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View Full Version : Rogue flight attendant hailed as working class hero



Nothing Human Is Alien
11th August 2010, 02:31
Steven Slater's Monday probably started off no different than yours or mine. He might have hit snooze once or twice on his alarm clock before crawling out of bed. He probably had a cup of coffee on his way to work. In other words, to the outsider, Slater's life probably appeared painfully ordinary.

But the way Steven Slater's Monday finished was anything but ordinary. In fact, Slater's Monday turned into something out of a John Waters film, what with a public profanity-laced tirade and an escape down a slide onto the airport tarmac.

He is now, for better or for worse, THE JetBlue flight attendant, with the now-infamous tarmac incident dominating the list of top Yahoo! searches. (Among the variations: "jet blue flight attendant," up 9,175% in one day; "steven slater jet blue"; and "fed up attendant jet blue.") And the term "JetBlue flight attendant" is still the top search term on Twitter as of this writing at noon Eastern the day after the fact, not to mention the outpouring of support he's received on Facebook.

And as is the case with anyone who stumbles upon sudden infamy in the digital age, Slater has been the subject of much discussion in the past 24 hours or so. To many, he's a working-class hero in the mold of the fed-up Peter Gibbons from the Mike Judge cult movie hit "Office Space." As David Allan Coe advocated in song, he took that job and shoved it. But to a few others (who seem to be in a scant minority), he's a psychopath, a man who lost control in a job where losing control is absolutely forbidden. Still others suggest he's just a funny, crazy wild man. Here's a random sampling of reactions from around the Web:

• Gawker's Maureen O'Connor labeled him a "hero" for "doing that which everyone who has traveled by airplane dreams." She added, "Unfortunately, his heroism may result in criminal mischief and trespassing charges."

• Under a headline calling Slater's actions "crazy," the National Review found some fault with the employees at the airport where Slater's plane landed, saying, "Heckuva job by the security people at JFK, no?"

• New York magazine's Chris Rovzar predicted that hero status for Slater is imminent: "You know, it's amazing you don't read stories like this more frequently. You'd assume that, just as passengers periodically go berserk, so would flight attendants. The gathering of the trash with the bare hands alone would have a normal person on edge. And forget about having to wash your hands in those maddening faucets every day. Prediction: This guy becomes some sort of folk hero."

• The New York Daily News' Joanna Molloy sympathized with Slater's plight, which she thinks is "part of the frustration all over the country as employees take pay cuts and have to do double the workload as they take on the responsibilities of their laid-off co-workers."

• Hot Air's Allahpundit said that Slater grabbing two beers on his way out the airplane door "makes him (a) the greatest airline-related folk hero since D.B. Cooper and (b) the inspiration for what's sure to be Will Ferrell's next movie."

• The Awl's Alex Balk is ready to raise a glass in celebration of Slater, writing, "I think even the most airline-phobic among us can sort of look at his great escape and offer a silent cheer."

• As one might expect, Slater's mother also spoke up for him, telling TMZ that the passenger who provoked his outburst acted "maliciously" when she hit Slater in the head with the door to the overhead bin. (It had been previously reported that it was a piece of luggage that hit Slater.)

Coincidentally, in a recent issue of the New Yorker, essayist David Sedaris wrote about air travel and the tendency for humans to behave at their worst on planes and in airports.

"We're forever blaming the airline industry for turning us into monsters," Sedaris wrote. "But what if this is who we truly are, and the airport's just a forum that allows us to be our real selves, not just hateful but gloriously so?"

Peace on Earth
11th August 2010, 03:36
People are making this out to be more than it actually is. He got angry and did what we've all dreamed of: sliding down the emergency ramp off an airplane. :lol:

Jimmie Higgins
11th August 2010, 04:03
People are making this out to be more than it actually is. He got angry and did what we've all dreamed of: sliding down the emergency ramp off an airplane. :lol:I don't think it's his one act (hell, I quit and walked off a job singing the "Internationale" one time) that's significant, it's that people are identifying with it. For us as radicals, there's the added potential to use this one example to illustrate the bigger trend of how people are being forced to take on more responsibilities and work on the job because the capitalists are trying to recover falling profitability on our backs.

I think this is a good and funny example of the pressure that the working class is facing right now. But a much darker and negative example of the same pressures is that guy who shot up his workplace last week. Apparently he complained to everyone that there was a lot of racism at his workplace and, aside from his family, the union and management at work told him he was wrong and there was no racism. The guy worked there for years, but when co-workers called 9-1-1 when he started shooting, they still referred to him as "the black guy".

Nothing Human Is Alien
11th August 2010, 05:47
I have some memorable quitting experiences. A number of people I know do. But this was more high profile as it happened in front of a large number of people (who were not coworkers), at one of the busiest places in the US, involved the police and the "sacred" air travel industry, etc.

I think a big part of this too is that it was an isolated, individual action. So the media can talk about it and even applaud it to a certain extent.

You see, he told them to "Take this job and shove it," and if gets bad you can too, because that's the freedom we all enjoy in this great country.

If he and his coworkers had instead gotten together and launched a wildcat strike we'd be told how they wrong, greedy and dangerous they were ... that is if we heard about them at all.

Os Cangaceiros
11th August 2010, 06:42
fuckin' legend.

The Vegan Marxist
14th August 2010, 03:42
As much as we've all had our memorable quitting experiences, I still want to shake this guy's hand. He's definitely a hero for me :)

crashcourse
15th September 2010, 11:18
I think a friend of mine put this very well - the fact that stories like this resonate so much with so many people is a sign of a high level of anger in the working class. And the fact that people think this act was heroic and that we don't have stories of collective action instead of individuals quitting in a flashy way is a sign of a low level of class consciousness in the working class.