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View Full Version : Liberty Lock™ - this is good



madfranks
31st January 2011, 07:54 PM
It's a lock that the TSA can open and close without breaking it. What, may I ask, is the point of locking your travel bags if the lock can be opened and closed on a whim by the people most likely to steal from you?

http://www.safeskies.com.au/Safeskies-Blog.aspx


Approved by the Transportation Security Administration, the Liberty Lock™ allows travelers to lock their luggage with the knowledge that, if necessary, airline security can still examine the contents of the luggage. Both federal and international luggage screeners are provided with tools that can open Safe Skies luggage locks for mandatory baggage inspections, meaning you won’t arrive at your destination to find a lock that has been forced open on what can be expensive luggage.

From Amazon:


designed with a security feature that allows TSA airport security agents to open the lock without destroying it. TSA agents are trained to recognize the Travel Sentry Certified logo and should not break the luggage lock. The red indicator pops up when the lock has been opened by TSA. You can reset the lock with your personal combination.

Airport security professionals no longer need to cut your lock or force your bag open and risk damaging it. They simply open your locks, inspect, and relock your bags, sending them quickly and securely on their way.

bellevuebully
31st January 2011, 08:02 PM
"liberty" lock :ROFL: :ROFL: :ROFL:

LuckyStrike
31st January 2011, 08:04 PM
Doesn't look like much of a professorial company to me

"Travel has changed significantly after 9/11 event. (not a sentence) A major area of change has been with airport security and travel security in general New protocols (why capitalize the N?)have been adapted (adopted?), and many airports require thorough security checks in both domestic and international flights."

sirgonzo420
31st January 2011, 08:17 PM
Doesn't look like much of a professorial company to me

"Travel has changed significantly after 9/11 event. (not a sentence) A major area of change has been with airport security and travel security in general New protocols (why capitalize the N?)have been adapted (adopted?), and many airports require thorough security checks in both domestic and international flights."


professorial?

LuckyStrike
31st January 2011, 08:19 PM
Doesn't look like much of a professorial company to me

"Travel has changed significantly after 9/11 event. (not a sentence) A major area of change has been with airport security and travel security in general New protocols (why capitalize the N?)have been adapted (adopted?), and many airports require thorough security checks in both domestic and international flights."


professorial?


LOL, damn spell check. :D

Twisted Titan
31st January 2011, 08:36 PM
.................

"liberty" lock :

Ponce
31st January 2011, 08:37 PM
I'd better stay away from you guys........you could lynch me for my English.

big country
1st February 2011, 06:27 AM
Doesn't look like much of a professorial company to me

"Travel has changed significantly after 9/11 event. (not a sentence) A major area of change has been with airport security and travel security in general New protocols (why capitalize the N?)have been adapted (adopted?), and many airports require thorough security checks in both domestic and international flights."


Why is "Travel has changed significantly after [the] 9/11 event" not a sentence? It has a noun and a verb (subject and predicate) which is all it needs to be a complete sentence.

Travel = subject
changed = predicate

Am I wrong?

LuckyStrike
1st February 2011, 07:02 AM
Doesn't look like much of a professorial company to me

"Travel has changed significantly after 9/11 event. (not a sentence) A major area of change has been with airport security and travel security in general New protocols (why capitalize the N?)have been adapted (adopted?), and many airports require thorough security checks in both domestic and international flights."


Why is "Travel has changed significantly after [the] 9/11 event" not a sentence? It has a noun and a verb (subject and predicate) which is all it needs to be a complete sentence.

Travel = subject
changed = predicate

Am I wrong?


I couldn't tell you the parts of speech to save my life but to me it should be either

Travel has changed significantly after the 9/11 event

or

Travel has changed significantly after 9/11

not


Travel has changed significantly after 9/11 event.


English was easily my weakest subject in school so maybe I'm wrong but couple that sentence with the myriad of other spelling errors on the site I think it's written by a foreigner.

big country
1st February 2011, 07:09 AM
Ok gotcha. So it is a sentence, it just doesn't make sense as written which I agree with.

They forget THE or they should have dropped the word EVENT for it to really make sense, but technically it is still a sentence.

Yes I agree, it sort of flows like those chinese building instructions you get with cheap furniture. I would guess it is written by a foreigner as well.

gunDriller
1st February 2011, 07:14 AM
http://www.safeskies.com.au/Safeskies-Blog.aspx


http://whois.domaintools.com/safeskies.com.au

"Registrant: MERMELSHTAYN TOMMY"

well ... Tommy M. has to make a living.

Awoke
1st February 2011, 08:31 AM
Travel has changed significantly following the events of 9/11.


Fuck.