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by cbhl
751 days ago
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If you buy a plane ticket for the future, in a bankruptcy, you become an unsecured creditor of the airline. That means the airline could have taken your money, spent it, and the bankruptcy court can say that they don't actually have to honor your ticket because it falls below the line of the things the airline has money to actually pay people back for. And then you have to go buy another ticket on another airline. Beyond that, Southwest is known for loading and unloading their planes efficiently: https://www.npr.org/2015/06/28/418147961/the-man-who-saved-s... |
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Unless you pay for it with a credit or debit card, which probably accounts for pretty much every ticket sold in the US.
In other words, this is simply not true. The airline's acquiring bank bears the bulk of the risk for almost all flights (except for those purchased extremely far out, i.e. much more than a year, and some other edge cases).