I have found in my travels that the TSA people at LAX are among the worst I have dealt with. Good luck with your vacation.
Really? I've found them to be quite reasonable, except for the very first lady you get to before the escalators.
Their metal detectors were a bit nutty once, though...went off at hubby's shorts zipper. He was sent off to be wanded. I sent DS through and he waited, then I kept setting off the machine. Just as they were about to mess up entirely (they were telling me to get wanded and I was reminding them that I had a small child with me) the passenger behind me reminded me taht I had an inch long barrette at the back of my hair. The TSA person let me take it out, put it through the xray, and go through again, successfully.
This was a really BAD time for this to happen, as my own horrid timing caused us to be VERY late. The TSA agents helped us get everything together, laptop back in the case, shoes in the right spot for us to put on, etc. Hubby had to put his belt on as we were running. We were there 5 minutes before the plane would have taken off, but other things had delayed the plane and it hadn't even boarded.
Now...I will say...on that trip they let a pair of scrapbooking scissors go through in my carryon, so that was a Fail for them. But it would be VERY difficult to harm someone with a blunted scissor that cuts out Mickey Mouse heads, so in a way it was sane.
They are also the KIND people who did NOT confiscate our "rebel alliance" blaster and the huge plastic sword DS got during our trip, even though they were in a carryon, and even though I guess TSA agents have been taking the whole "replica" thing a bit too seriously. The agent said she couldn't guarantee that another agent wouldn't take them, but we didn't have a connecting flight so it was all OK.
The flight that we almost missed...while we were putting shoes back on a couple male agents were talking about our trip and mentioned that the wife of one of them wanted to go to DL on 12/25. I strongly urged him to NOT go along with that busy busy busy plan and he was thankful.
Good experiences at LAX for us!
http://blogs.keloland.com/blog/index.cfm?commentID=1485
This is exactly the type of crap I have had to put up with from the TSA on many occasions. Pray tell what did these guys do to bring this upon themselves (other than being ordinary run of the mill heroes)?
Well...the thing is...just having some years on you doesn't make you innocence and light. Having been in a war doesn't make you perfect.
My FIL was in WW2 as young as he could get in. He actually joined as a minor, was found out and sent home, then joined as soon as he could legally. His own father wanted to help Europe out so much during the time of WW1 (before it became a *world* war when the US FINALLY joined in) that he went to Canada to join up there!
Anyway, my FIL was a vital, frequent traveler up until a year before he died at 78, he was one of the higher ups on the civilian ships based out of SF that support the gov't so he traveled quite a bit, and he NEVER would have thought that his having been in the Navy, then Merchant Marines, some other stuff, and then being part of the support ships, as being a reason to not get screened.
I see from flyertalk that they got an apology, and I can see why regarding the oxygen etc (though now I'm reading the article and it seems the reporter person got that part a big wrong???), but purely the process of being screened, especially if there's been a solid threat that day...I just can't see a reason why being a soldier/sailor/etc decades ago should exempt you.
I'm sure I'm a minority about this...I'm not someone who thinks the TSA should continue (even though I've only had annoyances and moments where I tilt my head like a confused puppy at their "logic")...but still, someone's past doesn't give them a "pass" when it comes to taking metal, that can come off, off of one's clothing/body.