It's the old adage: You can make a pizza so cheap, nobody will eat it. You can make an airline so cheap, nobody will fly it.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
The problem with living in a fast-food nation is that we expect food to be cheap.
You can say Pizza Hut is terrible pizza, but they also sell more pizzas than anybody else.
You can't go wrong with pizza, unless it's terrible pizza.
If you're going out for a meal with friends, and they say they can't afford to go to such and such a place, you can't force them to afford it.
People who have come to appreciate well-sourced and well-cooked food refuse to pay too much for food that they wouldn't want to pay anything for.
Poverty is an anomaly to rich people; it is very difficult to make out why people who want dinner do not ring the bell.
There is no reason, in the capital city of the richest country in the world, for anybody to be hungry.
You can do irrefutably impossible things with the right amount of planning and support from intelligent and hardworking people and pizza.
And I don't cook, either. Not as long as they still deliver pizza.
The intriguing aspect of food charges on airlines is that they create the perfect laboratory for any economist who wishes to study the question of how to price a good that possesses, by universal consensus, absolutely no objective value.