Vortilon said:
When I saw this link, I thought it was a joke. When I clicked it and saw the page load, I thought it was an elaborate, nice-looking joke.
I never knew there was a separate WSJ for women.

Shouldn't there be one for men, too?

The irony of using such an institution as a platform to launch a cry for less-PC screening gives me a chuckle, to say the least.

Why didn't this article appear in the NON-WOMENS' WSJ?
On a lighter note, it appears that the Women's WSJ has somewhat, shall we say, less-stringent editorial standards than the (can I say this?)
real WSJ?
"I thanked him and we boarded the plan." (
I thought they were getting on a plane.
)
"We were now two hours into a four-in-a-half hour flight." (
What's four-in-a-half, anyway? Wouldn't DTW-LAX be more like four-and-a-half hours?
)
"I told him how we'd eaten with metal utensils moments in an airport diner before boarding the flight ..."

(
I get the impression she wanted us to tell Mr. Dove, the TSA Customer Service Supervisor, she had access to the metal utensils just moments before boarding the flight, and not that her encounter with the metal utensils had been for mere moments. "... moments before boarding..." then, should not be separated by "... in an airport diner..." Try: "...we'd eaten with metal utensils in an airport diner just moments before boarding the flight..." OK, so I'm picky about construction, but this is, after all, the WSJ, isn't it? Or is it?
)
OK, back to reality. I hope there are more articles written about things like this. We all know that the TSA as it stands today is a mockery, and it only serves to make MOST of the flying public
feel like it's safe to fly again. The feeling comes for the most part from the increased
hassle they enounter in getting on an airplane. If it's tough for grandama or little Timmy, it must be too tough for those bad guys, right? Wrong!
Maybe if a few more... OK, a LOT more... of the flying public start to see how woefully inadequate these procedures with their ridiculous PC restrictions are, then maybe, jut maybe, we'll see some pressure to use procedures that make sense from a SECURITY perspective, and not just from an ACLU perspective.