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Comedian Tyler Fischer Perma-banned from Delta Flights For Tweet Joke

Will the short comedian get his comeuppance?

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I'm told with some reliability that comedians make jokes. But like the 2020 pandemic, maybe some people aren't considered "essential workers" when their work offends the people "in charge."

That's right, the emperor has no clothes, but making jokes about it will get you sent up the river.

Why is this happening? Because as they say, you will be able to find out who rules society when you find out who feels that they are exempt from the law. Delta is "a cut above" the rest of the plebs, so they don't have to learn to respect other people's 1st amendment rights.

My feeling on this is that as soon as the harassment dies down, and flight attendants stop dog-piling in a mob-fueled rage, they will have a lawsuit on their hands. Who knows how big the lawsuit will be. Will it be Disney vs Gina Carano levels? Probably not. But it could be big enough to seriously cut into their nonexistent profits, since Delta among many other airlines often fail to make a profit.

4 Reasons Why Airlines Are Always Struggling
Why is the airline industry synonymous with ongoing losses and insolvency? We list four reasons.

Simple Q & A.

Q: How do airlines survive?

A: They are subsidized by the government.

I wish that was a joke, but it's not.

So, I guess like any other industry that doesn't feel the pressure to appeal to customers, just like our education system, or in the insurance industry, or in other subsidized industries who's consumer has often not been their actual customers for decades. Instead the industry is padding their wallets through a third party that has every interest in violating our 1st amendment rights. This US constitution, being the law of the land, is designed to stop governments from violating our citizen's natural human rights (our EQUAL natural human rights).

Here is a Mercatus Center article on the 2020 pandemic bailout of the airlines.

The Case against Bailing Out the Airline Industry
In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, the federal government will again bail out the airline industry, which is in the midst of a crisis owing to dwindling passenger revenue. The president insisted on taking such actions and called emergency aid for the airline industry his “number one” priority. Bailouts between $29 and $58 billion had been requested by the industry in the form of grants, loans, and tax abatements.

These bailouts of the airlines are nothing new. Similarly to many other large "essential" corporate industries such as car manufacturing, government tends to "save them" from natural industry-wide harm that may occur when tragedy strikes. Making strange bed-fellows that end up in favors and co-mingling in ways the public often doesn't anticipate or understand.

So, governments, wearing the so-called "private airline industry" around like a skinsuit doesn't make this any less egregious. In fact, it makes it worse. It makes the corporate world corrupted in a way that gives it a false belief that they can act outside of market concerns and the needs of their true customers.

Sure, none of us would like it if the airlines stopped flying, due to increased gas prices, or if GM ("government motors") stopped making our favorite Suburban SUV's, but isn't that fair if we "regular folk" must "do without" when we lack the funds to pay for things? What makes them the essential workers that get to benefit while others like Tyler Fischer suffer?

One goes free as the other goes into debt slavery.

The very guarantees of justice in favor of natural human rights afforded to us by our US constitution are ignored if some benefit (some who are deemed more important) while others suffer under the guise of government "mandate." That is unfair and unconstitutional, and it has been this way since these subsidies began decades ago. It must be rolled back, and now the subsidies should go to the "non-essential comedians" who now deserve a fair settlement for unfair treatment.

Those who suffer now may soon come out "on-top" as Delta languishes on the tarmac, grounded and unable to pay employees.

This will keep happening as long as we fail to "do justice" in our nation, and stop respecting humans as equal under the law.

Micah 6:6-8

No, airline employees are not worth more than tiny comedians. And no, mothers are not worth more than their babies in the womb. They both have a right to life... a right to make jokes at our expense. And Delta can make jokes in response and we can all be taller for it...

We wish the best to Tyler Fischer and his legal team!

Did you enjoy this article? Do you think Tyler was within his rights to make jokes about Delta Airlines? Let us know by commenting down below or on our socials here.

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