So you think the TSA has finally come to its senses and smartened up
its ban on deadly weapons like nail clippers and pool cues? Most
people, if they bother to think about it, aren't all that terrified that
some 12 year old carrying his Little League bat or hockey stick is
going to commandeer a 747, nor is the woman with that tiny Swiss Army
knife on her keychain. The TSA has at least recognized that the
hijackings of 9/11/01 were facilitated by cabin doors without locks,
thanks to the refusal of our regulatory agencies to force that level of
security on private business. Box cutters were secondary.
Your
tiny knife with tweezers and nail file isn't really going to allow a
terrorist incident or some adolescent to take over an airplane with a
plastic hockey stick and so the TSA is going to acknowledge the laughter
and relent -- in some cases. In customary ban-it writing style
however, the descriptions of the newly permitted items seem to have been
written by people being forced to relent at gunpoint or people from
Mars who have never seen and are terrified of sharp objects.
So
what can you take on the plane that you couldn't last week? Cigarette
lighters, although you can't smoke, up to two golf clubs, ( three
would somehow be too dangerous) toy bats or other sports sticks and
small pocket knives with blades up to (wait for this) 2.36 inches. 2.37
is too scary to allow and a fixed blade is out for some reason known
only to Martians and most mysteriously, if the handle has any curve to
it, it's still a terrorist assault weapon and prohibited. My tiny mustache scissors? Sorry Osama, you and your beard don't get on the plane.
Box
cutters? Even though the evidence from 9/11 really doesn't support the
newspaper story, a 1" box cutter blade, half the length of Uncle
Fogg's Victorinox is just too al Qaeda for the TSA.
You'll
suspect that I'm going somewhere with this, but I don't need to, you
already guessed that I think people who write and most passionately
defend regulatory descriptions tend to be fond of tin foil
haberdashery, or at least that's my opinion -- and I'm sticking with it.