In the political scenes of various countries around the world, national leaders usually do not arrange their main leaders such as heads of state and vice heads of state on the same flight when traveling. Meanwhile, other senior officials will also board separately to prevent government operations from being disrupted due to air disasters. Recently, Japanese netizens have started discussing whether they have encountered situations like having to split flights when taking a plane.
A netizen said that during high school extracurricular teaching, the entire grade was split into two planes to travel to Hokkaido. Netizens are curious whether the school, like the government, avoids all staff being in danger at the same time. Let’s take a look at these interesting Japanese netizens sharing together.
During our high school off campus teaching trip, we were split and taken on different flights to Hokkaido. As we were about to take off, a girl jokingly said, ‘Is the school arranging this for us to have an accident together?’ This sentence actually caused panic among some students
At that time, some girls even shouted, ‘I don’t want to die!’ However, the flight still took off as scheduled. In the end, both planes safely landed at Chitose Airport, and some boys took the opportunity to applaud and celebrate their safe arrival
Recently, netizens on Japan’s X platform have discussed that heads of state and vice heads of state are usually avoided from flying on the same plane around the world to avoid the impact of their simultaneous distress on national operations.
A netizen nicknamed ‘ぐっちちょむ’ mentioned a similar experience of participating in extracurricular teaching in high school. He said that at that time, the number of students was actually sufficient to take a plane, but the school split them into two batches. He still can’t figure out whether the school’s true intention is the same as the government’s, to prevent the entire group of students from getting into accidents together&# 8230;
Why do we have to take two separate planes to teach outside the school for the whole grade?
Japanese netizens have expressed their opinions and experiences on the intention behind this arrangement&# 8230;
I have only seen such a plot in foreign movies
I think the school’s arrangements are indeed forDiversify risk… “
When I first joined the company, I was sent abroad for an internship. Half of the people took Japan Airlines, while the other half took All Nippon Airways. This is a common habit, isn’t it
I heard that in the past, sumo wrestlers would also choose to take separate flights when performing abroad to preventNational technology destroyed… “
When I once held a Hawaii employee trip at my company, half of them took one flight and the other half took another, in order toEstablish rigorous risk management… “
My sister was assigned three planes while teaching outside of school. Usually, there are exactly two planes that crash, but the admission class did not take that type of plane, which raises doubts about the motives behind the school’s arrangements
When I was teaching outside of high school, I originally planned to fly to Hokkaido, but due to inclement weather, it was cancelled. The students were divided into two groups and flew back to Tokyo, and later changed to Okinawa
The company I once worked for also had similar regulations, which prohibit all employees from taking the same flight or transportation when traveling within the same department, in order to prevent the overall collapse and affect business operations
As an Okinawan tourism operator, I have hosted groups that teach outside of school, and this shared travel arrangement is used to alleviate the dissatisfaction of other passengers. After all, a large number of students may cause discomfort for other passengers. For schools, charter flights are costly, and the number of students may not necessarily fill a flight. In addition, boarding so many people at the same time may lead to scheduling problems for subsequent flights, so choosing to take in batches is a wise choice. Hotel arrangements are usually dispersed
Have you ever faced such an arrangement when traveling by plane for off campus teaching?