Virgin Rebirth's Botched Abortion
Sir Richard Branson wants to bring Virgin Air stateside. U.S. competitors counter: You're British.
Just how American is the proposed startup airline Virgin America? Not American enough, critics say.
The proposed low-cost carrier, which is seeking approval from the Department of Transportation to begin flying, is facing strong opposition from several major domestic airlines that accuse it of trying to skirt U.S. ownership laws.
The traditional way to skirt stupid ownership laws, of course, is to marry a local--and here in the U.S. we have a great system for hooking up moneyed men and willing strangers. Alas, the already-hitched SRB has partnered with American investors, who will control 75 percent of voting stock. U.S. airlines complain that Virgin America still reeks of our colonial overlords, and Continental has lodged a hilarious complaint with the Department of Transportation, fuming, "Virgin America is a foreign-funded, -owned and -controlled would-be airline masquerading as a U.S. airline applicant." In other words, Virgin Air fails the one-drop test, and Arthur Fortune should go back to getting high and handing out dollar bills. Unlikely, but there's always the chance someone will make the (plausible) argument that Branson's mustache is a form of global terrorism and further delay the deal.
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When in the course of human events. . . .
Let me get this straight- my state is spending $250 million to build this fucker a SPACEPORT, and we're trying to block him out of the AIRLINE industry.
Yeah...
No, Postmodern, you don't understand. It's for the children. The US airlines are our children, and they need our protection! And you and I need to be protected from Branson's high tech ideas...
It's absurd that the U.S. hasn't been forced in trade deals to open its skies to foreign competition. Just as Costa Rica's telecommunications and insurance industries are about to undergo a painful but necessary process of liberalisation, the U.S. airlines need to face painful but necessary competition in domestic markets for air travel.