Can't even hold a lie for 5 minutes 'beth

http://www.ibtimes.co.uk/articles/45257 … ticket.htmSamoa Air has become the first airline to start charging customers according to how much they weigh.
The company, based in the Samoan capital Apia, is the first to bring in the controversial measure that means overweight passengers pay more for their ticket.
A statement from Samoa Air said: "We at Samoa Air are keeping airfares fair, by charging our passengers only for what they weigh.
"You are the master of your air 'fair', you decide how much (or little) your ticket will cost. No more exorbitant excess baggage fees or being charged for baggage you may not carry. Your weight plus your baggage items, is what you pay for. Simple."
When booking online, customers are asked to enter their details, including the estimated weight of passengers and their baggage, and the fare is then calculated accordingly.
Customers prepay the estimated cost and the airline then weighs them at the airport, to ensure they have paid the correct amount.
Samoa Air chief executive Chris Langton said paying by weight is the fairest way to calculate fares.
Last edited by Uzique The Lesser (2013-04-02 10:00:01)
Tyranny?! I am okay with this. These machines are terrible.New Jersey Governor Chris Christie signed a bill into law on Monday banning children under 17 from using commercial tanning beds, a move stemming from the case of a local woman accused of taking her 5-year-old daughter into a tanning booth.
Christie said that while he does not favor government regulation of small business, the new law was important for protecting the safety of minors.
"Governmental regulation of the private sector should always be carefully scrutinized, and sparingly adopted," he said in a statement. "The new restrictions imposed by this bill followed a single but breathlessly reported incident of a parent bringing a minor child into a tanning facility."
Patricia Krentcil of Nutley, New Jersey, was arrested in April 2012 after her daughter showed up at school with a sunburn and officials accused her of taking the child into a tanning booth.
Krentcil, who became known in tabloid stories as the "Tan Mom," testified that her own chocolate-brown hue came from many hours spent under the intense ultraviolet light of a tanning bed or out in the sun soaking up rays.
She denied exposing her daughter to a tanning session, and a grand jury opted not to indict her on charges of endangering the welfare of a child.
New Jersey was already one of several states that have regulations prohibiting anyone age 14 or younger from tanning with commercial ultraviolet devices because of the risk of skin cancer. The new law extends that ban to older teenagers.
Signing the bill into law, Christie noted the skin cancer risk and also that tanning before age 35 has been shown to increase the risk for melanoma by 75 percent.
Let's just hope that pale skin comes back into vogue. I'm a goddamn trendsetter!Macbeth wrote:
Tyranny?! I am okay with this. These machines are terrible.New Jersey Governor Chris Christie signed a bill into law on Monday banning children under 17 from using commercial tanning beds, a move stemming from the case of a local woman accused of taking her 5-year-old daughter into a tanning booth.
Christie said that while he does not favor government regulation of small business, the new law was important for protecting the safety of minors.
"Governmental regulation of the private sector should always be carefully scrutinized, and sparingly adopted," he said in a statement. "The new restrictions imposed by this bill followed a single but breathlessly reported incident of a parent bringing a minor child into a tanning facility."
Patricia Krentcil of Nutley, New Jersey, was arrested in April 2012 after her daughter showed up at school with a sunburn and officials accused her of taking the child into a tanning booth.
Krentcil, who became known in tabloid stories as the "Tan Mom," testified that her own chocolate-brown hue came from many hours spent under the intense ultraviolet light of a tanning bed or out in the sun soaking up rays.
She denied exposing her daughter to a tanning session, and a grand jury opted not to indict her on charges of endangering the welfare of a child.
New Jersey was already one of several states that have regulations prohibiting anyone age 14 or younger from tanning with commercial ultraviolet devices because of the risk of skin cancer. The new law extends that ban to older teenagers.
Signing the bill into law, Christie noted the skin cancer risk and also that tanning before age 35 has been shown to increase the risk for melanoma by 75 percent.
i'm fluent in arabic and will be in need of work. hook a (sand)nigga up!Uzique The Lesser wrote:
pretty sure most airline companies enforce a quiet policy of only taking on hot air stewards, anyway. i have a friend who graduated uni in my year and she decided to become an air hostess for a year, just for the adventure and travel, i guess. her family are rich whities based in dubai and she flies on arab emirates, super posh style. judging from her photos, all her colleagues are really hot white people.
she was one of my college favourites
Last edited by 13/f/taiwan (2013-04-02 12:01:24)
how much does she ask for to get shit on by a saudi prince?Uzique The Lesser wrote:
all i know about it is that it pays really well and has a really selective recruitment process. so selective that new recruits, after a few months training, 'graduate' into the job.
http://i.imgur.com/S8UQySe.jpg
swoon... baby come back
yeah, you need a واسْطة to get good work with arabs.Uzique The Lesser wrote:
all i know about it is that it pays really well and has a really selective recruitment process. so selective that new recruits, after a few months training, 'graduate' into the job.
http://i.imgur.com/S8UQySe.jpg
swoon... baby come back