Qantas Refuse "Assistance" dog

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Mental illness are real, but there are medications which can taken or meditation techniques employed to treat anxiety etc without turning a flight into a petting zoo like they have in the USA.

Very true. This current case is exactly about that. She wanted her pet to sit next to her on the flight. Nothing more, nothing less.

The argument for need of anything but a genuine guide or assistance dog on a flight is tenuous as best, and as someone who is highly allergic to cats I hope never to have to share a plane with one.

There are also a lot of people who are allergic to dogs but dogs are allowed onto trains, buses, cabs, Uber and just about everywhere else. When some restaurant is accused of having trace elements of peanuts in food and someone has an allergic reaction to it then there is a massive outcry and reprecssions but when the same happens with dog hair then it is considered just a normal part of life.

As a side question, has anyone ever seen any dogs, including guide dogs, on any planes that belong to Gulf kingdoms or even Malaysia, Brunei or Indonesia? Dogs are considered 'filthy' animals in these parts of the world.
 
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There are also a lot of people who are allergic to dogs

True but most dog allergies are to the fur which if you keep at a distance from is no issue (so asked to be moved if you are seated next to the genuine guide/assistance dog. Whereas most people with cat allergies react to the cats dandruff which tends to get airborne more so than fur. Plus it is much easier to keep a trained guide/assistance dog at the feet of their owners (they don't get a seat) than a cat which has natural tendency to climb all over things.

dogs are allowed onto trains, buses, cabs, Uber and just about everywhere else

in NSW only guide/assistance dogs are allowed on public trains and busses. I've seen a bus driver refuse to admit people with pets on the bus (even if in a carrier). Cabs/Uber is at drivers discretion unless a genuine guide/assistance dog.

The difference is accredited training and genuine need. I've sat next to a guide dog on a few domestic flights and no issues at all, and unless you were sitting in seat next to them you wouldn't even know they were there, as they sit still all flight one in place and dont make a sound.
 
in NSW only guide/assistance dogs are allowed on public trains and busses.

I didn't know this about trains as I see people quite frequently getting on board with dogs. Just last week a woman got on with her dog which immediately jumped on a seat and occupied all three seats while she sat opposite him. And this at a time when people can get fined for putting feet on seats.
 
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