Good, he should. Providing discounts to NRA members has nothing to do with the Second Amendment and is just as much virtue signaling as any other discount or political stance.
Good, he should. Providing discounts to NRA members has nothing to do with the Second Amendment and is just as much virtue signaling as any other discount or political stance.
"There are no finger prints under water."
I find this hard to believe, but supposedly only 13 tickets had ever been purchased with Delta using the NRA discount.
Martin
If you love your freedom, thank a veteran. If you love to party, thank the Beastie Boys. They fought for that right.
What if NRA-ILA filed on behalf of all 18-20 year olds in a class action fashion? The injury of those 3 years doesn't disappear. emotional suffering, denial of civil rights, sort of thing?
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It is terrible to contemplate how few politicians are hanged. - The Cleveland Press, March 1, 1921, GK Chesterton
I don't find it odd that few people use their NRA discounts thru Delta or any others offered. I NEVER ask for an NRA discount...just never think about it.
On the other hand, it isn't about the discount. I don't give a rat's ass about the discount. I do care that certain companies claim to value everyone as customers and then pull shit like this. Does anyone think if they offered a discount to the NAACP (just using that as an example...don't get all wound up) and then publicly made a big announcement about discontinuing it over some politically charged incident there wouldn't be progressive heads exploding all over the country? This is about targeting a certain group of people because of their views and opinions on guns and gun rights. Sure, they have a right to do it. And I have a right to bitch and moan about it and complain to the company and to post how much I think they suck for doing it.
I'm just tired of all the double standards inflicted on everyone by progressives in the name of social justice.
Stella - my best girl ever.
11/04/1994 - 12/23/2010
Don't wanna get shot by the police?
"Stop Resisting Arrest!"
MMmm ... no, providing discounts to any group having a large gathering is about marketing to a large gathering or group just like they do with AARP or Veterans Advantage. It has nothing to do with the Second Amendment but it also has nothing to do with virtue signalling. Delta and United never advertised those discounts to the general public -- if they had marketed the discounts as some kind of support for the 2A, THAT would have been virtue signalling but they haven't and they don't.
The reason I take offense at what they've done is that it's NOT a blind change in business policy. They publicized the end of the group discount only with the NRA and they did it in a manner that indicates virtue signalling. Those who think that "virtue" is a vice should therefore be free to respond accordingly.
Don't get me wrong, I disagree with the stance they are taking. As an airline, they should fly people to places and not engage in politics.
"There are no finger prints under water."
My point was just that the "discount" had nothing to do with virtue signalling before (which makes their virtue signalling with cancelling the discount all the more egregious). From what I could tell, the discounts available by being a member of the NRA or American Legion or whatever were off their top-priced fares so actually cost more than buying tickets directly via delta.com or ua.com and getting the lowest available fare. In other words, pretty much useless. I'm surprised they even got 13 people to apply the so-called discounts.
You're probably correct, especially since they didn't advertise the discount.
"There are no finger prints under water."