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The TSA Is About To Hike Your Pre-Flight Groping Fee
Under a pending TSA rule update, you're about to begin paying an average of an additional $11.20 on each round trip ticket for the displeasure of having your bags and body searched prior to boarding your flight. This rate hike more than doubles the current $5.00 fee. (flightclub.jalopnik.com) Más...Sort type: [Top] [Newest]
Not surprised... they have to give a raise to all of those morons thousands of morons stand around.
And to think I've been paying $50 for a "full body grope"!
Oh wait... wrong internet chat room...
Oh wait... wrong internet chat room...
Government waste at its finest! Like every other agency created by government, it grows ever larger and consumes more money to provide less and less of the service it was originally created for. Every government agency created should have had a 5 year (max) lifespan before it is cancelled and has to be reviewed (by an independent citizens committee) to determine if its charter can be renewed for another 5 years. Heads of these agencies, even though appointed, need to be voted on by the people at renewal time, no consecutive appointments of the same person by the same leader. This single action could help bring more accountability to agencies like the TSA (and possibly even the IRS?) and cleaning house periodically is a good thing when it comes to limiting the growth and power of any agency.
I don't have much choice regarding whether I fly or not. It's a big ocean to cross to get home, so I just grin and bear it, although I wonder if this could count towards my annual physical. Fortunately, this year, TSA opened up it's pre-check to all DoD employees, so the process is a little easier now.
Wow... a truly non-emotional reply... congrats...
I guess I'm just used to it. It's the world I live in. Getting to work frequently involves getting my vehicle searched two or three times a month, so what's an extra body groping?
Now the TSA is feathering their own nest with our money. The $11.20 will not show up on the frontline against terror, rather be squandered on executive lifestyles of the managers who had to struggle to finish high school. It is time to send them back to watching the mall and checking badges at comic book conventions.
We would be better served to suspend the civil rights of the terrorists and profile them for exclusion from participation in travel. If they need to change location, they can do it same way Mohamed did, by foot. That would fit well with their desire to propel the world back to the fifth century and force their religion on everyone.
Air travel will not be safe until we pay attention to the real problem, which is not a teenage girl with a picture of a gun on her purse.