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TSA screeners working without pay isn’t just a headline, it changes the real safety and stress level of flying. When staffing drops and security lanes close, airports turn into choke points where five, six, even eight hour waits become normal, and that kind of crowding creates risks most travelers never think about. I share what I’m seeing, what the news is missing, and why the TSA funding shutdown is the kind of everyday disruption preppers should treat as a serious warning sign.
We dig into where the TSA came from after 9-11, why rapid hiring and brutal turnover still matter today, and what happens when morale and staffing collapse at scale. I also talk about ICE stepping in to help with line management, and a point Sarah Adams raised that hit me hard: long airport lines can become soft targets. That’s not fearmongering, it’s realistic situational awareness in a public space that was never designed to hold thousands of stressed people for hours.
Then I get personal with travel stories from flying right after the 2009 underwear bomber incident and what “extra security” actually looked like in practice. I compare it with Glasgow’s layered approach, including multiple checkpoints and a deep inspection of my camera gear and boots, plus a look at air marshals, hiring standards, and why frangible rounds matter on an aircraft. I even share my Newark “toothpaste is a liquid” lesson and how a smart comment can buy you a secondary screening.
If you’re flying soon, I close with simple travel preparedness steps: food, water, meds, chargers, bathroom planning, and time buffers that keep a bad day from turning into a disaster. Subscribe, share this with a frequent flyer, and leave a review so more people can find the show.
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