The ongoing TSA meltdown is mighty interesting to see. Thanks to our incompetent United States Congress, TSA agents have been missing paychecks for a few weeks now, with no end in sight. No one would work for free willingly, right? (Unwillingly is what they used to refer to as slavery.) So agents have been calling out sick en masse. This has lead to massive lines at major airports.
Imagining needing three hours just to get through the TSA checkpoint. For someone like me who hates to cut things that close in terms of getting to the airpot last minute, I’d plan to arrive at the airport something like six hours before departure, in the current situation, in order to feel at ease. Even the British would scoff at waiting in a queue for that long.
Thankfully my local airport -SFO - has TSA workers under contract by a private company. They are not affected by the ongoing partial shutdown of the Department of Homeland Security. They weren’t affected last year when the government shutdown for a record 40 some odd days. How did we get so lucky? The local powers at be must have been a libertarian: the more you can remove government from a responsibility, the better.
Whatever the case may be, I was super appreciative of the normal operation at SFO when I flew to China a few days back. My smugness is through the roof when I now read the news of queuing chaos at other airports in the country. What I feel most worse for is the TSA agents that actually did show up to work, despite the continuing lack of pay. No shade to those that didn’t - again, no one should work for free, but the reality is the workload remains the same, and there’s way fewer people to execute it.
Wait a minute - isn’t that what “big AI” is doing in reality? Promise big efficiency so companies can lay off workers, but those left behind are actually still doing the same amount of work.
Feeding time.