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Taking a war club as carry-on

dsowers.silvrback.com

23 points by dsowers 12 years ago · 10 comments

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krenoten 12 years ago

A friend of mine travels internationally constantly for work. During one trip to Cambodia, he went to a range to shoot machine guns, and he slipped a few 7.62 nato rounds into his pocket at some point. They ended up in his travel bag, where they were forgotten about and remained for several months. The bag was brought as a carry-on on more than a dozen international flights with the bullets clanging around inside, and eventually the bullet detached from the casing on several of the rounds, causing gun powder to spill all over the pocket. It was not stopped once.

I found the bullets when he told me to grab some goggles out of his bag, and my hand came out of a pocket blackened with explosive powder. That was during a trip about 2 years ago.

  • baddox 12 years ago

    But I saw the videos of the TSA groping children and the elderly, so I think we're safe.

patdennis 12 years ago

I generally consider myself a part of the more libertarian wing of the Democratic Party. But as a thought experiment, lets say that one airline was given clearance by the FAA to exempt its passengers from TSA screenings. Or, alternately, simply assume this airline allowed war clubs such as the one above to be brought onboard, while some sort of pre-9/11 security screening system was in place.

Would you choose to fly on that airline?

Either situation would certainly raise concerns in my mind, regardless of my emotional reactions to TSA screenings and that sort of thing.

  • baddox 12 years ago

    I think I would include that airline in my normal considerations for my particular flight. If the price, leg room, route, timing, etc. was right, I'd choose it.

  • moocowduckquack 12 years ago

    Would you choose to fly on that airline?

    Only if the war clubs were mandatory and the plane was made of guns.

  • rosser 12 years ago

    Yes — assuming it was otherwise suitable for my travel needs.

rosser 12 years ago

Before the TSA, I routinely carried my Leatherman on my person in the cabin of commercial aircraft. When I passed through the security checkpoint, I'd remove it from its sheath and place it in the basket for your keys and change and such, and hand that to the uniformed person manning the checkpoint. I was never once stopped, questioned, or even looked at twice for doing this.

vacri 12 years ago

On the flip side of the coin, a long swinging weapon is going to cause more issues than it's worth in the confines of a plane cabin.

  • baddox 12 years ago

    You think so? If there was a fight on a plane, I think I'd rather have that club than any object that is normally handy on a plane.

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