Tampico Trauma
Line Up and Wait
- Joined
- Nov 3, 2015
- Messages
- 621
- Location
- Southeast of Disorder
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Mauled Formerly known as Tampico Trauma
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I work in the 121 world.PIC/Capt ARE the same thing in the 121 world.
"PIC and in charge".... LOL, No ****Two Capts flying together? One is the PIC and in charge.
As a citizen of a free society, some danger is to be expected at all times.Nobody ever expected box cutters to be used for anything else, too.
Plenty would argue that we're not truly free.As a citizen of a free society, some danger is to be expected at all times.
Are you arguing that no price is too high to ensure ultimate safety? AKA, sure we inconvenience and stifle the freedoms of billions of people daily, but if we stop just one attack it is worth it?
Because Richard Reid would promptly serve as evidence that you've gained nothing while losing lots. So would Abdulmutallab.
But if every attempt to stop terrorism has failed miserably and we call that success I guess I lose that argument.
Plenty would argue that we're not truly free.
I consider the TSA a minor inconvenience. Exaggerate all you want.
This is an interesting argument because it likely conforms with how the 50% of US citizens who actually think the TSA is doing some good view the situation. There are several lines of argument which suggest that this observation or the similar one that "there have been no more terrorist attacks on airliners since 2001" don't provide reason a to believe the TSA improves traveler's safety.
Perhaps most concretely there is the fact that there have been no terrorist attacks on the lines to enter TSA screening in the U.S. These lines often contain several hundred people who can't have been screened yet, because it is the line to be screened. This is a very attractive target for a terrorist attack, yet none has been performed in the US (it happened recently in Europe). That is likely because this type of attack is very rare and there just aren't that many people in the U.S. who want to commit that kind of terrorist act. It certainly can't be due to the TSA's procedures.
Secondly, there is the fact that the TSA's procedures only catch 4% of attempts to smuggle contraband through the checkpoints. Do we seriously believe that terrorists who are willing to die for their cause would be deterred by a 4% chance of being caught?
Thirdly, the TSA has never been able to provide any evidence that they have prevented a single attack.
Finally, and more abstractly, but perhaps most importantly, these are just extremely rare events so accurately reasoning about their causes or prevention takes a lot of data. The last time a commercial airliner leaving a US airport was certainly destroyed by a non-crew member prior to 2001 was in 1962. There was the explosion off Long Island which some theorized may have been a terrorist attack. Even if we count that, it would require 75 years from 2001 to be able to make a valid statistical argument that the rate of terrorist attacks had decreased since the institution of the TSA.
Given all of this data, what is the likelihood that the TSA's policies have prevented or will prevent a terrorist attack? I think quite low. From a policy perspective, that likelihood has to be balanced against the costs. Given the costs of the TSA, in dollars, other lives lost on the highways due to displacement to more dangerous forms of transportation, and the violation of innocent people's privacy, I think we have to ask -- is it worth it? Incredibly, the TSA has never performed a formal cost-benefit analysis of their policies.
Auburn Calloway, the ******* who tried to hijack FedEx 705, was a crewmember, but he was not operating that flight. He was a jumpseater.And though not an airliner, a non-crewmember very nearly brought down a FedEx DC-10 in 1994, and severely injured the crew.
What about this one:
"7 December 1987; Pacific Southwest Airlines BAe146-200; near San Luis Obispo, CA: A recently fired USAir employee used his invalidated credentials to board the aircraft with a pistol and apparently killed his former manager and both pilots (USAir had recently purchased PSA). All five crew members and the 37 other passengers were killed."There was also Pacific Air Lines flight 773 in 1964 (Fairchild F-27 from Stockton to SFO). The pilot, Captain Ernest Clark, was the father of airshow performer Julie Clark.
[http://www.airsafe.com/events/hijack.htm]
Maybe I'm just lucky, but I've never been bothered or had any trouble with TSA. I get more annoyed at the people who travel once a year who don't know what they're doing in line.
I travel with a firearm. Springfield XD40 subcompact. Not all the time, but most of the time.
Here I am, in Yuma, AZ, having travelled with this particular gun for a year or so in its factory case with a lock on it.
Officer Blart called me back to the ticket desk once I had already gone through security to inform me that I would not be able to take my gun with me because my case didn't meet their requirements.
He told me that my case could be broken in to. I disagreed. Well, he showed me, by prying open my case and breaking one of the tabs off. Then Supervisor Fife came out, informing me that my case was not approved because if you had small hands you'd be able to work through the now broken (by officer Blart) you could touch the gun.
Here I am, 8 minutes to board with no rental car and no other flights that day. I spent the next 15 minutes arguing with the two.... The CBP agent came by and finally talked some sense into these boys....
My final statement was: put the case back in my suitcase and ensure that it gets packed in the bottom of the baggage compartment and I'll promise not to get up from my seat, cut a hole in the floor of the CRJ-200 and dig through the bags until I find my suitcase on the 38 minute flight to Phoenix and I won't say anything about you breaking my case.
Problem solved.
I now have a nice key-locking metal case from Tractor Supply.
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Unfortunately, a few years ago the agency changed their titles to "officer". Even if they're not sworn or real LEOs. It was done to boost morale and "command respect" from the public. (yes, really).Please do not refer to them as 'officer' unless they are carrying a firearm (there are some). Otherwise, they are screeners and have no law enforcement authority.
I travel with a firearm. Springfield XD40 subcompact. Not all the time, but most of the time.
Here I am, in Yuma, AZ, having travelled with this particular gun for a year or so in its factory case with a lock on it.
Officer Blart called me back to the ticket desk once I had already gone through security to inform me that I would not be able to take my gun with me because my case didn't meet their requirements.
He told me that my case could be broken in to. I disagreed. Well, he showed me, by prying open my case and breaking one of the tabs off. Then Supervisor Fife came out, informing me that my case was not approved because if you had small hands you'd be able to work through the now broken (by officer Blart) you could touch the gun.
Here I am, 8 minutes to board with no rental car and no other flights that day. I spent the next 15 minutes arguing with the two.... The CBP agent came by and finally talked some sense into these boys....
My final statement was: put the case back in my suitcase and ensure that it gets packed in the bottom of the baggage compartment and I'll promise not to get up from my seat, cut a hole in the floor of the CRJ-200 and dig through the bags until I find my suitcase on the 38 minute flight to Phoenix and I won't say anything about you breaking my case.
Problem solved.
I now have a nice key-locking metal case from Tractor Supply.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
I was just going to pitch in with a hilarious Yuma TSA story myself!
Was stuck there during a power outage that caused my flight to be cancelled. One other got out, but with no power I was treated to the comedy of errors of watching three agents try to hand crank open the grate covering the entry control point. 45 minutes later it was complete, they began security screening and, you guessed it...
Forced passengers to queue up and walk through an UNPOWERED METAL DETECTOR.
I will admit to messing with them occasionally. I have flown with medical devices that most definitely look like adult toys (d****s). I have been know when questioned what it is to say "It's an adult toy" with a straight face. The fact that I'm a dude makes it even more funny.
Sure... that's what they all say!I will admit to messing with them occasionally. I have flown with "medical devices" that most definitely look like adult toys (d****s).
Didn't read the responses, but to your original post..
You walked into a secured area. What part of that don't you understand? Is a headset and bag over the shoulder a pass to go unscreened through security? Should the tsa ignore it if it's one, two, or hundreds of people walking through secure areas??
I think you used zero point zero common sense.
You got away with one IMO.
You can't make that shiat up.
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Should have just carried it in your carry on. More likely to not be hassled and carry your strap worry free.I travel with a firearm. Springfield XD40 subcompact. Not all the time, but most of the time.
Here I am, in Yuma, AZ, having travelled with this particular gun for a year or so in its factory case with a lock on it.
Officer Blart called me back to the ticket desk once I had already gone through security to inform me that I would not be able to take my gun with me because my case didn't meet their requirements.
He told me that my case could be broken in to. I disagreed. Well, he showed me, by prying open my case and breaking one of the tabs off. Then Supervisor Fife came out, informing me that my case was not approved because if you had small hands you'd be able to work through the now broken (by officer Blart) you could touch the gun.
Here I am, 8 minutes to board with no rental car and no other flights that day. I spent the next 15 minutes arguing with the two.... The CBP agent came by and finally talked some sense into these boys....
My final statement was: put the case back in my suitcase and ensure that it gets packed in the bottom of the baggage compartment and I'll promise not to get up from my seat, cut a hole in the floor of the CRJ-200 and dig through the bags until I find my suitcase on the 38 minute flight to Phoenix and I won't say anything about you breaking my case.
Problem solved.
I now have a nice key-locking metal case from Tractor Supply.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
As for staying out of the red box, do stay out of these, especially if they are full of "cards" for the girls:
When you said "passed the north end of the red box" that to me sounded as though you were in it. Rereading it is ambiguous. You also said "walking away from it", but in context that read as though tsa questioned you after you were through it. So, if I misread than it's my apologies to you. That said, it didn't exactly read that way. And why would tsa question you if you didn't walk through? Why didn't you just tell them you didn't walk through and be done with it?
When you said "passed the north end of the red box" that to me sounded as though you were in it. Rereading it is ambiguous. You also said "walking away from it", but in context that read as though tsa questioned you after you were through it. So, if I misread than it's my apologies to you. That said, it didn't exactly read that way. And why would tsa question you if you didn't walk through? Why didn't you just tell them you didn't walk through and be done with it?
Tim Winters said:"Well, you need to stay out of the red box"
"I did, I walked around it."
Should have just carried it in your carry on. More likely to not be hassled and carry your strap worry free.
Ask me how I know.
Unfortunately, a few years ago the agency changed their titles to "officer". Even if they're not sworn or real LEOs. It was done to boost morale and "command respect" from the public. (yes, really).
The New Orleans TSA crew thought my wife had a pair of garden shears in her carry-on. Visual inspection found nothing other than clothes and shoes in her bag, leading to consternation and frustration for TSA and delay for us. Turned out my wife's shoes were stacked cris-cross fashion in her bag, and the metal stays in the soles of the shoes looked like shears on the x-ray.
I will admit to messing with them occasionally. I have flown with medical devices that most definitely look like adult toys (d****s). I have been know when questioned what it is to say "It's an adult toy" with a straight face. The fact that I'm a dude makes it even more funny.
Was that at Newark? I had the same thing happen there. I didn't take my laptop out so they "punished" me by making me wait about 10 minutes for a screener to look at my bag himself. He barely opened it enough to see that, indeed, it was a laptop.What bugs me is the inconsistency. I have TSA Pre. An "agent" gave me **** for not taking my laptop out of my bag.
"I have TSA Pre"
"That doesn't matter. You have to take it out."
"But I didn't have to on the way here..." and I just stopped because, well, it's tough to win an argument with an intelligent person, but damned near impossible to win with an idiot.
Was that at Newark? I had the same thing happen there. I didn't take my laptop out so they "punished" me by making me wait about 10 minutes for a screener to look at my bag himself. He barely opened it enough to see that, indeed, it was a laptop.