joe Armstrong, of Green Day.
Maybe they just hate celebrities?
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/09/02/billie-joe-armstrong-gree_n_947397.html
EnderD_503
09-28-2011, 06:07 PM
That guy was Billie Joe Armstrong, of Green Day.
Maybe they just hate celebrities?
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/09/02/billie-joe-armstrong-gree_n_947397.html
Nah, it wasn't Bill Joe (though they kicked him off, too). There was a US college basketball player or some such that was kicked off a plane (same airline, I'm pretty sure) for sagging his pants a few months ago, too. I think that's who she was referring to? There was a big hoopla over it, I recall.
Medusa
09-28-2011, 06:11 PM
They also had an issue with a director or an actor because he was supposedly too fat for his seat. I'll have to look that one up.
Southwest is also becoming known as "The Seat Nazi Airline" when it comes to requiring fat people to buy an extra seat (sometimes even when the plane isn't completely full or even without checking to see if they fit first)
theblueone
09-28-2011, 06:30 PM
Yeah Kevin Smith was kicked off that same airline because he was too fat. Either they don't like celebrities or they have a list of people they want kicked off the plane so fat people, baggy pant wearing poeple, and lesbians.
Gemme
09-28-2011, 06:53 PM
Yeah Kevin Smith was kicked off that same airline because he was too fat. Either they don't like celebrities or they have a list of people they want kicked off the plane so fat people, baggy pant wearing poeple, and lesbians.
So, if I'm a rail-thin, heterosexual in a full pantsuit, I should be okay?
theblueone
09-28-2011, 07:02 PM
thats right...though its a family airline they appreciate full on camel toe
stargazingboi
09-28-2011, 08:08 PM
http://www.heraldsun.com.au/entertainment/confidential/the-l-word-star-says-she-was-kicked-off-plane-for-lesbian-kiss/story-e6frf96o-1226147905568
I'm not big on PDAs. Never have been.
But I don't think everyone has to be like me.
Yet there is a line that shouldn't be crossed.
However, the problem is the line is different for everyone.
And it is in a different place depending on whether you are gay or straight.
Since the airline claimed the issue was one of degree I decided to give them the benefit of the doubt. If the degree of PDA was the problem for this airline or really for any airline, then surely heterosexual couples have had their fair share or at least SOME share of incidents where they stepped over the line. So I googled heterosexual couples tossed off planes for excessive kissing and got more stories about gay couples. I tried a different approach and googled has a heterosexual couple been admonished for overly sexual behavior and didn't put any more information just to see what issues hetero couples have surrounding PDA. But I just got more stuff about homosexuals.
It's hard to accept the airlines claim that it wasn't about gender.
What do people think about public displays of affection and the different standards for gays and straights?
First...regarding the gender issue mentioned..do heterosexuals face the same issues and get booted off flight for PDA? Yes..yes they do...a man in California was arrested and convicted after a 3 day trail for PDA with his girlfriend (link to story below..I found several stories like this one)
[URL="http://www.calguns.net/calgunforum/archive/index.php/t-57274.html"]
I have no doubt that one group of people will get more attention in the media than another...lets face it, it's about what will grab peoples attention and sell.
I'm of the mind set that there is a time and a place for everything. I sorta live by the...if I wouldn't do it in front of my parents or kids (whether my partner's kids/my foster kids when I have one placed with me etc)..then I don't do it in public places where other peoples parents or kids are.
Couples should be able to show affection to one another, it's actually quite healthy for a relationship. It also teaches our children what a healthy relationship looks like....of course once again...there is a time and a place for certain things.
For me it's about mutual respect.
First...regarding the gender issue mentioned..do heterosexuals face the same issues and get booted off flight for PDA? Yes..yes they do...a man in California was arrested and convicted after a 3 day trail for PDA with his girlfriend (link to story below..I found several stories like this one)
[URL="http://www.calguns.net/calgunforum/archive/index.php/t-57274.html"]
I have no doubt that one group of people will get more attention in the media than another...lets face it, it's about what will grab peoples attention and sell.
I'm of the mind set that there is a time and a place for everything. I sorta live by the...if I wouldn't do it in front of my parents or kids (whether my partner's kids/my foster kids when I have one placed with me etc)..then I don't do it in public places where other peoples parents or kids are.
Couples should be able to show affection to one another, it's actually quite healthy for a relationship. It also teaches our children what a healthy relationship looks like....of course once again...there is a time and a place for certain things.
For me it's about mutual respect.
I couldn't get through to this either by clicking on the link or by copying and pasting. I would be very interested in reading this as well as the several others you found. I spent a good deal of time yesterday trying to find something so any help would be greatly appreciated.
A big part of what bothered me about this incident was the apparent unfairness. That and the fact that every time I tried to find something about heterosexual public displays of affection or heterosexual overly sexual behavior, I was directed to something with the tag homosexual in it. Pissed me off a tad.
First...regarding the gender issue mentioned..do heterosexuals face the same issues and get booted off flight for PDA? Yes..yes they do...a man in California was arrested and convicted after a 3 day trail for PDA with his girlfriend (link to story below..I found several stories like this one)
[URL="http://www.calguns.net/calgunforum/archive/index.php/t-57274.html"]
I have no doubt that one group of people will get more attention in the media than another...lets face it, it's about what will grab peoples attention and sell.
I'm of the mind set that there is a time and a place for everything. I sorta live by the...if I wouldn't do it in front of my parents or kids (whether my partner's kids/my foster kids when I have one placed with me etc)..then I don't do it in public places where other peoples parents or kids are.
Couples should be able to show affection to one another, it's actually quite healthy for a relationship. It also teaches our children what a healthy relationship looks like....of course once again...there is a time and a place for certain things.
For me it's about mutual respect.
I figured out how to cut and paste the story. But I think there was a bit more to it than kissing
"According to an FBI indictment, Persing's face was pressed to Sewell's vaginal area during the September Southwest Airlines flight from Los Angeles to Raleigh, N.C. When a flight attendant gave them a second warning, Persing reacted angrily and the couple, both in their early 40s, were arrested when the plane reached its destination."
But at least you were able to find something.
stargazingboi
09-28-2011, 08:37 PM
I couldn't get through to this either by clicking on the link or by copying and pasting. I would be very interested in reading this as well as the several others you found. I spent a good deal of time yesterday trying to find something so any help would be greatly appreciated.
A big part of what bothered me about this incident was the apparent unfairness. That and the fact that every time I tried to find something about heterosexual public displays of affection or heterosexual overly sexual behavior, I was directed to something with the tag homosexual in it. Pissed me off a tad.
Hmm I am fairly new to posting ..and haven't gotten the hang of putting links in here I guess. I hit the add link and cut and pasted the link...didn't work I see. I was able to cut and paste and it worked.
http://abcnews.go.com/Travel/story?id=3143566&page=1&CMP=OTC-RSSFeeds0312
the first one was part of another story and post..the referenced this *points above* link which was the original story on ABC ...perhaps, if I messed it up again, you cut and past that one it will work for you. However, I would be more than happy to send it along to you another way.
What does it mean exactly when a company or organization says there are a family enviroment, or family this or family that? Do they think we don't have family? Or that we are not part of a family? Or that we don't have our own kids? What are we hatched and seperated at birth to grow and live alone from civilization and have no concept or understanding of family???? I just want to say that's awesome!!!!!!!! Cause I belong to a family , a great family! I have family and I am family( more ways than one) and my family loves me and I love my family so I'll fit right in here, no that we have that squared away, where do I sit! Can I get the family discount?
stargazingboi
09-28-2011, 08:45 PM
I figured out how to cut and paste the story. But I think there was a bit more to it than kissing
"According to an FBI indictment, Persing's face was pressed to Sewell's vaginal area during the September Southwest Airlines flight from Los Angeles to Raleigh, N.C. When a flight attendant gave them a second warning, Persing reacted angrily and the couple, both in their early 40s, were arrested when the plane reached its destination."
But at least you were able to find something.
yes...but it's all in the perception isn't it? We are never given the full story in any article. However, it was asked if heterosexuals get booted from flights for PDA..and they do. Do we know how far they went? no..because we were not there. Did this couple go to fair? did Leisha go to fair? we wont really know because we were not there...
so, where do we draw the line? who determines this? In our country it is stated "you're rights end where mine begins" what does this really mean? We each must figure this out for ourselves...and this is what crossed my mind when I read your original post.
yes...but it's all in the perception isn't it? We are never given the full story in any article. However, it was asked if heterosexuals get booted from flights for PDA..and they do. Do we know how far they went? no..because we were not there. Did this couple go to fair? did Leisha go to fair? we wont really know because we were not there...
so, where do we draw the line? who determines this? In our country it is stated "you're rights end where mine begins" what does this really mean? We each must figure this out for ourselves...and this is what crossed my mind when I read your original post.
That is true. i suppose we are never given the full story in any article. But at some point I need to get to a place where I am comfortable with some idea of truth. I can't just say well, I don't know what happened so you are all wrong. Or you are all right for that matter. I have to do my homework. If I am interested in some issue I need to research it and come to a place where I believe I have enough knowledge or information to make an informed decision. I'm not saying I have enough in this case yet. I am saying that I am not prepared to say two women kissing is going too far. I might be prepared to say that putting your face in someone's vaginal area in a public place is going too far. However, it seems to me that the constant here was giving the flight attendants a hard time. I don't think they like that.
Also I might be prepared to say that the line for what is inappropriate behavior for homosexuals is in a very different place than it is for heterosexuals. I know so far evidence points to the possibility that this might be the case.
stargazingboi
09-28-2011, 09:18 PM
That is true. i suppose we are never given the full story in any article. But at some point I need to get to a place where I am comfortable with some idea of truth. I can't just say well, I don't know what happened so you are all wrong. Or you are all right for that matter. I have to do my homework. If I am interested in some issue I need to research it and come to a place where I believe I have enough knowledge or information to make an informed decision. I'm not saying I have enough in this case yet. I am saying that I am not prepared to say two women kissing is going too far. I might be prepared to say that putting your face in someone's vaginal area in a public place is going too far. However, it seems to me that the constant here was giving the flight attendants a hard time. I don't think they like that.
Also I might be prepared to say that the line for what is inappropriate behavior for homosexuals is in a very different place than it is for heterosexuals. I know so far evidence points to the possibility that this might be the case.
The way you are going about it..is indeed a wise way to approach most topics that provokes within. Over the course of time I have watched the world change regarding same sex couples. I have faced many issues that revolve around who I am..how I live etc. What I have found is...depending on where (what city and state) I am, will determine what line is drawn in the sand regarding appropriate and inappropriate behavior. I have found that in major cities the line is different...than in smaller towns or down south.
Do I think kissing is inappropriate..whether same sex or opposite..hell no? but what else was going on when the kiss occurred? bumping..grinding...hands roaming about? Could something else have caused the issue? perhaps..and then again depending on the flight attendant it could have been their own personal view that caused them to say something. Not sure
What we do know is that a disagreement occurred...a scene was made and that flights can not take off or continue being in flight when such disagreements are in effect. I have even been on a plan that landed to eject someone from the flight for causing a disruption (was a person who drank to much and became belligerent).
So..maybe it wasn't the kissing that caused the issue but the way it was handled? If they were on the ground and in the waiting area of the same airline would the situation have been handled differently? There is much to think about here
EnderD_503
09-29-2011, 05:50 AM
First...regarding the gender issue mentioned..do heterosexuals face the same issues and get booted off flight for PDA? Yes..yes they do...a man in California was arrested and convicted after a 3 day trail for PDA with his girlfriend (link to story below..I found several stories like this one)
[URL="http://www.calguns.net/calgunforum/archive/index.php/t-57274.html"]
I have no doubt that one group of people will get more attention in the media than another...lets face it, it's about what will grab peoples attention and sell.
I'm of the mind set that there is a time and a place for everything. I sorta live by the...if I wouldn't do it in front of my parents or kids (whether my partner's kids/my foster kids when I have one placed with me etc)..then I don't do it in public places where other peoples parents or kids are.
Couples should be able to show affection to one another, it's actually quite healthy for a relationship. It also teaches our children what a healthy relationship looks like....of course once again...there is a time and a place for certain things.
For me it's about mutual respect.
The first thing that struck me about this case, that did not occur in the case of Hailey and Grey, is that the airline's reports actually were able to tell us what the couple was doing that constituted "inappropriate." In the case of Hailey, all they say is "it was inappropriate, it caused customer's to complain." They did not go into detail, and Hailey is the only one who tells us anything; that it was a "modest kiss" and they were not making out or causing a "spectacle" of themselves.
In the case of the heterosexual couple, the airline then needs to justify itself, and did when it reported (and it was confirmed) that
Carl Persing was convicted Thursday of interfering with flight attendants and crew members after he and his girlfriend, Dawn Sewell, were seen "embracing, kissing and acting in a manner that made other passengers uncomfortable," according to a criminal complaint.
According to an FBI indictment, Persing's face was pressed to Sewell's vaginal area during the September Southwest Airlines flight from Los Angeles to Raleigh, N.C. When a flight attendant gave them a second warning, Persing reacted angrily and the couple, both in their early 40s, were arrested when the plane reached its destination.
This report on the heterosexual couple is far more detailed, far more methodical. It tells us what happened step by step, that the couple were touching each other and kissing (we can probably assume making out), that man had his face pressed to the woman's vaginal area; that the flight attendant came back twice to tell them to stop, and that it was only when the man became enraged that further action was taken.
We have nothing of the sort in Hailey's case. Instead, we have very few details or comments by the airline (and the original article was heavily biased in order to make Hailey sound irrational/hysterical if you look at the quotes they used there vs. the ones in the later article, and the airline look "reasonable" and "family-oriented"), we don't know what was said, we don't know what went on, the airline won't tell us what was done that was inappropriate. The lack of details hints, again, to the potential homophobia that occurred. How far does a heterosexual have to go for this to happen? The case you've given us is rather extreme. How far does a homosexual couple have to go for this to happen? I'd gather a "modest kiss" just might do it.
If something like in the case of the heterosexual couple went on, something tells me they'd be all too willing to tell us.
dykeumentary
09-29-2011, 08:27 AM
This situation points to an ever deeper problem, in my opinion. Airlines are only one entity that has been exercising full martial law/police state powers since the "patriot act" rolled out.
What I read is that the lesbians reacted angrily to the directions given by the flight attendants. That should be reasonable, but now because of TSA and homeland security, is not. it's against the law to not do exactly what someone in a position of Power says, regardless of how nonsensical or authoritarian or racist it is.
Consider what's happening in Arizona- if a police officer thinks you look like you speak Spanish, you have to provide documentation of your citizenship. You can land in a jail if you don't comply immediately. If you want to stand quietly, and bear witness to the police brutality happening at the demonstrations at Wall Street, you can be charged with obstructing justice.
We live in bizarre, deadly times. Any young black man could tell you what would happen to him when he gets angry- even if he's justified in doing so.
When these things happen I hope it brings more awarenes to the problems of our times. It is sad that the experience of injustice brings people to the fight against it.
RockOn
01-28-2012, 06:58 AM
I don't like it but it is a fact that the playing field is not level, not the same for all in terms of what "greater society" declares acceptable here in the U.S.
This story reminds me of an incident I became involved in around six years ago in the women's dressing room at local Dillard's store.
I was trying on some men's polo shirts that night. There were broken wooden slits on the doors of the dressing rooms - no privacy. From overhearing conversation, l realized my room was directly across from a woman who was about to be married. I was disgusted when her male fiance joined her in her room because he was all over her with his hands. When she walked out to view herself in big mirror outside of dressing rooms, he had his hands around her waist, walked behind her with his dick pressed up against her bottom as tight as possible. I initiated verbal exchange, told him he needed to wait outside since the rooms had broken panels on the doors. He got nasty, called me a dyke, etc. I went to nearby cash register, explained to the Dillard's employee what was going on and that he needed to be removed from women's dressing room. This employee was not a take charge personality. I ended up instructing her to call security. I received more dyke slurs from this guy during the ten minutes or so that it took security to arrive. This asshole het male had ten minutes to leave but was determined to "I'll show the dyke who is boss" and he did because security did nothing. I left after becoming infuriated from standing there with the jerk, talking with security and realizing security had no intention of doing anything. Due to intensely inflamed emotions, I was not thinking correctly at that point in time. Given a similar situation today, I would write down all names involved, consult legal advice, find out who I needed to direct formal proceedings against - take it to the max from there.
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