Showing posts with label airport security. Show all posts
Showing posts with label airport security. Show all posts

Monday, March 31, 2014

Hey, Nice Little Suitcase You Got Here. Hate to See Anything Happen to It.



Mack Hall, HSG


 

Hey, Nice Little Suitcase You Got Here. 

Hate to See Anything Happen to It.

 

“This is disinfectant.  Use it.”

 

-Train Guard in Doctor Zhivago

 

When George Custer and I left Viet-Nam (poor George got into some fracas in the Dakotas later on), every departing passenger was required to go to confession before being subject to a pat-down.

 

The confessional was a little walk-through closet curtained on both ends.  The sign advised the passenger that if he was carrying home instruments of destruction for later use to repent of any such idea and in the privacy of the closet leave the things-that-go-boom in a little box provided for them.

 

My seatmate, a fellow named Wellington (he later visited Belgium and designed boots or something), was much amused when I told him that out of curiosity I had peeked into the box and had seen pistols, .50-cal machine-gun rounds, bayonets, knuckle-dusters, and a couple of hand grenades.

 

Lo these fifty years later no such courtesy or privacy is extended to airline passengers: unhappy people of the sort our mothers warned us against touch us in ways once regarded as inappropriate outside the bonds of wedlock. 

 

As for your toothbrush and spare socks, at Los Angeles International Airport, familiarly known as LAX(ative), there is no need to leave things in a little box for others to take away; the baggage smashers will go into your old Samsonite and decided for themselves which of your earthly goods they will endow themselves with.

 

Passengers, by order of Higher Authority, must not / may not / will not secure their bags except with a TSA-approved lock to which everyone in Christendom, Cathay, and Cucamonga has a key. 

 

Last week the Los Angeles police and the airport police (everyone has a police force these days; thinking of getting one myself) arrested a number of workers for liberating the people’s goods from the Belly of the Beast.  Apparently this criminal gang / activist group is an ongoing problem for LAX(ative), and like Captain Reynaud’s Casablanca Police Department the local authorities make a few arrests every now and then, claim to be shocked, shocked that there is pilfering  going on, and then steal Sam’s piano.

 

In Casablanca the response to a crime is “Round up the usual suspects.”  In an American airport the response is “Certain measures have been implemented…” broadcast over and over from Big Brother’s overhead speakers. 

 

When the unhappy people (maybe it’s the polyester uniforms) hired to paw through your stuff paw through your stuff, they ask “Did anyone else help pack your suitcase?”

 

And then lower down in one of the circles of (Newark) others who are not hired to paw through your stuff paw through your stuff, they help you unpack your suitcase before you even board the plane.

 

This is why the airline charges you to check your bag.

 

The cleaners, loaders, and security at American airports, unlike the paying passengers, are not inspected, not checked, not watched, and not regulated. What is to prevent some resentful son of toil from accepting a nice gift in a fat envelope in exchange for placing another fat envelope in your luggage?

 

When the Agency for Something Or Other reconstructs the accident and analyzes fragments of your suitcase, they can then tell your survivors that “Hey, your old daddy took a bomb on board.  What did you know about this?  We’re going to seize – um, sequester – all your property, and, hey, have you visited Guantanamo this time of year?  They say it’s lovely.”

 

While the Los Angeles police are investigating the LAX(ative) Chapter of the Comradely Brotherhood of This and That Oppressed Workers International, perhaps Captain Reynaud could ask them if they know where your lost youth is.  They may have pinched that too.

 

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Sunday, June 23, 2013

Knives on a Plane



Mack Hall, HSG
Mhall46184@aol.com


Knives on a Plane


1.   Pre-teens climbing over the seats and screaming  – they’re a problem.

2.   Brats (of all ages) who will not turn off their signal-spewing electronic devices at takeoff and landing – they’re a problem

3.   The fat slob whose rolls of blubber spill over into your seat and your life – he’s a problem.

4.   The lady next to you whose bare arm features a weeping, oozing, infected tattoo – she’s a problem.

5.   A suicidal Egyptian pilot with a messed-up home life – he’s a problem.

6.   That one mechanic who, while in a hurry and being glared at by his supervisor, doesn’t secure some hatch or bolt as he should – he’s a problem.  So’s his supervisor.

7.   The lady in front of you who insists on leaning her seat back into your face – she’s a problem.  Especially if she’s got critters in her hair.

8.   The conspiracy of sick, twisted wretches who design airline seating – they’re a problem.

9.   The idiots who bring aboard live lobsters in boxes – they’re a problem.

10.The jerks who bring aboard huge duffel bags, garbage sacks full of who-knows-what, and miscellaneous cases, and spent a half-hour trying to jam them into the overheads – they’re a problem.

11.Airlines who let this happen – they’re a problem.

12.Airlines who carry all this impedimenta away FOR FREE to stow them in the baggage compartment – they’re a problem.

13.Airlines who charge the considerate passengers for checking their modest bags at the counter – they’re a problem.

14.Drunken, party-hearty frat boys – or are they Secret Service? - yelling obscenities to each other – they’re a problem.

15.Rude, snarly, slovenly Air Canada cabin attendants – they’re a problem.  Canadians really are the politest folks you’ll meet, and apparently they deal with their few anti-socials by exiling them to Air Canada.

16.Lung-choking-chemical-perfume lady – she’s a problem.

17.Terrorists – they’re a problem.

18.The 1½ inch Swiss Army Knife I bought at the gift shop in one of the most security-conscious airports in the world – that’s not a problem.

 

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Sunday, November 14, 2010

The Government in Your Underwear

Mack Hall
Mhall46184@aol.com

The Government in Your Underwear

Suppose that you were in World War II. Or perhaps in Korea, Lebanon, Viet-Nam, Iraq, Afghanistan, or some bleak air base along the Arctic circle, or hazarding yourself in a patrol plane or aboard a destroyer between here and Cuba during one of Kruschev and Castro’s giddier moments. Or suppose that you are an ordinary working American – and you surely are – who goes off to work most days. You pay your taxes, rake your leaves, and try to save enough to take the rug-rats to Disney World before they grow up. Your encounters with the awful majesty of the law are limited to a speeding ticket from Al Caldwell’s friend Officer Fatback.

Why, then, should you, before boarding an aircraft to take your kids on that long-promised adventure to Disney World, be forced to take off your shoes, empty your pockets, be zapped with nudity rays by blinking, hooting, beeping machines designed by Captain Nemo, raise your hands in surrender, and suffer the gropings of the Roderick Spodes of the Transportation Security Administration?

In sum, why is the ordinary American presumed by his own government to be the enemy?

Security on airplanes, trains, buses, and ships is not trivial matter in a time of war, and just now we cannot expect to board a vessel as blithely as folks did as recently as the 1970s. Even so, why are the OGPU assigned to make our transit secure so focused on humiliating Americans?

Not so long ago airport security apologetically looked through your carry-on bag and wished you a safe journey. Because of The Religion of Peace and their exploding panties security has become more intense, and rightly so, but why have TSA personnel become so hostile to the traveling public? Is freedom of movement a matter of suspicion?

Our democratically-elected government has, for our safety, forbidden us to travel with nail clippers, shampoo bottles, or one of those itty-bitty Swiss Army knives, and requires us to eat our airline meals – provided you can get one – with flimsy, brittle flatware. Our democratically-elected government has dictated that Americans cannot be trusted with nail clippers, shampoo, pocketknives, or even a usable fork and (eek!) knife.

We Americans who could once travel freely within the borders of our own country are now subjected to strange radiation from strange machines and fondling from strange people. And these strange people yell a great deal, slam our possessions around, and don’t wash between gropings.

Excuse me for asking, dear elected government, but shouldn’t the TSA be going after evil people instead of functional dinner forks and our grandmothers?

TSA and this family newspaper leave you with some random thoughts for this new age of luxury air travel:

Briefs? Or boxers?

When ink cartridges are outlawed, only outlaws will have ink cartridges.

When panties are outlawed, only outlaws will have panties.

America – love it or get nekkid on TSA tellyvision in order to leave it.

Fourth Amendment? What’s that?

Work harder – thousands of TSA functionaries depend on you to pay them to humiliate you and your children.

Show me your papers and your body parts, comrade.

Abandon dignity all ye who enter here.

Be nice to the TSA guy touchy-feely-ing your children; he’s going to choose your cell.

Keep your shirt on, pal – until Security Officer Igor lovingly tells you to take it off.

Don’t get your panties in a twist; the TSA will do that for you.

And if you’re boarding Aer Lingus – it’s a thong way to Tipperary.

-30-

The Government in Your Underwear

Mack Hall
Mhall46184@aol.com

The Government in Your Underwear

Suppose that you were in World War II. Or perhaps in Korea, Lebanon, Viet-Nam, Iraq, Afghanistan, or some bleak air base along the Arctic circle, or hazarding yourself in a patrol plane or aboard a destroyer between here and Cuba during one of Kruschev and Castro’s giddier moments. Or suppose that you are an ordinary working American – and you surely are – who goes off to work most days. You pay your taxes, rake your leaves, and try to save enough to take the rug-rats to Disney World before they grow up. Your encounters with the awful majesty of the law are limited to a speeding ticket from Al Caldwell’s friend Officer Fatback.

Why, then, should you, before boarding an aircraft to take your kids on that long-promised adventure to Disney World, be forced to take off your shoes, empty your pockets, be zapped with nudity rays by blinking, hooting, beeping machines designed by Captain Nemo, raise your hands in surrender, and suffer the gropings of the Roderick Spodes of the Transportation Security Administration?

In sum, why is the ordinary American presumed by his own government to be the enemy?

Security on airplanes, trains, buses, and ships is not trivial matter in a time of war, and just now we cannot expect to board a vessel as blithely as folks did as recently as the 1970s. Even so, why are the OGPU assigned to make our transit secure so focused on humiliating Americans?

Not so long ago airport security apologetically looked through your carry-on bag and wished you a safe journey. Because of The Religion of Peace and their exploding panties security has become more intense, and rightly so, but why have TSA personnel become so hostile to the traveling public? Is freedom of movement a matter of suspicion?

Our democratically-elected government has, for our safety, forbidden us to travel with nail clippers, shampoo bottles, or one of those itty-bitty Swiss Army knives, and requires us to eat our airline meals – provided you can get one – with flimsy, brittle flatware. Our democratically-elected government has dictated that Americans cannot be trusted with nail clippers, shampoo, pocketknives, or even a usable fork and (eek!) knife.

We Americans who could once travel freely within the borders of our own country are now subjected to strange radiation from strange machines and fondling from strange people. And these strange people yell a great deal, slam our possessions around, and don’t wash between gropings.

Excuse me for asking, dear elected government, but shouldn’t the TSA be going after evil people instead of functional dinner forks and our grandmothers?

TSA and this family newspaper leave you with some random thoughts for this new age of luxury air travel:

Briefs? Or boxers?

When ink cartridges are outlawed, only outlaws will have ink cartridges.

When panties are outlawed, only outlaws will have panties.

America – love it or get nekkid on TSA tellyvision in order to leave it.

Fourth Amendment? What’s that?

Work harder – thousands of TSA functionaries depend on you to pay them to humiliate you and your children.

Show me your papers and your body parts, comrade.

Abandon dignity all ye who enter here.

Be nice to the TSA guy touchy-feely-ing your children; he’s going to choose your cell.

Keep your shirt on, pal – until Security Officer Igor lovingly tells you to take it off.

Don’t get your panties in a twist; the TSA will do that for you.

And if you’re boarding Aer Lingus – it’s a thong way to Tipperary.

-30-