Hehateme1 you must look suspicious then or must have had something in your bag that look suspicious.
Hehateme1 you must look suspicious then or must have had something in your bag that look suspicious.
Honest question.
Of all of the attempted and successful plane bombings and hijackings over the past 30 years or so, what % are not perpetrated by muslims?
Is this targeted at Mo Farah for being a drug cheat suspect, or that he is from Somalia, or is this just a routine procedure?[/quote]
It is routine procedure. I had a lock hanging on my bag but not locking the bag. TSA cut it off.
Big deal! Most Muslims hate the US Occupation of Jerusalem and the Middle East just like the rest of humanity hates it.
Y'all a bunch of pu$$ies. Who the hell cares about Mo.
Don't lock your bag wrote:
You are not supposed to lock your checked in bags. Locked bags are guaranteed to get opened and searched. Farah has Zero rights to prevent searching of his bags.
When traveling in the United States, the TSA sets guidelines for baggage for the safety of all travelers. All checked bags are screened through electronic screeners, and if the TSA inspectors determine that a bag needs to be physically inspected, they will open the bag. If the bag is locked, the TSA inspector is permitted to break the lock to inspect the luggage, and a notice is placed inside your luggage to inform you of the inspection.http://traveltips.usatoday.com/airline-rules-locked-luggage-61495.html
I usually don't check a bag. But I do sometimes. I never lock them or pace a lock on them. I have received one of those your bag was inspected messages inside my bag.
Europe SUCKS wrote:
At least Muslims wipe after #2 unlike the Europeans in England.
In the land of no TP, is it wipe with the left, eat with the right. I keep confusing the two...
travelling in the "global south," I wanted to ship most of my clothes back home before going around Asia, so in New Delhi, I locked a duffle bag with a small lock and then as per regulations there I put it in a box, the box was sewn in cloth, and the cloth closed up with wax. Three or four months later it arrived home in the U.S. It was sealed up with the wax and the cloth as before. I broke the wax, opened the cloth, cut open the box and there was the duffle bag with the lock inside it, broken. I assume that was done for graft or drug search purposes right there in New Delhi, but who knows?