Airline passengers still don’t get it

Did someone miss the news about September 11, 2001?  Did someone not hear about new restrictions on what you can carry on to commercial airline flights now?  Did someone just pull their head out of the sand?

There are times when the words "ludicrous" or "stupid" or "dumb" simply don't convey a harsh enough representation of how cranially dense some people really are.  The recent report on items confiscated by TSA personnel from people trying to board commercial flights is a perfect example of when words just don't seem harsh enough.

In the 13 months since the Federal Government (via the TSA) took responsibility for security screening of airline passengers, more than 4.8 million restricted items have been confiscated.  Despite reminders and news reports and common sense telling us that potential weapons of any kind are now restricted and cannot be taken into the cabin of commercial airline flights, TSA authorities have confiscated all manner of ludicrous carry-on items.  Here are just a few examples.

Nearly 40,000 box cutters.  You heard me correctly — box cutters.  It's as if these idiots slept through September 11 and the more than 17 months of news covering it since then.

A machete.  OK, perhaps a pocket knife or a letter opener would not be so surprising, but there's no way you can convince me that someone didn't know you couldn't take a machete on the airplane.

A trailer hitch.  This one might be a little more difficult to berate, as one does not normally carry such items around on one's person and — as luck would have it — trailer hitches haven't been specifically covered in the list of items restricted from planes.  There's still that nagging question of common sense…

1,101 guns.  Simple solution to this one — shoot the idiot with their own gun.  It's difficult to believe anyone could be so stupid, but the numbers are too simple to get confused.

1.4 million knives.  Have these people been on another planet?

15,666 clubs.  I think those caught with such things should be beaten with their own clubs.  It's too late to hope you could knock some sense into them, but there is hope you might hinder their ability to procreate.

125,000 incendiary devices.  I suppose the restriction on taking such items is new…  No, you dolts.

A 15-piece cutlery set.  OK, I'll let this one slide — NOT!  Cutlery is cutlery is cutlery.  Did the understanding that a box cutter is cutlery (it cuts, right?) totally escape these people?

A kitchen sink pipe.  This is almost ludicrous.  What dimwitted moron thought that would be acceptable?

Horseshoes.  Undoubtedly someone from Texas.

A circular saw.  Have you ever heard of anything quite so insane?  Why don't I carry my nail gun with me as well?  You never know when you might have to perform emergency repair work on the plane itself.

Transportation Security Administration spokesman Brian Turmail made it clear when the report was released that further education was necessary to reduce the number of banned items that continue to be caught at security checkpoints.  Luckily he found the right balance when he continued by saying, "If you don't know by now that box cutters are inappropriate, no amount of public education is going to make a difference."

Out of all of this, 922 people were arrested for attempting to carry such items through security checkpoints and to their plane.

Arrested?  They should be shot.  If they have no common sense (the only possible shortcoming that could explain this level of stupidity), they should be removed from the gene pool so we don't pass that level of ignorance on to children and a whole new generation of boneheads.

Of course, there's not much humor in all of this when on considers the results of the TSA's test last spring which showed that screeners only found 70 percent of knives and missed one in four guns.  Given the numbers above, it makes you curious about what they didn't catch.

Still, I have to wonder WTF these people were thinking.  More importantly, WTF are their counterparts thinking out there right now as they try the very same things?

Possibly a clearer view of the end of dinosaurs

The argument about how the dinosaurs (and more than 70 percent of Earth's species) were wiped out of existence has taken a clear step in the direction of a massive asteroid or comet strike 65 million years ago.  In new images released this week by NASA, a new radar image of the Yucatan Peninsula taken from space clearly shows a 180-kilometer-wide (112-mile-wide) impact crater — evidence of a geologically devastating event.

The release of the new topological radar image taken by the space shuttle Endeavour three years ago has significantly bolstered the theory of a devastating cosmic impact that brought about the extinction of the dinosaurs and significant numbers of other species.

In the new image, the crater itself is still difficult to see due to the limestone sediments which has settled over it during the past 65 million years.  Despite being visually difficult to identify, the crater is easily identified by the elevation readings returned by the radar imaging.  It is in these radar images that the crater becomes obvious.

The idea of a cosmological event being the catalyst for extinction of massive numbers of Earth's species at the time was first offered up in 1980 by physicist Luis Alvarez and his son Walter Alvarez, a geologist.  Since then, mounting proof has driven the scientific community in that direction with increasing speed.

The Chicxulub crater is now the the focus of intense scientific study as evidence continues to mount which points to this being the flashpoint of the dinosaurs' demise.

As with all things scientific, however, there is no guarantee that a meteoric event is truly to blame for wiping out the dinosaurs and paving the way for humans.  Until we're certain, we're never sure, and even then we keep our minds open to the possibility that we're still not sure.

What’s ailing Kako?

Poor Kako has been quite ill the last few days.  For the third time in her life, she’s suffering from what the vet called a “raging” urinary tract infection.  Poor thing; as if being the only female in the house wasn’t bad enough, now she has to deal with this.  According to her doctor, she’s simply prone to these kinds of infections.  Despite having her pH tested regularly, she always waits until she’s in absolute agony before showing any symptoms (this time landing us in the emergency vet at 1:00 AM after screaming like a banshee).  So it’s back on antibiotics again.  After a terrible start to the week, she’s feeling much better now and is almost back to her regular self.  Just wait until she realizes she has another eight days on the pills.  Not gonna be happy…

eBay gladly hands your info to law enforcement

In a private meeting between eBay and law enforcement representatives, eBay announced that it would gladly hand over any information requested by law enforcement — and they didn't need a court order.  Calling its privacy policy the most "flexible" on the Internet.  Reporters were not allowed into the meeting, but a tape of the event was carried out and immediately handed to the press.  eBay even went so far as to explain that, in order to make it convenience for law enforcement to get the information they "need," they can simply send an email or fax to get all the information available.  The article is rather disconcerting if you read it in its entirety.

Oh, and one more thing…

eBay owns PayPal, so keep that in mind as well.

Welcome message archive – March 11, 2003

This is an archive of the new welcome message on the homepage.

I’m now approaching my first month’s anniversary with this site, and it’s likely I’m finally getting the hang of this web thing.  OK, you might not think so, but I’m still learning — so shut up.

I’m hoping to pick up the pace on the content here relatively quickly.  I will be making every effort to update the site every day, and, given the purchase of a new digital camera in the near future, I also hope to be able to post the beginning series of pictures in my workout photo journal.

Feel free to provide feedback on your experience, questions you might have (or want to see answered in the FAQ section), content you’d like to see, content you wish would go away, or anything else that comes to mind.  The experience provided by this site will only get better based on your feedback and, more importantly, whatever I feel like doing.

a life in progress