corl737
Veteran
- Jun 13, 2005
- 565
- 6
Facing the possibility of losing all credibility with the public following it anti-Wright Amendment repeal doomsday propaganda AA must carry out its self-defeating prophecy.
The sky isn't falling in AA's "chicken little" scenario, their ability to maintain a grip on reality is. I especially like the line where AA says "they were forced to counter Southwest." No. They decided to counter Southwest. There's a big difference.
Here's the excerpt from the Associated Press article:
DAVID KOENIG
Associated Press
DALLAS - The first Southwest Airlines Co. flight from Dallas to Missouri left Love Field on Tuesday morning, opening a new front in the battle between the low-cost carrier and American Airlines.
The 8:10 a.m. flight to St. Louis was followed 40 minutes later by a flight to Kansas City, marking Southwest's first new nonstop service from Love Field in more than 20 years, according to spokeswoman Brandy King.
A few hours later, American, the nation's largest airline, announced that American and regional affiliate American Eagle would begin 16 daily flights from Love Field on March 2 to St. Louis, Kansas City, Austin and San Antonio.
Officials with American, a unit of Fort Worth-based AMR Corp., said shifting flights to the downtown facility would weaken Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport but that they were forced to counter Southwest. The airline told DFW Tuesday that it would cancel about 30 daily flights there.
"It's better to move those flights to Love Field than leave them here (at DFW) and let Southwest eat away at us," said Dan Garton, American's executive vice president. American and Eagle operate about 800 daily departures at DFW.
Garton said American would end service from DFW to several cities, including Long Beach, Calif., Rochester, N.Y. and Toledo, Ohio, and reduce flights to others, including Cincinnati, College Station and Tyler. American says about two-thirds of its passengers at DFW are just passing through on connecting flights, so moving Missouri-bound flights to Love Field is expected to have a ripple effect.
[...]
The sky isn't falling in AA's "chicken little" scenario, their ability to maintain a grip on reality is. I especially like the line where AA says "they were forced to counter Southwest." No. They decided to counter Southwest. There's a big difference.
Here's the excerpt from the Associated Press article:
DAVID KOENIG
Associated Press
DALLAS - The first Southwest Airlines Co. flight from Dallas to Missouri left Love Field on Tuesday morning, opening a new front in the battle between the low-cost carrier and American Airlines.
The 8:10 a.m. flight to St. Louis was followed 40 minutes later by a flight to Kansas City, marking Southwest's first new nonstop service from Love Field in more than 20 years, according to spokeswoman Brandy King.
A few hours later, American, the nation's largest airline, announced that American and regional affiliate American Eagle would begin 16 daily flights from Love Field on March 2 to St. Louis, Kansas City, Austin and San Antonio.
Officials with American, a unit of Fort Worth-based AMR Corp., said shifting flights to the downtown facility would weaken Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport but that they were forced to counter Southwest. The airline told DFW Tuesday that it would cancel about 30 daily flights there.
"It's better to move those flights to Love Field than leave them here (at DFW) and let Southwest eat away at us," said Dan Garton, American's executive vice president. American and Eagle operate about 800 daily departures at DFW.
Garton said American would end service from DFW to several cities, including Long Beach, Calif., Rochester, N.Y. and Toledo, Ohio, and reduce flights to others, including Cincinnati, College Station and Tyler. American says about two-thirds of its passengers at DFW are just passing through on connecting flights, so moving Missouri-bound flights to Love Field is expected to have a ripple effect.
[...]