(A.K.A. Non-Original Rants)

–Co-opting good stuff from all over the ‘Net and maybe some original thoughts—ΜΟΛΩΝ ΛΑΒE

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The tyranny of victimhood

I’m not sure why this article torqued me off, but here it is. A girl was bitching about not have a ‘buffer area’ around her on a plane because her various allergies are apparently so virulent that the mere thought of a peanut will send her into anaphylactic shock.

Here’s what she does to make sure that the crew absolutely knows who she is and what her demands are:

As soon as I got on a plane, I tell flight attendants exactly where I am sitting and where I keep my epinephrine auto-injectors in case of emergency.

I also usually ask staff to create what is known as a ‘buffer zone’ – meaning the rows immediately around me are asked by the flight attendants to avoid eating peanuts or nut products during the flight.

I wipe down every surface around me – tray table, television screen, seat pockets, arm rests and even the floor beneath the seat, where crumbs and food residue often collect.

And here’s the part that really got me:

Eventually, after take-off, crew members began asking nearby passengers not to eat nut products because someone on board had a severe allergy. By then, I said, the woman with the açai bowl had already been eating it for some time.

I turned around and explained that I was the passenger with the allergy, reassuring her that it was not her fault and asking only whether she could wash her hands afterwards.

Seriously, WTF. She felt the need to ‘reassure’ someone eating their dinner that they weren’t doing anything wrong (because they weren’t) and asked them to wash their hands. If someone asked me to wash my hands after eating my dinner, I’d tell them to let themselves out the emergency door and sit on the wing.

I’m trying to figure out if this is attention getting behavior, because demanding that total strangers not eat the foods of their choice because they had the bad luck to sit close to a person, just strikes me as the ultimate self-centered move.

If someone has a medical condition that is severe enough that it has to inconvenience six or ten or twelve people or entire flights, then they either need to drive or put themselves into a self contained suit, complete with oxygen.

This kind of self-centered bullshit is like the fat people who want to blob over into someone else’s seat because they don’t want to pay for another ticket.

At one point do they just keep these women off planes because their insane demands cannot be met?



16 responses to “The tyranny of victimhood”

  1. First world problems. Give her back her ticket and tell her to drive or take a ship to her destination. Rewarding stupid is what got us here.

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  2. I remember hearing a story some years back about a kid in Florida who was supposedly so allergic to peanuts his parents had requested that no one was to bring any type of nuts or peanut butter into the school. If I were the superintendent of that district I would have advised the Parents to keep him at home and provide them with teaching material for his lessons. On top of that, I read more than one article last year stating the cause of all of these allergies was due to people NOT introducing their children to these types of foods early enough in their early years. It became a self-fulfilling prophecy and caused the vey allergies they were trying to avoid.

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  3. I bet that woman is a joy to be around, let alone, travel with.

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  4. Same mentality as “you have to get vaxxed to protect me (even though I took the vaxx)”

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  5. I was waiting for a friend at a small restaurant. A group came in and announced to the maitre’d that one of them had allergies. The maitre’d stopped and told them they’d have to leave because they only had a small kitchen and couldn’t accommodate them.

    Suddenly it was food preference, not allergies. The maitre’d stood firm. I’m sorry, you said allergies and we can’t afford to have a reaction. Please leave.

    Lot’s of respect for that maitre’d.

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  6. I think this line from the movie Lake Placi fits.

    Are you mental?

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  7. There was a girl in my daughters class that claimed to have 31 food alergies. No way that could have been even close to true. Probably a lie her mother told her to tell to control other people.

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  8. For years nobody had these “allergies”, except seasonal reactions to ragweed and such. Then we started spraying everything with Roundup…

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  9. Hey I think I saw her(or someone just like her) on a flight years ago! Some chick wearing a full face bio mask and waited for everyone to get off first. At least she didn’t beak off about her issue and make everyone else fit her problem. No skin off my nose, but the kid across the street has deadly severe nut allergies and takes shots for it and hopefully he will get less affected as he grows out of it.
    My two cents as to why. These allergies showed up when everyone switched to pasteurized milk. While growing up everyone lived on peanut butter. We lived on raw milk and garden veggies and were around cattle all the time.

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  10. SilliestString Avatar
    SilliestString

    I don’t think it’s pasteurized milk to blame. I was born in ’64 and never lived on a farm. I doubt I ever had raw milk until the last few years when I found a place that sells it. I have no known food allergies. My dad was allergic to mushrooms, but I’m not aware of any other allergies among family members my age or older. I suspect the reason they’ve exploded in the last few decades is a combination of not introducing foods early enough and pesticide use that has contaminated the food supply at a micro level.

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  11. Born and grew up in Ga./SC in the 1950’s –>
    Never heard of peanut allergy until sometime in the mid 1990’s, and it was not a person born and raised in the south.

    Heck, our public schools in Ga. even had peanut butter sandwiches at lunchtime, until this craze started?

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  12. Sigh… agree with TRoy. I’m betting NONE of that was told to anybody when she purchased the ticket!

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  13. I read that article a few days ago. If I’m not mistaken, she was traveling to her sister’s bachelorette party. That should be a fun time with her there……

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  14. The hygiene hypothesis is not a hypothesis; it does real damage. Government – or ‘expert’ advice – also does enormous damage; see the recent inversion of the nutrition pyramid, the increase in childhood vaccination from a dozen or so to about 80 shots now, and practically any advice from pediatricians.

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  15. To follow up on what Doc said, the fact that kids don’t get out and play, get dirty, and spend time outside has contributed significantly to the rise in ‘allergic’ reactions to things that don’t affect us old folks.

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  16. I’ll throw in my two cents; Does the older set, GenX and older, remember getting the red gumball in the mail introducing and pushing one of the artificial sweeteners? There’s been a lot of problems ever since.

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