▲ | sokoloff 3 hours ago | |||||||
I don’t think it does. People with flexibility to be assigned to sit next to whomever and willingness to sit in middle seats ought to be able to pay less in exchange for providing that flexibility. Their flexibility is lubricating the entire system and making it work better. Why should we charge them the same amount as people who aren’t as flexible? What I see is people who aren’t offering that flexibility arguing that they should still get the price as if they were willing to provide it, when they are consuming rather than providing it. | ||||||||
▲ | rimunroe 3 hours ago | parent [-] | |||||||
> I don’t think it does. Let me know if this is an unfair summarization, but the way I see it: my comments discussed how charging parents additional fees to sit near their infants is bad. Your comment proposed charging people who wanted assigned seating for that feature and allowing people who don't need that flexibility a discount. How does that address my point rather than simply re-describe the thing I've already described as the problem? > Why should we charge them the same amount as people who aren’t as flexible? Because that flexibility is needed more by parents and we generally want to encourage parenting and reduce the burden on them by using the power of the state to spread such costs out. IMO we don't do nearly enough of this, like with family leave, daycare, or healthcare costs. | ||||||||
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