Oh yes, by all means, let’s bail out Spirit Airlines. Because when a company has spent years transforming air travel into a loud, ghetto rat infested, cramped, fluorescent nightmare with seat belts, the only rational response is to reward it with public money.
Spirit did not stumble into being terrible. It cultivated it. It refined it. It built an entire brand around making a round-trip from Los Angeles to Chicago feel like a hostage exchange with boarding passes. This is not an airline. It is a social experiment designed to test how much indignity and torture the average American will tolerate in exchange for a fare that looks cheap right up until the fifth add on junk fee punches him in the throat.
And let’s stop pretending the misery is limited to the aircraft. The real show starts at the gate. That is where the culture of Spirit fully blooms. People hauling duffel bags stuffed like federal disaster relief pallets. Passengers acting shocked, shocked, that bag fees exist on the one airline on earth famous for weaponizing bag fees. Families sprawling across rows of seats like they are homesteading Oklahoma Territory. Loudspeaker announcements being ignored with the discipline of zoo animals staring at a fan.
Then boarding begins, and the circus really earns its payroll. Suddenly every zone is everyone’s zone. Every rule is optional. Every argument is a constitutional convention. Somebody is fighting about a carry-on the size of a refrigerator. Somebody else is on speakerphone broadcasting their IQ to the terminal. Another passenger is already offended, although nobody knows why, including them.
And then you squeeze into the cabin, that glorious yellow tube of human fatigue, and the magic continues. Kids crying. Grown adults screaming louder than the kids. People shouting across rows. Seat recline disputes treated like blood feuds. Trash everywhere. Zero self-awareness. Maximum attitude. Spirit is not just selling a ticket. It is monetizing public decline.
So now the bright minds want taxpayers to rescue this masterpiece of airborne squalor? For what? To preserve a company whose signature achievement was proving that flying can feel worse than a city bus station restroom at midnight? No. Absolutely not. If your whole business model is built on discomfort, hostility, nickel-and-diming, and the steady erosion of civilized behavior, then bankruptcy is not unfair. It is performance review.
Do not put lipstick on these pigs. A real round-trip from LA to Chicago on Spirit is not transportation. It is a flying trailer park argument with wings. If the airline collapses, that is not the fall of Rome. That is the market finally saying, enough of this garbage.
Spirit Airlines does not need a bailout. It needs a coroner. It took one of the most basic acts in modern life, getting from Los Angeles to Chicago, and turned it into a cramped, screaming, fee-soaked carnival of public dysfunction. Taxpayers should not be forced to rescue an airline whose greatest innovation was making people actually miss traveling on Greyhound busses.
Comments