Category Archives: Travel

Woman Strips Naked on Delta Flight

Nothing this interesting ever happens when I travel…

And I’ve been on hundreds-if not thousands-  of flights…

Talk about in-flight entertainment. Passengers on a Delta flight Saturday got a “show” when a woman stripped naked and began to make a scene during their flight.

Flight 6562, en route from Chicago to New York, was descending to Kennedy Airport when the “emotionally disturbed” woman removed her clothes, reports USA TODAY.

A Newsday manager who was also on the flight said flight attendants tried to cover the woman with a blanket, but she yelled “No! No! No!”

The woman, reportedly in her late 20s, was taken into custody by local law enforcement. According to the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, she was taken to Jamaica Hospital Medical Center in Queens.

via Woman Strips Naked on Delta Flight – AOL Travel News.

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State Dept. Wants to Make It Harder to Get a Passport

Why do I have the sneaking suspicion this is to discourage International travel by US Citizens so they won’t realize how bad some things are here compared to the rest of the world….

Little things like Internet Service and Mass Transit that work much better in other countries than here….

And god forbid the travel on an airline like Virgin Atlantic, British Airways, Air France or Singapore Airlines that show how flying should be- not how the flying cattle cars that pass for US airlines do it….

Oh, and fresh food that isn’t full of additives and mass-produced on corporate farms….

Just little things….

From ConsumerTraveler.com:

The U.S. Department of State is proposing a new Biographical Questionnaire for some passport applicants: The proposed new  Form DS-5513 asks for all addresses since birth; lifetime employment history including employers’ and supervisors names, addresses, and telephone numbers; personal details of all siblings; mother’s address one year prior to your birth; any “religious ceremony” around the time of birth; and a variety of other information.  According to the proposed form, “failure to provide the information requested may result in … the denial of your U.S. passport application.”

The State Department estimated that the average respondent would be able to compile all this information in just 45 minutes, which is obviously absurd given the amount of research that is likely to be required to even attempt to complete the form.

via State Dept. wants to make it harder to get a passport.

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America’s Meanest Airlines | Gadling.com

Since I’m currently in the middle of business trip, this seemed appropriate to share…

I can’t believe USAirways didn’t take top dishonors in every category.  They are truly a horrible airline in every conceivable way…

From the Gadling.com:

2011’s Airline Quality Report came out this month, which means that it’s time to distill out the industry leaders in a variety of categories, from on-time departures to lost bags to general happiness among passengers. Reporting on the best of the best is only half as fun as vilifying the worst though, so Yahoo and US News took the liberty of sorting out the worst performers in each category and hanging their decapitated bodies in the public square for everyone to shame. Among the losers this year:

Meanest major carrier: United Airlines

Meanest regional carrier: American Eagle

Most complained about airline: Delta Air Lines

Most likely to be unsafe: Jetblue

Most likely to overcharge for bags: Delta / US Airways / Continental

Most likely to bump you: American Eagle

Most likely to be late: Comair

Most likely to mishandle your bag: American Eagle

Daunting stuff, right? Maybe. Bear in mind, that the AQR samples a limited data set over a limited market, and that the term “worst” doesn’t necessarily mean that service is bad. American Eagle, for example, mishandles 7.15 bags for every thousand that go through its hands. The best carrier? Air Tran at 1.63 per thousand. That’s 1 drop in the bucket versus 1.0002 drops in the bucket.

Our suggestion? If you really want to figure out why each airline performed the worst in its own category then download the AQR yourself and flip through the data. It’s the only way you can get an accurate gauge of quality.

via America’s Meanest Airlines | Gadling.com.

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Some Thoughts from 37000 Feet

First of all, I’m amazed that I can blog from an airplane 37000 feet in the air while I’m traveling to Phoenix on a business trip.  It’s so cool to be able to access the internet in flight, but I’m so thankful they still don’t let people use cell phones.  This is as good as it gets while traveling….

I’m sitting here listening to Spencer Lewis on my iPod while I type this…I’ve flown cross-country and around the world with Spencer more times than I can count and he’s never known.  Maybe he will now.  His music makes it so easy to create my own peaceful, pleasant bubble while surrounded by travel madness.

And travel is madness now.  There is no longer anything pleasant about it.  Planes are packed solid and less comfortable than the old Greyhound Buses.  The airlines are out to get every penny they can from you any way they can.  Customer service is non-existent.

And my fellow travelers…

I frequently think of the old Noel Coward song:  “Why Do the Wrong People Travel?”

So many of them complain constantly and I don’t know why.  Sure, its miserable to travel, but why do people have to wallow in it?  Why can’t they just make the best of it and muddle through.

I will offer them a few travel pointers:

  1. Never argue with the airline.  You will not win.  They do not care and you will only raise your blood pressure.
  2. When your flight is delayed and you originally only had 30 minutes to make your connection, do not complain loudly to anyone and everyone within ear shot.  Yes, we realize you are going to miss your connection and we do not care.  You should never have booked a flight with a connection that tight in the first place.  We should all know better by now.  I certainly do.
  3. If it is cold enough for you to think you need to wear a sweat shirt, it is too cold to wear flip-flops, so don’t complain loudly about your feet being cold.
  4. If you are a man over 40, and certainly over 50, you have no excuse for wearing shorts on a plane.  No one wants to see your  legs anymore.  Where is your sense of dignity, man?
  5. When you travel, you are on an airplane.  They do now have the internet, but they do not yet have gyms.  Dress accordingly.  No need to wear your workout clothes…
  6. It is beyond tacky to bring a whole box of Bojangles Chicken on the plane and eat it by yourself.  Yes, someone is doing that a couple of rows behind me…

That’s it for now.  I’m going to put up the laptop and go back to listening to Spencer Lewis on my iPod with my Bose noise reduction headphones and reading my Kindle.

I’ve learned these are all necessities for my frequent travel in today’s world.  They help me pretend to be anywhere but where I am.  This is one moment I do not need to be in….

I just had to take advantage of the moment and the access to all this new technology.

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How Many Americans Have a Passport? The Percentages, State by State « Grey’s Blog

Fascinating data from another blog (Link at bottom)…

There is a great map on this site also as well as percentages for every state…

Why am I not surprised Mississippi is last?

This also seems to prove my theory that travel is the best education.  Note the states with the highest number of travelers are generally the more liberal/progressive States.  Alaska is the exception, but remember you now need a Passport to enter Canada from the US and Canada borders Alaska.

 

Percentage of State Population with Passport

NEW JERSEY 68.36%

DELAWARE 67.05%

ALASKA 65.01%

MASSACHUSETTS 63.42%

NEW YORK 62.47%

CALIFORNIA 60.19%

NEW HAMPSHIRE 59.39%

CONNECTICUT 58.50%

WASHINGTON 57.28%

VERMONT 56.32%

MARYLAND 56.21%

MORE:   How Many Americans Have a Passport? The Percentages, State by State « Grey’s Blog.

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South of the Border, Down Mexico Way…

It’s been an interesting week…

I left last Sunday for Mexico City- with a great deal of trepidation.  I’ve been to Mexico twice before this trip and, no matter how careful I was, I became deathly ill both times.

This time I survived with my health intact and that gave me a better chance to focus and process Mexico City.

I stayed at the W Hotel.  I’ve never seen a hotel anywhere work so hard to be hip.  It was all done in a very modern design in all black, white  and red.  Mostly Black and Red. The hallways were all black.  Walls, floor, ceiling.  All Black.  With a thin line of red neon like a chair rail.  The room numbers were spray painted on the floor in front of your room in white.  German techno music blasting everywhere.  It was not conducive to  peaceful slumber.  I felt like I was trapped in a horror whorehouse when I got off the elevator on my floor…

The bathroom was the real trip.  It was gigantic.  It took up about a third of the room.  It had one of those showers that were like rain from above and two other jets shooting at you mid body and face level.  You couldn’t turn them off.  Most inconvenient in a city where you can’t drink the water or get it in your mouth while showering…

And the bathroom had a hammock in it.  Yes, a hammock.  I’m still trying to figure that one out….

But I must say the service was fabulous.  They never missed my wake up call and gladly followed up with a second call 15 minutes later.  By a real person.  As soon as I hung up the phone from the second call, the waiter always knocked at my door with my English Breakfast Tea and fresh, hot croissant.  Free of charge.  Try getting that kind of punctual, free, gracious service at an American hotel.  The first night back in the States in Phoenix, they lost my room service order and it took over an hour to get my meal.  That would never have happened in Mexico.  Or probably anywhere else.

One of the things that struck me was how friendly and nice everyone was.  And warm.  Everywhere we went, the service was impeccable.  And this was in a poor country under siege by drug wars.

At the office I heard people speaking of robbery, kidnapping and murder as just an everyday fact of life.  But they didn’t want pity or let it interfere with going on with their lives.  It was just a part of their lives they had adjusted to….

What struck me most was the gap between the rich and the poor.  We were definitely in the best part of town.  There was a Hugo Boss store right across from the hotel.  And a Porsche dealership.  But there were armed guards and gates everywhere.  They always have at least one guard with a submachine gun at our office there.  Other armed guards patrolled both the office and the hotel.

We had our own van transportation as the cabs and public transportation aren’t safe in Mexico City.  Especially for foreigners.  Too much chance of getting kidnapped and held for ransom or being robbed.

I guess my thought- and fear- was how long before this comes to the USA?  This fear is not based on fear of immigration.  I welcome immigrants.

My fear is that it will be driven by the growing divide between the Rich and the Poor.  I can see it happening here.

When a few have so much, but most have so little, no one is really safe.

That’s the thought I brought back from Mexico this time….

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Filed under History, Politics, Scott's Commentary, Travel

Off to Mexico…

I’m off to Mexico City today on business and won’t be back until Friday.

Due to Customs restrictions limiting me to one laptop- and I have to take my business laptop that blocks access to everything personal and fun- I won’t be posting again until Friday at the earliest.  I also read that iPad’s are counted as computers and not mobile devices, so I’m going to have to go through internet withdrawal cold-turkey.

I’ll definitely be back on-line by Saturday.

Thanks for you patience and have a great week!

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DavidMixner.com – Is America Becoming The Ugly Step Child Of High Speed Rail?

Since I’ve been on six flights in 48 hours, this seems appropriate to me.  I truly wish we had a rail system that was a reasonable alternative to flying.

I still can’t believe the Government is not willing to invest in infrastructure improvements.  We are so far behind the rest of the world in so many areas- especially high speed rail.

And much of our existing infrastructure is crumbling.

Infrastructure investment is not only good for the future, it’s good for the present.  Infrastructure investment=Jobs= Personal Spending= Increased Tax Revenues

Seems a no-brainer to me…

From DavidMixner.com:

Excellent advanced infrastructure is a sign of a nation’s ability to compete in the world. President Dwight D. Eisenhower saw the German Autobahns and insisted that for America to be strong we had to build the interstate highway system. Within years, Americans were able to abandon unreliable two lane highways (Route 66) traveling across country for sleek fast roadways.

Many now believe that high speed rail lines are the key to success for the future. If that is the case, then America is really hurting. We have one of the worst high speed rail plans in the world and almost none of them have been implemented. We have the best opportunity in California which seems to be moving rapidly ahead with its system. Then there is the Northeast Corridor with a modified high speed system in its Acela.

More:   DavidMixner.com – Live From Hell’s Kitchen.

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Air Travelers Will See New Consumer Protections in 2011 – DailyFinance

At least this is a start…

Some positive developments are on the horizon for America’s beleaguered air travelers in 2011. I wish I could say that the changes will mean less crowded planes, more legroom in coach, and an easier experience in clearing security, but that’s probably too much to wish for. Still, U.S. Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood seems intent on raising the bar for the treatment of airline passengers.

Among the new rules likely to be finalized next April are mandates for greater transparency in airline pricing, higher reimbursements for bumped passengers and an expansion of the rule that requires U.S. airlines to let passengers off a plane if a tarmac delay exceeds three hours to cover foreign airlines as well

Other new rules would give customers the right to cancel their ticket within 24 hours of making their reservation without a penalty, reimburse them for luggage fees when checked bags are lost or delayed and require airlines to announce flight delays within 30 minutes of receiving the information.

via Air Travelers Will See New Consumer Protections in 2011 – DailyFinance.

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Fmr. Shell president ‘predicting’ $5-a-gallon gas in 2012 | Raw Story

I’m not surprised and fully expect this to happen.

Too bad the Government is taking more pr0-active steps to encourage alternative energy, better mass transit, higher gas mileage cars and tax incentives to purchase  hybrid auto’s.

All these steps would also help grow the economy and create jobs…

Epic failure of leadership in Washington…

The former president of Shell Oil said he believes Americans could be paying $5 for a gallon a gas by 2012.

“I’m predicting actually the worst outcome over the next two years which takes us to 2012 with higher gasoline prices,” John Hofmeister said in a recent interview with Platts Energy Week television.

Tom Kloza, chief oil analyst with Oil Price Information Service, agreed that Americans would see $5 a gallon gas but told CNN that he did not believe it would happen in 2012. “That wolf is out there and it’s going to be at the door…I agree with him that we’ll see those numbers at some point this decade but not yet.”

“The demand is still sluggish enough in some of the mature economies,” he said.

Hofmeister also predicted that demand would outstrip supply before the end of the decade.

via Fmr. Shell president ‘predicting’ $5-a-gallon gas in 2012 | Raw Story.

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