Slashdot is powered by your submissions, so send in your scoop

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Businesses Transportation United States

'Don't Bail Out the Cruise Industry' (theverge.com) 277

An anonymous reader shares a column: The United States economy is grinding to a halt as the country grapples with the novel coronavirus pandemic, and one of the first major actions President Trump has floated is having the government bail out the cruise line industry, which he says is a "prime candidate." He shouldn't do it. There are myriad reasons not to bail out the cruise industry's biggest players.

Here are just a few: 1. They're not really US companies. [...] 2. They pay basically zero federal income tax. [...]
3. They're bad corporate actors: These companies use the protections offered by the countries they are incorporated in as a shield. They make passengers sign over a ton of rights before they even come aboard. Many employees often face long hours and brutal working conditions.
4. They pollute the air and oceans. Every fossil fuel-powered mode of transportation pollutes the air, but cruise ships are among the worst. They emit more sulfur dioxide than all of the passenger vehicles in Europe combined. Cruise ships also pollute the oceans by dumping waste. Not just illegally, for which these companies have been repeatedly fined, but also in some cases with impunity, again thanks to protections afforded by the laws of the countries where they're incorporated. And where they've been caught, there have been coverups.
5. They are not necessary. [...]

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

'Don't Bail Out the Cruise Industry'

Comments Filter:
  • by bblb ( 5508872 ) on Wednesday March 25, 2020 @03:49PM (#59871334)

    For once, I've got to agree with the anti-corporate crowd... the cruise industry is an absolute shit industry and bailing them out does virtually nothing for the US economy beyond saving a fairly insignificant amount of mostly low level jobs.

    • by hey! ( 33014 ) on Wednesday March 25, 2020 @03:54PM (#59871350) Homepage Journal

      Being anti-corporate probably means being anti-bailout, but the converse is not true.

      The criterion for whether an industry gets a bailout shouldn't be how we feel about them, but how essential they are to the US national interests. Even if you *love* the cruise industry, it's hard to argue they're essential. They don't provide an irreplaceable service (like the banking industry) or employ lots of people (like the auto industry).

      • by bblb ( 5508872 ) on Wednesday March 25, 2020 @04:18PM (#59871476)

        Totally agree... I mean, don't get me wrong, I love me some cruise industry on a personal level in terms of vacations and excessive day drinking but they're just not a critical industry to the US economy and have no business being propped up by US tax payers.

        • by Xenx ( 2211586 )
          I'm not arguing for the cruise industry specifically, but while recreational activities might not be critical for mere survival they are critical for the continued ongoing wellbeing of the workforce.
          • by Ambassador Kosh ( 18352 ) on Wednesday March 25, 2020 @05:34PM (#59871836)

            I am okay with bailing out other recreational industries but at the core the cruise companies are not USA companies and don't pay USA taxes and don't provide a critical service so I see no reason why taxpayers should bail them out.

            If your local paint ball, laser tag, d&d shop, sports area etc needs help I don't have a problem with that. Those places have been hit hard by social distancing and employ local people and pay taxes. We do want them to stay around.

        • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by Dutch Gun ( 899105 ) on Wednesday March 25, 2020 @04:03PM (#59871392)

      I'm not typically one to side with the anti-corporate crowd either. I have nothing against them per-se (if they're bad corporate actors, let's fix the damned tax laws), but if they're not US-based corporations and not employing US citizens, I also see no reason to use US tax dollars to bail them out. Maybe corporations will re-think whether it's a good idea to be incorporated in some Caribbean tax haven instead of the US when the shit hits the fan.

      • ... but if they're not US-based corporations and not employing US citizens, I also see no reason to use US tax dollars to bail them out. Maybe corporations will re-think whether it's a good idea to be incorporated in some Caribbean tax haven instead of the US when the shit hits the fan.

        And that's all we really need to know. The debate over what's essential is pretty subjective but the debate over where companies are based and how many they employ are much more clear cut. No taxes no bailout. And for those who barely paid taxes they should get a similarly prorated bailout. That alone will clear out much of the abuse. Choose to be based abroad? Let that country bail you out.

    • by Anonymous Coward
      Besides, all their employees are Philipino or Malaysian. Let those countries bail them out.
    • by nospam007 ( 722110 ) * on Wednesday March 25, 2020 @04:44PM (#59871630)

      "For once, I've got to agree with the anti-corporate crowd... the cruise industry is an absolute shit industry and bailing them out does virtually nothing for the US economy beyond saving a fairly insignificant amount of mostly low level jobs."

      First, they are not US ships, they are flagged in Bermuda, Panama etc and the low level jobs you mention are done by people from the Philippines etc.

    • Agreed. They're shitty and nothing of value would be lost by them going away.
  • Bail them out (Score:5, Interesting)

    by OverlordQ ( 264228 ) on Wednesday March 25, 2020 @03:54PM (#59871352) Journal

    On the condition they're all floating hospital ships for the duration of the pandemic

    • Re:Bail them out (Score:5, Insightful)

      by SirAstral ( 1349985 ) on Wednesday March 25, 2020 @04:00PM (#59871376)

      LMFTFY

      "floating petri dishes"

      Their entire environment is inhospitable for a healthy and clean environment. The entire structure of a cruise ship is one giant cut corner to squeeze as many humans and their germs into the smallest spaces they can possibly get by with.

      Literally the opposite of what a hospital is. I might prefer to play hide and seek with coronavirus in the tundra against a pack of wolves than take medical care on a cruise ship... just packed with people with other infectious problems co-habitating with coronavirus...

    • On the condition they're all floating hospital ships for the duration of the pandemic

      The "hospitals" where they send people to die. In Italy they just use tents.

      • On the condition they're all floating hospital ships for the duration of the pandemic

        The "hospitals" where they send people to die. In Italy they just use tents.

        Better tents than trenches. I guess.

  • I won't pretend I've totally thought this through, but at the moment, I think I'd agree... let them die.

    Cruise line companies are "moneyfunnels". They don't employ large numbers of people relative to their profit, so they're not redistributing wealth to "the people". I don't feel the same way about car manufacturers because they employ a huge workforce, which has an even bigger secondary supporting industry. Yes, they're profitable, but a large amount of the earnings does end up back in our pockets. C
    • Re:Moneyfunnels. (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Lonng_Time_Lurker ( 6285236 ) on Wednesday March 25, 2020 @04:03PM (#59871398)

      Eh, those people deserve to have their money taken from them.

      Everything about a cruise, unless you are disabled / old enough to barely be able to move, is awful.

      Set agendas (cool you saw a port for half a day, did a shit discovery dive, ate at a tourist trap restaurant),
      Set places (destroyed by said cruises coming into them),
      Set people, stuck on a boat with a bunch of other boring morons that can't even run their own trip.

      Bill Burr has it right with sinking cruise lines to thin out the population. The entire thing is garbage. Nearly straight out of Wall-E.

      • Re:Moneyfunnels. (Score:4, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Brave Guy ( 457657 ) on Wednesday March 25, 2020 @04:39PM (#59871606)

        Have you ever actually been on a cruise? The cruise lines are certainly far from perfect corporate citizens, but a lot of what you wrote there is just stereotypes with a side of bigotry.

        Are cruise holidays for everyone? Obviously not.

        Do cruise ships cause real problems, and should we demand that the industry improves to address them? Absolutely.

        Is the legal and regulatory framework under which they operate offensively weak and in need of dramatic and abrupt correction? Sure.

        But in the end, you could level similar criticisms at a lot of holiday and leisure activities and the ecosystems that have built up around them. I don't see much of a moral argument, or probably an economic one either, for stepping in to prop up the cruise lines with public money, any more than a hotel chain or airline, but the vitriol on your comment seems unwarranted.

        • "The cruise lines are certainly far from perfect corporate citizens, but a lot of what you wrote there is just stereotypes with a side of bigotry."

          Remember, bigotry is okay... when a certain group does it. People have a deep seated need to find winners and losers in everything they interact with. It is just the nature we have. It takes a lot of get people to understand that real humans also work for cruise lines too. And while it is totally not okay to turn foreigners away at the border, it sure is shit

        • I can't believe my insane rant was upvoted - but even more, I can't believe you're calling my denunciation of cruise ship lovers bigotry, on the level of slavery and the holocaust.

          First of all, cruise ship patrons chose to be there. You're right, murdering cruise ships of people would murder innocent employees. Guess what's not really going to happen? Murdering cruise ships.

          Second - I have been to many cruise ship port destinations. Cartagena, for example. Colombia, beautiful country. Port stop, garba

    • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

      I won't pretend I've totally thought this through, but at the moment, I think I'd agree... let them die.

      Cruise line companies are "moneyfunnels". They don't employ large numbers of people relative to their profit, so they're not redistributing wealth to "the people". I don't feel the same way about car manufacturers because they employ a huge workforce, which has an even bigger secondary supporting industry. Yes, they're profitable, but a large amount of the earnings does end up back in our pockets. Cruise

  • To hell with them. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by RatBastard ( 949 ) on Wednesday March 25, 2020 @03:57PM (#59871362) Homepage

    I live in a city that is overwhelmed by cruise ship passengers every summer, and I'd be happy to see the cruise ship companies die. They do everything in their power to avoid paying any local taxes and fees, have bought out or driven out of business most local businesses that cater to their passengers, hire as few locals as possible during the tourist season, and a list of sins longer than I can remember.

    And really, the list of reasons why not to bail them out should only need one item: They're not American companies. Let them as Liberia or whatever country they're registered in bail them out.

    • by jonwil ( 467024 )

      The companies involved appear to be headquartered in America but the ships are registered in whatever flag-of-convenience country benefits them the most.
      100% agree that the US shouldn't be in the business of bailing out companies that don't provide economic benefit to the US.

  • by Austerity Empowers ( 669817 ) on Wednesday March 25, 2020 @03:57PM (#59871364)

    I don't know if punishing the cruise industry is justified, this doesn't seem like the time or place to debate that. The question is what these bailouts should mean.

    Money should be used to make payroll and accounts payable, any other use of the money requires a reimbursement to the government during the next tax filing. No share buy-backs, no dividends, no bonus pay, nada. Keep the doors open and the employees paid so that business can return to usual quickly.

    Shareholders will get absolutely nothing anyway if the company folds, at least for most companies. There's no need to artificially pump the stock market just to get the orange moron re-elected.

    • by mishehu ( 712452 )
      Not bailing out a company is not the same thing as punishing a company. It's not like any company has a g0d-given right to a free handout anymore than I as a private citizen am. In fact, they should have far less right to that than me, and I'm not one who ever wants to be in a position that I have to ask for one.
  • by gurps_npc ( 621217 ) on Wednesday March 25, 2020 @03:58PM (#59871368) Homepage

    They choose to register in foreign countries for tax and regulatory purposes.

    That is perfectly legal and acceptable. But that also means they are NOT AMERICAN companies and we should not be bailing them out.

    What next, are we going to bail out the Toyota and Honda?

    • by Mashiki ( 184564 )

      What next, are we going to bail out the Toyota and Honda?

      You bailed out Toyota and Honda in the last crash, at least the US divisions of it. Canada did the same to the Canadian divisions.

    • by Ogive17 ( 691899 ) on Wednesday March 25, 2020 @08:44PM (#59872230)
      That's not really a fair comparison. You have two Japanese companies who have made significant investment in the US that directly employ 10s of thousands of Americans (at good wages). Then you have cruise companies who have not invested billions, do not produce anything in American, and honestly have very few well paying jobs for Americans.

      Yeah, Honda and Toyota profits funnel back to Japan but they do pay taxes domestically first. Do you want to talk about the taxes being paid by American companies?
  • One issue is that there is a large industry set up of small coastal villages that depend on cruise ship visits. Many of these are situated in low income countries or areas, and is the primary income generator for the region. Killing off the cruise ship industry is going to devastate these areas.

    Maybe they could permanently dock the ships near these areas and use them as floating resort/hotels?

    • Re:Side Effects (Score:4, Insightful)

      by thadtheman ( 4911885 ) on Wednesday March 25, 2020 @04:04PM (#59871410)
      Are they part of the US?
      • by Mashiki ( 184564 )

        Puerto Rico, Guam, Hawaii, Alaska for example are part of the US. All of them dock cruise ships as well.

      • No, but guess who will be probably be bailing out the countries affected? Think of all those tiny Caribbean countries who get most of their income from tourism. It won't be Cuba or Mexico bailing them out.

    • So, I'm not American and don't have a dog in this show, but you might consider the idea of bankrupting them and buying up the assets cheap ($400 for a liner?) so you can restart a US based liner company for 1/100th of the cost of a bail out?
      • So, I'm not American and don't have a dog in this show, but you might consider the idea of bankrupting them and buying up the assets cheap ($400 for a liner?) so you can restart a US based liner company for 1/100th of the cost of a bail out?

        Couldn't afford the US based crew.. .If you are operating a US flagged ship, you have to follow US law, including minimum wage rules, workman's compensation insurance, duty hours and coast guard safety regulations and inspections.

        So, you might have obtained a $400 boat, but your operational costs will be higher than the guy who registers his ship with one of the more common nations and bypasses all the expensive stuff.

      • Even if you buy them cheap, it's going to cost you a hundred times that in disinfectant.

  • The moment someone doesn't like a particular industry they suddenly get all libertarian about bailouts. No business should be bailed out. No individual should be receiving handouts from the government.
  • Agreed (Score:5, Insightful)

    by superdave80 ( 1226592 ) on Wednesday March 25, 2020 @04:02PM (#59871388)

    In fact ALL companies that are now 'headquartered' (wink, wink) in another country should fend for themselves.

    Let the cruise industry die for all I care. Someone with some money will snatch up the corpses for pennies on the dollars and we'll have cruises again.

  • Then they can finance new startups instead, with new people, on the condition they space the seats out better. It's better than dumping good money on today's bullshit cattle cars.

    And we most definitely have to cap the bottomless well Wall Street is sucking dry right now. Many trillions already went up in smoke, and not a peep from the cheap seats!

  • Hundreds of thousands of people work for that industry and hundreds of thousands more owe their jobs to the tourist business the ships bring to ports.

    Do people matter?

    • Do people matter?

      That's the wrong question.

      The question is "Do corporations matter MORE than people?"

      There are 2 answers:

      Bail out the corps, which will (incidentally) help only the people it employs, and let other people lose their homes and health, so investors keep their dividends.

      Bail out the people, which will (purposefully) help everyone, and let the corporations die so their assets can be reacquired and put to better use.

      • by Kohath ( 38547 )

        What's a "better use" for cruise ships?

        People work in the cruise industry because the industry is profitable and provides a service that customers value. You can't magically replace that activity with something else. If you could, why didn't you personally already build it and become a billionaire?

        All of the good things will continue because... magic is a good plan if you want people to be desperately poor and curse your name.

        • What's a "better use" for cruise ships?

          What's a better use for ANY assets of failed corporations sold at auction? With an appropriate price, there's more uses than I would be able to list, like "cheaper fucking cruises" (for one) is like not even a full step of imagination, let alone a leap. Asking the question in the first place is a stark failure of imagination.

          ...You can't magically replace that activity with something else. ...

          Nobody said anything about magic except you, and if you still believe in magic as an adult you're basically an NPC.

          People have needs, wants and resources to pursue them, and if cruises

          • by Kohath ( 38547 )

            Bailing out corporations is communism but only for business.

            Communism is permanent. The measures being discussed would be a bridge to 2021 or 2022 when everything goes back to normal.

    • by taustin ( 171655 )

      By and large, those people aren't US citizens either. Perhaps they should look to their own governments for help?

      The flip side is, with the tax structures and very expensive safety regulations that no other country finds necessary, the choice isn't between foreign flagged ships and US flagged ships, it's between foreign flagged ships and going out of business.

      There's more than one bad guy here.

    • by RatBastard ( 949 )

      Let the countries they're registered in bail them out.

    • Re:No humanity (Score:5, Insightful)

      by liquid_schwartz ( 530085 ) on Wednesday March 25, 2020 @04:37PM (#59871600)

      Hundreds of thousands of people work for that industry and hundreds of thousands more owe their jobs to the tourist business the ships bring to ports.

      Do people matter?

      Not US ports for the most part, and certainly not US flagged ships or companies. Let the tax shelter countries bail them out since that's where they are all headquartered.

      • by Kohath ( 38547 )

        Hundreds of thousands of people work for that industry and hundreds of thousands more owe their jobs to the tourist business the ships bring to ports.

        Do people matter?

        Not US ports for the most part, and certainly not US flagged ships or companies. Let the tax shelter countries bail them out since that's where they are all headquartered.

        You guys should just say whether you think people matter or not. Do you want all the people to lose their jobs? Want to tell them they don't matter ... because Bermuda?

        I'm not even saying we should bail them out. Having some humanity is good though. And showing it looks good. Where's the humanity from you guys?

        Do you expect anyone to ever show you or your family or friends any humanity? Why should they?

  • Bail them out with the same terms as private industry. Gut the shares, issue a new 90% controlling share of preferred stock owned by all Americans non-transferable one per person over 18. Kick out all management including the board and ALL executives (make them train their replacements first). Then reorganize and have the profits go to a universal income. Sure, just a few cruise companies won’t support all Americans, but if we did this every single bailout, either companies would get their shit to
  • Ya, but ... (Score:5, Interesting)

    by fahrbot-bot ( 874524 ) on Wednesday March 25, 2020 @04:11PM (#59871440)

    They are not necessary.

    Where else can you go to get stuck for 7-14 days, contract a severe intestinal illness and shit and puke enough to lose 10-15 pounds. It's a great way to lose weight fast. I'm surprised more diet plans don't include a "Cruise Ship Option". I'm sure it's as least a fun as a no-anesthesia colonoscopy.

  • It simply is not, why governments are instituted among Men...

  • by JoeDuncan ( 874519 ) on Wednesday March 25, 2020 @04:22PM (#59871494)

    ..."American cheddar" - it's basically something totally different using the same name but with "American" slapped in front of it.

    For a country that is supposedly so "anti-socialism" they don't want decent healthcare, it's pretty fucking surprising that y'all are so damn eager to give welfare to failing corporations, but reluctant to give food stamps to starving children.

  • About Point #5 (Score:2, Insightful)

    5. They are not necessary.

    Who is to be the arbiter of what industry is or is not "necessary"? The global cruise industry's annual revenue is $35.5B. For an "unnecessary" industry, people sure spend a lot of money on it, so it must have some value to customers. If it truly didn't have any value, then their revenue would be zero. What other US industries should be declared "unnecessary" and abolished? Pornography ($12B in revenue)? Gambling ($240B in revenue)? Movies ($12B in revenue)? Let the market decide

    • the voter is. And it's pretty damn obvious American voters don't want to bail out an industry that has practically nothing to do with Americans, either hiring them or incorporating in their districts or paying taxes.

      And you're really, really bad at math. $35 billion isn't even a drop in the ocean these boats swim in. You're purposely comparing domestic numbers (gambling, movies, porn) to global ones to make your case. That is disingenuous to say the least. Do you work for a cruise line? Own one?
  • "1 billion gallons of sewage a year that goes straight into the ocean": Cruise ships dump 1 billion gallons of sewage into the ocean every year [qz.com]

    And really they are just floating cheap motels with a casino.

    As the summary says "They are not necessary"
  • The question isn't who deserves to be bailed out. Hardly any big company deserves a bailout. They're all unscrupulous and money-driven. Nobody is going to consider bailing out Apple. Apple has assets. If Apple has a bad year, they're not going to default on anything. That's the difference you need to look for. The question is, is a company going to default and who is at the other end of the default? Who will not get paid? When Europe bailed out Greece, Greece wasn't what they were worried about. By bailing
  • by nospam007 ( 722110 ) * on Wednesday March 25, 2020 @04:49PM (#59871652)

    Flag states list of the largest ship registries in the world

            PANAMA (22,6 %)
            LIBERIA (11 %)
            MARSHALL ISLANDS (6%)
            HONG KONG (5,8%)
            GREECE (5,3%)
            THE BAHAMAS (5%)
            SINGAPORE (4,8%)
            MALTA (4,4%)
            CHINA (3,5%)
            CYPRUS (2,5%)
            SOUTH KOREA (1,6%)
            NORWAY (1,5%)
            UK (1,4%)
            JAPAN (1,4%)
            GERMANY (1,4%)
            ITALY (1,3%)
            ISLE OF MAN (1,3%)
            INDIA (1,2%)
            DENMARK (1%)
            ANTIGUA & BARBUDA (1%)
            USA (1%)

    • I'm pretty sure you don't understand the work "no" (else you just like to use absolute terms even if it makes your statement misleading)

      "No US cruise ships" also "Flag states... USA (1%)"

      One of those statements isn't true.

  • Government shouldn't ever bailout an industry. If they play fast and loose, then they should deserve to fail. If they are truly necessary, then they shouldn't get it for nothing. Government should value them *in their current dire state* like any other investor fund would, and then ask for preferential voting stock based on the funds they are injecting.

    Yes this means we are back on the road to government owning the means of production (as they likely become majority shareholder with each successive bailout)

  • We'll bail out any ships with a US registration. Not companies, individual ships.

    Of course, as the cruise lines register their ships elsewhere to avoid taxes, yeah, well.

    Fuck 'em. They decided to not pay taxes, I decided to not rescue them.
  • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Wednesday March 25, 2020 @05:06PM (#59871728)
    they've bought off your Congress person using their enormous profits. They're getting bailed out. If anyone reading this wants this to change then they're going to have to start actively supporting politicians who refuse corporate money. Until that happens then they are our masters, and we will do as they say.
  • by Pfhorrest ( 545131 ) on Wednesday March 25, 2020 @05:11PM (#59871754) Homepage Journal

    Don't bail out any businesses. Bail out people. Those people will then spend money on businesses, and the businesses that produce things that people actually need will continue to thrive as a consequence. This whole problem was caused by people at the bottom losing access to their source of income, and the effects of that trickling up through the economy. Money trickles up, not down. The lack of money at the bottom is the cause of this problem. Sending more money to the bottom is the solution. Bailing out businesses from the top down is thoroughly anti-free-market. Make sure the potential customers have money and then let the market sort out who that money gets spent on. (And if the problem is that most of that money would get spent on paying rent or servicing debt rather than actually buying useful products and services from businesses that provide them... well, then maybe it's a problem that so many people have to devote so much of their income to paying rent and interest, and we should fix that too).

    If some kind of truly essential business absolutely needs to be bailed out, then that should take the form of the government buying it for cheap, fixing it up, and then maybe selling it off again later. It doesn't even have to require any special government action, ordinary market processes can handle it. Imagine if you were rich person with infinitely deep pockets and you personally wanted to bail out an airline. Calculate the market capitalization of a bailed-out airline. Subtract the cost of the cash infusion it would take to fix them up. Divide by the number of shares. Issue lots of buy orders for that amount, and when the company tanks low enough you'll start taking ownership of it. Once you have a controlling stake, inject cash as needed to bail it out. Then issue sell orders at the new bailed-out value. Use profits from the difference between purchase price and sale price to cover the cash injection. Voila. There is no reason the government can't do that just as well,

  • are you fucking kidding me? the cruise "industry"? go fuck yourself!

  • Seriously, many of these companies that will want a bail out have HQ here, but taxed outside of the nation and have the bulk of their employees elsewhere.
    These companies should NOT be bailed out by America.
    All companies that get bailed out should :
    1) be FULLY taxed in the states. if they moved their taxation offshore, then let those nations bail them out.
    2) if the company has offshored more than 50% of their work, then again, let those other nations bail them out.
    3) if the company sells more than 50%
  • by NimbleSquirrel ( 587564 ) on Wednesday March 25, 2020 @06:44PM (#59871996)

    First and foremost, I used to work on cruise ships, but I do not think that they should be bailed out.

    That said I have a problem with the points raised in the column:

    1) Most major cruise companies are headquarterd in Miami or Fort Lauderdale, and they do employ large numbers of US workers. The cruise industry (not just the Crusie Lines, but also supporting organisations) generate more than 330,000 US jobs. They follow US Coastguard and CDC requirements. But their ships operate in international waters, so they are more global businesses rather than solely US companies.

    2) A vast number of Fortune 500 companies are incorporated in places like Grand Cayman and Ireland for the specific purposes of avoiding tax. Cruise companies are no different from Apple, Amazon and Alphabet in this regard. That said this is the reason I do not believe they should be bailed out. If they will not contribute their actual income tax to the US, they should not be allowed to receive a US Government bailout.

    3) For the individual ships they must comply with the flag state the ship is registered under. As I recall NCL did try ships registered under the US flag (they still have one: the Pride of America), but they were required to have 70% US crew and labour costs alone (especially once various unions got involved) made the project prohibitively expensive and restricted the ship to US waters. Other ships use foreign crews: there were around 50 different nationalities on the ships I worked on. International labour is cheaper. While I can't really speak for others, I was paid well. I never experienced horrible conditions, but it is a ship so space is at a premium and cabins can be rather small (especially when you've had a bad day). The ships I worked on had well funded crew welfare organisations to make sure staff were taken care of. Food and medical expenses are all taken care of. I did work long hours on occasion: the ship works 24/7 every single day, so there is always work to do. Also, you can't just pick up the phone and get more people in to help when things go wrong.

    4) Cruise ships MUST comply with the environmental laws of the countries whose waters they are sailing in. Suggesting they get to hide behind corporate parents is rubbish.
    Cruise ships are mostly fueled by fuel oil, which is a really dirty fuel compared to petrol and diesel. It is really high in sulfur and impurities (although EU requirements that came into effect 1 Jan 2020 force cruise ships to have much lower sulfur content in their fuels). Most modern ships have exhaust scrubbers to specifically remove SOx and NOx gasses from their exhausts. Do they "emit more sulfur dioxide than all of the passenger vehicles in Europe combined..."? While they do emit SOx, even with scrubbers, I highly doubt it is more than all passenger vehicles in the EU combined. The only source I can find for this (the OP citation is behind a paywall) is an 'in house analysis' done by the Transport & Environment NGO. A numerical extrapolation based on old data by an environmental lobby group is not the same as an actual scientific study by a independent and unbiased research organisation.
    As for waste, most ships have treatment plants on board. They will hold Graywater (the term for shower and washing water), treat it until it is safe, and then release it once they are in deep water. Blackwater (the term for sewage and heavily contaminated water) is treated and held until the ship is in port when it is transferred to the local treatment plants. The only time Blackwater is released is when they are way out in open ocean (eg transatlantic crossing), and then it is only treated Blackwater that is released not raw sewage. There are trash handling facilities on board, and solid waste is held until it can be offloaded in port and is not dumped overboard.
    Yes, cruise ships aren't environmentally friendly but they are not as bad as some make out. Cruise ships represent a tiny portion of the shipping industry, but are the most visible and probably the most regulated.

    5) Cruise ships aren't essential, but what kind of tourism is? They do offer a way for many people to get out and travel without a lot of complication. Sure, cruise ships have their issues, but nothing out there is a perfect solution.

"Being against torture ought to be sort of a multipartisan thing." -- Karl Lehenbauer, as amended by Jeff Daiell, a Libertarian

Working...