India’s largest budget carrier, IndiGo, is the first airline to trial a feature that lets female passengers book seats next to other women to avoid sitting shoulder-to-shoulder with a man in a move designed to make flying more comfortable for female passengers, according to a CNBC report.

The airline’s booking process is fairly standard except for the seat map which highlights seats occupied by women with the color pink. This information is not visible to male passengers, according to the airline, CNBC reported. IndiGo did not immediately respond to CBS MoneyWatch’s request for comment on the new feature.

  • @mholiv@lemmy.world
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    -14 months ago

    I am going to ignore the weird race stuff. I don’t agree with it but don’t want to spend the energy.

    I will speak about this:

    I just suppose that the risk of alienating men and them getting more violent may outweigh the immediate benefit of increased plane safety, eventually turning against women themselves. But to prove or disprove that point, I’d love to see more numbers

    This again dehumanizes women and removes agency.

    You are saying that women are the tools that are used to prevent male violence. By treating women as a means to reduce violence without considering the women themselves as people you are dehumanizing and removing agency.

    Women are people just as men are people. Women are not the tools to reduce male violence.

    You also say giving women the choice to sit with women is radical. Women having the chose to protect themselves is not radical. It is a basis for a moral society.

    You shouldn’t need studies to prove how effective or not using women as tools to reduce male violence is.

    Women are not tools.

    • @Allero@lemmy.today
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      04 months ago

      Women are not tools - and I never said that. Women, as all people, may have to sacrifice this short-term benefit for the long-term effect and actually lasting safe environment - that’s my point. In a world where people radicalize and suggest knee-jerk solutions, I want to step back to see if evidence is there to back them up.

      I say that sometimes people make irrational decisions that hurts the bottom line for themselves and others, and game theory means sometimes we have to all sacrifice something to maintain a better position than we could achieve individually - in this case, a world where we don’t have to isolate ourselves to be safe and live in fear of someone.

      If allowing women to “protect themselves” by letting them choose male-free spaces is gonna cause the rise in male violence, this will undermine the very purpose of this initiative. And since individually every woman is still better off separated, this will perpetuate even further, even if collectively women lose big time.

      I’m concerned about this particular risk. Should it be about men instead of women, I’d be same kind of concerned. This is not meant to be misogynistic (or misandric for that matter). This is rather collectivist, choosing a solution that could bring people together and let them actually solve the problem that requires both ends to solve. And a suggested initiative only makes this goal father away, proliferating the general issue that causes the concern in the first place.

      Separating people based on inherent traits is never the solution, which we somehow understand in any case but this one.

      • @mholiv@lemmy.world
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        24 months ago

        Until you see:

        1. Women are people
        2. People should not be used as a means to an end

        I don’t think this discussion is worth having. I hope you are never used as a means to an end.

        • @areyouevenreal@lemm.ee
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          23 months ago

          I can’t see them saying this at all. The only person treating people as not being people here is the way you treat men. If you discriminate against a group of people as is clearly happening here towards men, then of course that group is going to turn against you. You don’t remove sexual assault by pretending men are the only perpetrators and never a victim. You don’t remove sexism by adding discrimination against men.

        • @Allero@lemmy.today
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          23 months ago

          Until you see that by going for short-term solutions, we may end up causing way, way more harm and have more women sexually assaulted, I don’t think this conversation is worth having, either.

          I sincerely hope we will be able to direct our attention at treating the source of a problem instead of applying patches. And I absolutely hope you or anyone here won’t ever be abused by others.

          But for now, farewell.

        • Todd Bonzalez
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          03 months ago

          Get ready, he’s got another 5 paragraphs of petulance brewing.

          • @mholiv@lemmy.world
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            -23 months ago

            Yah. Lol. I was trying to avoid all the sidelong tangential points but the guy just does not see that using women as pawns to prevent male violence is a bad thing.

            • @areyouevenreal@lemm.ee
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              33 months ago

              You don’t get it at all. Creating this kind of system for only one gender is discrimination. It’s exactly the same kind of thing you see white supremacists doing because they only want to be sat next to other white people. It’s this kind of behavior that drives men to sexism in the first place. How you don’t see this after it’s been explained to you is shocking. It’s also hilarious that people only talk about men assaulting women and never about women assaulting women, women assaulting men, or men assaulting men. Not only does it not reflect the reality of sexual violence, it’s also heteronormative and sexist. Pretending that only men have the power to be abusive, and that women are always the innocent part is sexist thinking.