Ok I'll bite. Fully reclining my seat shouldn't be something that's looked down on. The person slamming their knees into the back of my seat preventing me from fully reclining should be more looked down on. The reason is that reclining doesn't intrinsically interfere with anyone else, but pushing your knees into someone else's seat absolutely does.
All passengers have the same and equal freedom to recline their seat if they choose, except for the people in the emergency exit rows of course. It's part of what you're paying for when you buy the ticket. If that interferes with the knees of the person behind me that's not my problem. The designers of the seats should ensure that fully reclining the seat doesn't reduce knee room for the person behind me. The airline constructed this scenario all by themselves and if there's a problem with it they should solve it themselves. I shouldn't be asked to sacrifice my comfort on a flight I paid for (just like everyone else did) because they failed to do that.
If we're really insistent that this is somehow not 100% the airline's problem, I'd next argue that if you don't have enough knee room in a regular seat with the person in front of you fully reclined, then you're literally too big for that seat. You should buy a "comfort plus" ticket. The airline should force you to do so.
there is a difference between something being the airlines responsibility, and you still having some form of etiquette and thought for others when said airline wont fix the issue.
just because it shouldn't be your problem doesn't mean it isn't. absolute individualism is a curse
If we acquiesce and make up for the airline's failures by taking matters into our own hands, that just enables the airline to continue to not fix the issue. It's the same thing as tipping at restaurants. We have to tip because the staff don't get paid enough otherwise. The restaurant is passing off their shortcomings to the customers. The system only works because we agree to participate in it.
Pretty sure the people saying this behavior is okay are the same people who like to slam their seats into people's knees on airplanes.
Ok I'll bite. Fully reclining my seat shouldn't be something that's looked down on. The person slamming their knees into the back of my seat preventing me from fully reclining should be more looked down on. The reason is that reclining doesn't intrinsically interfere with anyone else, but pushing your knees into someone else's seat absolutely does.
All passengers have the same and equal freedom to recline their seat if they choose, except for the people in the emergency exit rows of course. It's part of what you're paying for when you buy the ticket. If that interferes with the knees of the person behind me that's not my problem. The designers of the seats should ensure that fully reclining the seat doesn't reduce knee room for the person behind me. The airline constructed this scenario all by themselves and if there's a problem with it they should solve it themselves. I shouldn't be asked to sacrifice my comfort on a flight I paid for (just like everyone else did) because they failed to do that.
If we're really insistent that this is somehow not 100% the airline's problem, I'd next argue that if you don't have enough knee room in a regular seat with the person in front of you fully reclined, then you're literally too big for that seat. You should buy a "comfort plus" ticket. The airline should force you to do so.
there is a difference between something being the airlines responsibility, and you still having some form of etiquette and thought for others when said airline wont fix the issue.
just because it shouldn't be your problem doesn't mean it isn't. absolute individualism is a curse
If we acquiesce and make up for the airline's failures by taking matters into our own hands, that just enables the airline to continue to not fix the issue. It's the same thing as tipping at restaurants. We have to tip because the staff don't get paid enough otherwise. The restaurant is passing off their shortcomings to the customers. The system only works because we agree to participate in it.