Airline passengers behaving badly takes on a dangerous new meaning in the age of COVID-19
Jessica
Sutherland, Daily Kos Staff
Get out: Maskhole being booted from flight |
The deadly virus didn’t stop more than 7 million people from flying during the week
before Christmas, and that’s just in the United States.
Those
numbers represent just a fraction of typical holiday travel numbers, back
in the days before COVID-19. Airlines, of course, are bleeding money, and
their employees have faced reduced hours, layoffs, furloughs, and buyouts
for the better part of a year.
Concurrently, denial of the absolutely-real pandemic is rampant, particularly
among the Trumpian right, who have seen their soon-to-be ousted leader and his
acolytes politicize and ridicule the wearing of facial coverings to
help thwart spread of the novel coronavirus.
With
these facts in mind, it should come as no surprise that many of those who
might be willing to board a plane in a pandemic might also be unwilling to don
a mask.
Brando Straka, New York, booted by American Airlines |
In
a review of “more than 150 aviation safety reports filed with the federal
government since the start of the pandemic,” The Post found
that passengers of the anti-mask stripe boldly exploit the allowance to remove
masks while eating and drinking.
Ye're outta here, maskhole |
Another
report describes an unmasked man who charged up the aisle, stopping just 18
inches from a flight attendant. “He sneezed directly in my face, making no
attempt to cover his mouth, pull up his mask or turn towards the row 1 window,”
lamented the employee, who was, thankfully, wearing a mask that caught the
brunt of the man’s sinus explosion.
Airlines,
of course, are quick to note such reports, and thus anti-mask passengers
behaving badly, are quite rare—claiming otherwise could deter travel by those
who understand that masks work. But Baruch Fischhoff, a psychologist and
Carnegie Mellon professor, begs to differ, telling The Post that “if
you see 100 (reports), there are probably 1,000 or 10,000. This is a widespread
enough phenomenon that it needs to be taken seriously.”
COVID
denier-in-chief Donald Trump and his administration don’t even support
mask mandates at cocktail parties, much less on the federal front.
Transportation Secretary Elaine Chao repeatedly has quashed calls for mask requirements on public
transportation.
President-elect
Joe Biden has vowed to ask the nation to mask up for at least
his first 100 days in office; he also plans to issue a first-day mask
mandate in federal buildings and on interstate trains, planes, and buses.
Whether
or not people will comply remains to be seen.