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We need to also ban people taking calls on speaker in public places like cafes or trains.
Yes! Now do the same on beaches, busses, streets. Same punishment: banishment from the area.
I first interpreted the title as meaning you must use the cheapo free headphones and aren’t allowed to use your own.
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Ok, but how about kicking sick people off of flights, particularly trans continental?
Is this really a thing?!? Blasting the others with unwanted noise.

I never been in a flight, or train across Europe where passengers showed just lack of respect for the others.

The only ones pumping anything loud, on trains or busses, usually get quickly pointed down by other passengers, personal or security.

Ah, and then there are the rebellious kids or gangs, as the other exception, which usually don't take flights anyway.

I have been in flights, elevators (not joking), coffee shops where people were listening to music or were on phone calls, on speaker.

There are some weirdos amongst us. There were a handful of reports of people singing religious music, in planes while on flight. I haven’t had the pleasure of listening to this, thankfully

Big time!

I fly every week. There's always ONE F**ING GUY who needs to have Instagram or TikTok going at full blast.

It's a problem everywhere. People on the golf course walk around with bluetooth speakers audible to players in front and behind. Mountain bikers play music audible to other trail users. Many people have absolutely no regard for others around them and this manifests through noise nuisance.
Yes, at least in my experience on flights in the USA. It’s very rare but it does happen. I was lucky one time that the person doing it sat next to me and I politely asked them to use headphones and no fuss was had.
It never used to happen in the UK but now people do it every day on tubes and trains. I had to move seats twice last week due to these assholes blasting their stuff out.

I don't know what changed exactly. It was definitely seen as antisocial behaviour in the past. I'll just leave this clip here of Spock dealing with a noisy punk on a bus.

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=Zf5iwGZNY_Q

Yes, it is. I've been on a long distance train and there was some guy watching a movie on his tablet. Sleeping. In the quiet zone.

Rude, loud people usually don’t react kindly when you call them out on their behavior. It’s practically asking for trouble. That may be one reason why many people avoid conflict, even if it bothers them a lot.

I assume it's about blasting others with noise, not company sponsored headphones.
Airlines have been quietly expanding what they can remove you for. This isn't really about headphones. It's about how much discretion crew have now and how little recourse you have at 35,000 feet.
Good. You want to be an asshole? Do it in your car, driving alone, to your destination.
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I agree with the policy but this is such a mild offense. Just a few years ago in the US there was an epidemic of drunk people savagely beating flight attendants.

People who cannot figure out how to share use of shared space should lose access to those places.

Good, now do the same for public transit.
They should be stripped of all citizenship and left to live out their life roaming the airport. But this is a start.
This sounds like a USA problem..
Feels less like malice and more like people just not thinking about others. Still, on a plane you’re stuck for hours—rules like this make sense.
I was a passenger that was asked NOT to use the headphones regularly. Not from USA though
On one hand I understand why this exists, but on the other hand, I don't think it is even necessary. There is so much noise during the flight, and combined with lower atmospheric pressure I can barely hear what steward standing next to me is saying.
They tell people not to do it on busses but it still happens, typically people are more respectful at night but not always. However I never worry about terrorists on the bus, they would get jacked up fast