Originally Posted by
drtash
http:///forum/post/2538881
The safety of the passengers come first. Piercing should be removed if needed. Shame or no shame!
Safety of the passengers comes first? How are
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rings going to affect the safety of passengers? This was just a blatant overreaction of authority by TSA agents. There was no reason they couldn't have taken her to a private room, verified the rings were causing the metal detector to go off, then let her get on her plane. You telling me wearing a
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ring is going to interfere with navigating the plane? Look at some of the ridiculously huge earrings some of these women put on their ears. They're OK to take on a plane simply because they can remove them in order to walk through a metal detector to keep it from going off? The purpose of going through the detector is to detect the presence of large metal objects that could be construde as something that could be used to cause physical harm to someone while traveling on the plane. If an article of clothing can be easily removed, do it. If not, they use the hand wand to determine the location of the metal article. If the article can't be removed, or is difficult to remove, they do a visual inspection to insure it's not a dangerous item. That's what should have been done in this case. It was probably just a plain case of stereotyping.
I understand the need for tight security. But the TSA does not follow standard practices at every airport. I go to some airports, and they let me walk through with my shoes on. Others make me take my shoes off, my belt, and virtually anything else I have on that could have metal in it. I walked through the Salt Lake City detector last week with my huge Seiko watch on my wrist. No beeps, no problems. And what's with the requirement to have your laptop in its own bin? They run it through the scanner, but don't make you turn it on. You don't think a terrorist couldn't take C-4 and make it look like a battery? Like I said, they need to have consistent guidelines at every airport.