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The airline industry has never been better for customers
United Airlines.
United Airlines has been in the spotlight this week due to its treatment of a passenger dragged off of a flight.

Welcome to Airline Hate Week! Wait, isn’t that every week?

On Sunday, United Airlines (UAL) was sucked into a jet engine of social-media rage after a flight crew summoned Chicago airport police to remove a passenger from a regional flight to make room for crew members needed to staff a flight the next day. The 69-year-old man was eventually dragged off the aircraft, leaving him bleeding and dazed.

Last week, Delta Air Lines (DAL) canceled thousands of flights for days in a row, thanks toa system meltdown following a bout of thunderstorms around its Atlanta hub. That left passengers sleeping in airports and a deceased man’s body stuck in a cargo hold for two days.

American Airlines (AAL) hasn’t done too badly — but the month is still young. And if I were Southwest (LUV), JetBlue (JBLU) or Alaska (ALK), I wouldn’t get too cocky either.

While most of the venom on Twitter has been aimed at United, the general tenor of this airline angst has been that commercial air travel has descended to a level that barely beats bouncing across town on a crowded bus.

Still, at the risk of having readers want to stuff me into an overhead cabin bin: The facts simply don’t support that tale of woe.

Look at the numbers

The most common defense of the airline industry is its record of safety: Injuries and deaths have been declining for decades — the last fatal accident involving a U.S. carrier happened eight years ago. Meanwhile, the toll on U.S. highways can fairly be described as “American carnage.”

Safety is good! I prefer modes of travel more likely to deliver me intact. But statistics collected by the Department of Transportation show improvements in less eventful areas.

Airlines mishandle fewer bags — from 5.18 per thousand passengers in 1995 to 3.24 in 2015, the most recent year with data available. They bump fewer people from overbooked flights: The percent denied boarding has dropped from .18% in 1995 to .09% in 2015.

On-time arrivals could be better, though, having budged only from 78.6% in 1995 to 79.4% in 2015.

Flying.
Flying is actually a lot better for passengers than it’s ever been. (Photo: AP)

Adjusted for inflation, domestic airfares have fallen from an average of $472.68 in 1995 to $352.15 in 2016. The checked-bag fees nobody likes ate up some of that difference, but you can buy out of them with a $90 per year credit card that should recoup its value with four flights a year.

And fewer customers complain to the Feds (although you can’t rule out some offended travelers giving up hope). This January, the latest month with DoT data, passengers filed 1,003 complaints versus 1,259 a year ago, 1,480 in January 2015 and 1,713 in January 2014.