Ah, I see. Problem is, the profitable competitors may not want to see AA get a bailout. When nearly all airlines were losing money (exept for WN), bailouts were an easier sell.
Still, I agree that the entire industry is taxed too highly. The very notion that airlines/passengers should pay for a federal agency (TSA) that spends more than 10x what the airlines used to spend on security is irrational to me. And yet even President Bush and some members of Congress wanted to see the September 11 Security Fee (TAX) increased above the current $2.50 per segment/$5 max one-way tax. Of course the current Democrat President wants to increase that fee as well.
I didn't include the landing fees because unlike the other taxes, those actually show up on the financial statements as airline expenses but they are substantial. The current JFK rate is $5.50 per thousand pounds of MTOW. The new 77Ws at 775k will cost $4,263 each time they take off at JFK.
All the other taxes/fees that I listed don't even appear on the financial statements. Behtune and Smisek at CO used to publish how many billions CO collected in these taxes each year when they ranted about them. One of my criticisms of Arpey is that he didn't join with Bethune/Smisek and the other airlines in lobbying more aggressively to roll back these taxes. I don't think Arpey has ever quantified just how many billions AA turns over in these fees/taxes each year (which are in addtion to the $24 billion of revenue). Passengers actually pay several billion more when they buy their tickets - and if the taxes were repealed, I don't see fares going down much - passengers wouldn't fly any cheaper. Essentially, it would mean billions more in AA's pockets, completely doing away with AA's financial troubles. Dunno if management would want to share with the employees, but there would be billions of profits that aren't there now. History shows that profitable companies tend to pay their employees better than companies that never turn profits.