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I average about twenty flights a year, about half are international. I get a TSA idiot every once in a while. Really hard to just bite your tongue but no point in arguing with them, it will not be productive. Pre Check and Mobile Passport make life easy.
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Their Instagram is a good read...
https://www.instagram.com/tsa/?hl=en Like everyone else has said, don’t be an inconsiderate idiot, plan your time accordingly and you will be fine... |
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I did it a while back. Super nice to walk past the super long TSA line at SeaTac last week and breeze right through at pre. Between that and my company having our own bag drop lane with delta, I felt like a VIP. 🤪🤪🤪
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It would seem that it's totally at the discretion of the supervising agent on duty that day. Of course, avoiding those hassles and the long lines of unwashed masses is an option...for a price. ;) |
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Go figure. |
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I fly almost non-stop, and truth be told, its the moronic public that creates every single issue....the slow-walkers, the entitled, the generally stupid, and there are alot of them. They can't get out of their own way---can't or simply won't plan ahead, and just like the left-lane police, they are the ones mucking it up for everyone else. I take no issue in mowing down the tool-bags who literally stop on the moving sidewalks, who walk five abreast down every hallway, who have no idea that they cannot bring a big-gulp or a 32 ounce mocha latte through security--as if most of the folks I see with these can afford to consume that extra 2000 calories to begin with..... I also have TSA Precheck, Global Entry and Clear--and that usually gets me ahead of some of the cattle-call. |
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you personally on account of what you do have a strong counter-influence in how you look out and see a crowd, you get to see a crowd of passion, you get to see a crowd of love, you see a crowd of humanity. It is the regular walking through a system where guilty is a base assumption over innocence. Others see a crowd of stupid, a crowd of obstacles, a herd of dumb animals lining up like cattle. Look at comments about the guy who may hold the line up from not having flown before and not inherently knowing what to do. A little compassion would be patient. Instead there is an uncompassionate herd through the check point. Standing legs spread with my hands up through a scanner in the same posture as a guilty criminal being searched for arrest can't be good for the human mind on a regular basis. Each time you go through you give up being human temporarily. Now some pick it back up on the other side, but the continual laying down of what we consider basic human rights and dignity to transform into animals at the airport has got to wear on some of those folks that do it regularly. I know it is a necessity for some folks, and some may handle it better than others. Still, if you can avoid stepping in to such a situation you are better off. It has been a gradual increase of one thing at time, so frequent fliers may not be aware of just how harsh things feel to someone who is not a frequent flier and is confronted with the "new ways" in all their glory. |
Just get your license and buy a plane. No TSA and take what you want with you.
http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1531399914.jpg |
The patdown through security etc is to me an acceptable way to get flying from A to B. It is indeed what makes it more secure. We make choices whether we fly or drive but when it comes to trans ocean I will take the plane over a ship any day and of course you cannot drive a car in water too well.
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I'm a pragmatist. Little **** like this doesn't really bother me. If you have a better solution, let's hear it. Some people get bent out of shape over the smallest things, it's getting to be ridiculous. |
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Imagine if you had to remove your shoes, have your bags inspected, strip naked (which is essentially what a body scanner does), and then be molested to do any other activity? No one would stand for these things if introduced all at once. But because they were done gradually, and for our safety, people blindly accept exactly the kind of warrantless searches and seizures our constitution is supposed to protect against. The saddest part is that all of the violations airline passengers endure are largely just expensive and ineffective security theater. They do almost nothing to really improve safety other than reassuring those that don't think too hard about their loss of dignity and fooling casual criminals into thinking they will probably get caught--all the while punishing millions of otherwise innocent passengers along the way. There are security methods that are less expensive, less intrusive, preserve dignity and civil rights, and far more effective--but we don't do them, why? I have to conclude that "airline safety" was just an excuse for an unconstitutional power grab rather than an effort to really protect us. |
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There were armed hi-jacking attempts after 9/11, passengers and crew used whatever they had to physically overwhelm and beat down the hi-jackers. |
The way to go is by private jet. I was waiting in the cell phone lot at SDF during the Kentucky Derby. The airport is so packed with planes they park on the taxiways, and there was a row of nice Gulfstreams, Falcon Jets, etc across the fence in front of me. The main race had finished about 30 minutes prior. As I was sitting there, a limo drove through a security gate with a wave and looped around to a waiting G5. I timed it- less than 8 minutes later the plane was taxiing for takeoff. I watched this happen 2 or 3 more times as I sat there. Im definitely getting a Netjets card if I win the lottery.
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The problem is not the airline personnel or TSA it is the occasional ignorant passenger who acts like an idiot on or around an aircraft.
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