“The Alarm Bells Are Going Off”: Air Travel Hits New Lows
(A first-person account from seat 32B, somewhere between despair and recycled air) I knew things had gone off the rails when the gate agent said, with a straight face, “We are currently looking for two volunteers to give up their seats on this completely full flight,” and then immediately followed it with, “We are offering a $50 voucher.” Fifty dollars. Not even enough to buy a sandwich in the airport we were trapped in. That’s when I realized something fundamental: air travel hasn’t just declined—it has quietly, methodically, and almost impressively collapsed into a parody of itself. And we’re all still clapping when the plane lands, like survivors of a mildly traumatic group experience. Let me walk you through the modern miracle of flying—because calling it “travel” at this point feels like calling a root canal a spa day. The Illusion of Convenience Air travel markets itself as efficiency. Speed. Seamless connectivity. A triumph of human engineering. In reality, it’s a mult...