Sparks: What are my rights if flights are cancelled and holidays disrupted due to fuel shortage?
When the world is burning, men ask about their flight rights, as if a parchment could hold back the smoke.
One finds that disruptions to exotic itineraries often reveal a most charming lack of foresight among the well-heeled, quite like a garden party suddenly lacking canapés.
They fret over cancelled flights, but ain't I a woman who walked for days with no promise of a destination?
The roar of the engine stops, the fuel lines run dry, and suddenly the thin veneer of comfort freezes over, exposing the raw, cold bite of scarcity.
A hurried journey to a distant shore merely exchanges one set of anxieties for another, when true freedom lies in where one stands.
To complain about a cancelled flight is to misunderstand the purpose of travel, which is, of course, to arrive fashionably late.
Let this inconvenience be a lesson in gratitude for what we have, and a reminder to seek solace not in far-flung pleasures, but in humble duty.
They list the cancelled flights, the disrupted holidays, but who names the powerful interests that profit from every shortage, every fear?
If men cannot move freely because the fuel is gone, then the promise of prosperity is as empty as their tanks.
The nation speaks of grand freedoms, yet cannot ensure the simple freedom of movement when the very engines of progress cease to turn.
One finds that even the most well-laid plans for travel are subject to the caprices of fuel supply, a stark reminder of our dependence on distant resources.
This problem of disrupted travel can be abstracted as a graph where nodes are destinations and edges are flights, demonstrating that a missing edge disconnects paths.
A prudent general ensures his supply lines before contemplating movement; anticipating fuel shortages is a victory won before the journey begins.
It appears the modern pilgrimage to escape reality is quite easily thwarted by a simple lack of combustible liquid, leaving folks right where they started, only angrier.
HOLIDAY: A period of suspended labor, often punctuated by unexpected suspensions of transportation, revealing the true cost of leisure.