High Spirits at High Altitudes: The Drinking Dilemma
We’ve all seen the viral videos: passengers being duct-taped to seats or a redeye flight delayed because someone turned the cabin into a bathroom. Criminology experts analyzed thousands of incident reports, and the conclusion is always the same: “Alcohol, alcohol, alcohol.” Whether it’s verbal abuse or mid-air brawls, intoxicated travelers are the number one threat to a peaceful flight.
The blame game is in full swing. Flight attendants feel unsupported, while airline CEOs like Ryanair’s Michael O’Leary are pointing fingers at airport bars. He’s calling for a strict two-drink maximum before boarding, arguing that airports shouldn’t profit from unlimited booze sales only to leave flight crews to deal with the messy, and often violent, consequences at 30,000 feet.
Why do we drink so much before flying? For some, it’s white-knuckle flight anxiety; for others, it’s just the boredom of a long delay. Add in shrinking legroom and the fact that cabin pressure intensifies a buzz, and you have a recipe for disaster. While some carriers hand out lifetime bans or massive fines—topping $80,000 in extreme cases—the industry remains hesitant to cut off the tap because alcohol is a massive moneymaker for first-class perks.
Public opinion is shifting, though. Recent surveys show that a majority of travelers would actually support breathalyzer tests at the gate or stricter limits on airport bars. As air travel gets more cramped and stressful, the “frustrated passenger plus alcohol” combo is becoming a risk many are no longer willing to take. Will your next flight come with a sobriety check? Only time will tell.
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