By Brett T.
A couple of years ago, a spokeswoman for the TSA posted a photo of all of the water bottles, toothpaste tubes, and jars of peanut butter that had been confiscated from passengers over the course of just three days.
Display of oversized liquids, gels and aerosols that travelers had in their carry-on bags at the @SyracuseAirport @TSA Checkpoint in a 3-day span. The limit for liquids through a checkpoint is 3.4 oz. pic.twitter.com/Fan95TLrLy
— Lisa Farbstein, TSA Spokesperson (@TSA_Northeast) June 22, 2022
The limit is 3.4 oz., OK? That’s what keeps us safe from another 9/11.
NBC Washington reporter Joseph Olmo has a feel-good story for us all. You know all of those dangerous liquids the TSA confiscates from you before you board the plane? It turns out that Ronald Reagan National Airport has started a program to donate all of these seized toiletries to local nonprofits.
Ever wonder what happens when the @TSA makes you throw away an oversized toiletry item @ the security checkpoint?@Reagan_Airport started a pilot program in April where they donate toiletries to local nonprofits. So far, they’ve donated more than 2,300 items! @nbcwashington pic.twitter.com/jdCUdwal0r
— Joseph Olmo (@ReporterJoseph) August 13, 2024
Shouldn’t they be properly disposed of by a bomb squad?
Stealing your stuff and giving it to someone else makes us feel good https://t.co/QPjqvS0BEW
— Joe DeVito (@JoeDeVitoComedy) August 14, 2024
A decent “reporter” might ask why these “dangerous” items aren’t destroyed.
— JWF (@JammieWF) August 14, 2024
There could be explosives in that toothpaste tube…
READ FULL ARTICLE HERE… (twitchy.com)
Home | Caravan to Midnight (zutalk.com)
Be First to Comment