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unixronin: Galen the technomage, from Babylon 5: Crusade (Default)
Unixronin

December 2012

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Sunday, January 16th, 2005 02:23 pm

So I don't think I previously got around to mentioning that when I flew out to CA from NC, I wore my Jedi Mind Trick hat.  It's a NAS Alameda ball cap with scrambled eggs on the brim, which was given to me as a souvenir when I attended the base closing ceremonies in, uh, 1997 I think.  Flying wearing that cap turns out to be interesting.

[walks up to security checkpoint]

[screener's eyes go to cap]

And at this point, you can almost hear the Jedi Mind Trick at work:


-- You don't need to screen me. --

-- I can board my flight. --

-- Move along. --

I don't need to screen you.

You can go ahead and board, sir.

Move along.


Sunday, January 16th, 2005 02:51 pm (UTC)
Hah.

Meanwhile, they scan grandma, and dig for dope in Barlow's baggage. Blech. TSA is annoying and stupid.
Sunday, January 16th, 2005 05:35 pm (UTC)
Not too surprising, considering that most of their screeners are basically minimum-wage drones with little training. (And, it seems, little screening for larcenous tendencies... one of every four currently certified FFDO's sidearms has "been mislaid" on its way through TSA.)
Sunday, January 16th, 2005 05:47 pm (UTC)
WHAT!? Stealing in plain sight??? Give me linkage, please, kind sir... and pass the ammo. It's time t'go HUNT.

As far as the hat... just don't say anything about the noocleear wessels. *EG*
Sunday, January 16th, 2005 06:45 pm (UTC)
Uh, I seem to recall posting at length on the problems with the FFDO program some time ago. Unfortunately, I cannot at present find the post.
The Smithsonian Air & Space article I cited heavily from mentioned among other things that at the time it was written, only about a thousand pilots had actually been certified by the TSA's FFDO program (many of the best-qualified having been failed without explanation), and that of those thousand pilots, approximately 300 sidearms (which the pilots are not permitted to wear onto the aircraft themselves) never made it through TSA screening onto the plane and are presumed to have been stolen, in their distinctive mandated-by-the-TSA carry cases, by TSA personnel.