seamus wrote: » "Safety Theatre" as the man above says. You don't actually need a bomb to cause devastation in mid-air, anything that can ignite with sufficient ferocity would do it. And for that you can carry some of the material you need in your carry-on and source the rest in the Airside shops before you fly. Realistically it doesn't happen because the number of people who want to die on a plane is very small. Modern plastics mean that someone could very easily bring several weapons undetected onto a flight that are as strong and sharp as box-cutters, which is what the hijackers had in the WTC attacks. It has yet to happen, because it's basically a freak occurrence. But because they're cooped up in a metal tube 10,000m above the earth, people want to feel like they're as safe as they can possibly be. So airports maintain security rules to help people feel safe, even if those rules are pointless.
take everything wrote: » So basically again a decision made for the airlines' bottom line ultimately.
Cienciano wrote: » Security theatre as said already. I can't take my 2cm Guinness keyring with knife and bottle opener on board because I might kill someone with it and take over the plane. But I can buy a couple of bottles of strong spirits in duty free, use one as a petrol bomb and the other I can smash and use as a weapon. I can't see it going away, we're used to it now and airlines duty free shops are happy with it. Security can pretend they're doing a good job by confiscating your 125ml hair gel.
murpho999 wrote: » That being said, the amount of people being caught out by it and having liquids taken from their bags in every security queue I'm in is unreal.
Ubbquittious wrote: » I have been thinking for a long time that the various middle eastern terrorist groups must have depleted their supply of eejits thick enough to be willing to go out and kill themselves in order to bring down a plane or kill a few randomers on the street. They can't be very well funded either because if they paid some proper engineers and chemists to design some real bombs for them they could do fierce damage without requiring anyone to kill themselves for the cause. Instead you see the odd loon driving a rented Hyundai onto the pavement and a botch job explosion here and there.
Ubbquittious wrote: » If you're on the return part of the journey you have nothing to lose by chancing it. I'm sure a good % evade detection or the fella behind the x-ray machine simply cannot be arsed
Cienciano wrote: » I can't take my 2cm Guinness keyring with knife and bottle opener on board because I might kill someone with it and take over the plane. But I can buy a couple of bottles of strong spirits in duty free, use one as a petrol bomb and the other I can smash and use as a weapon.
andekwarhola wrote: » In recent times, I just tend to buy toiletries wherever I'm going rather than be arsed with all the buying of travel sized stuff or packing it into containers. After shelling out for a flight and hotel, some toothpaste, brush, deodorant, razors and shaving soap won't make or break the holiday.
take everything wrote: » Wow that's interesting. Never heard that before. So basically again a decision made for the airlines' bottom line ultimately.
Zebra3 wrote: » Sure if anyone wants to take a plane out while on board, all they have to do is switch on their mobile, right?