These days people fly with everything from peacocks to hamsters,The Perfect Taste of Sex but an incident on Tuesday reminded us squirrels have a long way to go before we accept them as emotional support animals.
A Frontier flight from Orlando to Cleveland was delayed by a few hours as police removed a woman who had brought a squirrel on board.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
According to Orlando ABC affiliate WFTV, the woman had noted on her reservation that she would be bringing an emotional support animal on board, but she didn't specify what kind of animal.
Because rodents of any kind are banned from Frontier flights, officials asked the woman to deplane. When she refused, police were called in and had to remove everyone from the plane. Eventually, the woman agreed to leave, and her removal was met with cheers from the other passengers.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
In a statement to ABC, Frontier said, "Rodents, including squirrels, are not allowed on Frontier flights."
The furor over service animals is such that Frontier's policy is changing as of Nov. 1, after which service animals must meet a stringent list of requirements and will be limited to only dogs or cats.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
So long, emotional support squirrel. May you one day realize the dream of cramming on to a flight on a budget airline to Cleveland.
People with disabilities want better tech and they know how to build itAmazon’s grocery store disruption has a very human problemAll the most mesmerizing space gifs from NASA's brandJerks stole photos from Maisie Williams' private Facebook account2016's most viewed YouTube videos might surprise youThe Bluetooth SIG has announced its adoption of Bluetooth 5 standardsThe best tech gifts for Netflix and chill this holiday seasonThe Bluetooth SIG has announced its adoption of Bluetooth 5 standards'The Bachelor' just announced a 'dramatic' line of signature winesThe internet is really pumped about this teen's quinceañeraThousands of snow geese were killed after landing in a toxic lakeSuper famous cat tweets feline Christmas song and it's gloriousEvil Geniuses knock Wings Gaming out of 'Dota 2' Boston MajorMichael Jordan is the Michael Jordan of China again after legal victoryAll the most mesmerizing space gifs from NASA's brandWatch the 'godfather' of fake news try to explain himself on Samantha Bee's showMashReads Podcast: Here's why you should reread 'To Kill A Mockingbird'Lady Gaga breaks down how PTSD affects her life in a poignant letterThis artist creates stunning henna crowns for chemotherapy patientsPolar vortex about to blast U.S. with coldest air of the season J. D. Salinger on a Cruise, and Other News by Sadie Stein What We’re Loving: Dickinson, Waltz, Lupines by The Paris Review In Praise of the Flâneur by Bijan Stephen The top 10 vibrators, according to the internet What We’re Loving: Mysteries, Horror, Geography by The Paris Review Catch nearly 100 Prime Day deals that are still live Google slapped with a lawsuit for 'secretly stealing' data to train Bard My Hinge match invited me to dinner and blocked me as I waited for our table Twitter honors Selma's Bloody Sunday on 56th anniversary Depths by Geoff Bendeck Librarians’ Darkest Secrets, and Other News by Sadie Stein MIT study: ChatGPT increases productivity, has potential to close the inequality gap What to know about the third round of economic impact payments Easy Reading by Sadie Stein It's official: SAG The History of Letters of Note, and Other News by Sadie Stein The EU will require all smartphones to have replaceable batteries by 2027 Twitter is producing errors. What we know. Frost Papers Recovered, and Other News by Sadie Stein 20 relatable tweets for anyone struggling with pandemic brain
1.93s , 8200.7578125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【The Perfect Taste of Sex】,Information Information Network