The last time I traveled through Ottawa airport (that's the capital of Canada, not the small town in Ohio), I had a problem at security.I'd forgotten to pack my trusty Swiss Army Knife
Before 9/11, carrying a penknife onto an aircraft was never a problem. Once, when the penknife triggered a metal detector at Montreal airport, I recall an experienced security guard explaining to a new security card that a "canif" with a small blade was perfectly acceptable.
This time, however, I could not take it with me. My "checked" baggage had already gone through so I had to phone my wife and get her to come back to the airport to collect my penknife. (I'm really very attached to that penknife).
All of which makes the above photograph rather ironic. It shows a special container for disposing of sharp objects. I observed it in the gentlemen's toilets in the secure area of the terminal at Ottawa airport. As you can see, the container is half full.
So even if you didn't manage to bring any nasty sharp objects with you through security, you can conveniently pick up a few here.

1 comments:
Such incompetence is normal. The incapacity of people to relate to any role outside the strict parameters of their work, the simple inability to think, will always deny the intelligent execution of policy.
A related tale. Not long after the introduction of emergency security procedures for Airports and aircraft in the wake of the World Trade Centre atrocity, a friend of mine travelled from Paris to Prague with a major Czech air-carrier. First Class, he had been subject to the same standards of screening as any other passenger before boarding the aircraft.
He was provided with sharp metal cutlery with which to eat his in-flight meal.
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