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New Coke Bottles Banned by TSA for Looking Like Grenades

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Imagine this: You’ve just finished a breathtaking trip to Galaxy’s Edge, Disneyland’s latest Star Wars-themed park in Anaheim, California.

You’ve loaded your suitcase with Stars Wars souvenirs — R2D2 headbands, a bucket of mouse droid popcorn, Jedi food capsules and plenty of plush characters from the movies.

You’re at the airport, about to check your bag. Then, you realize there’s a problem.

Your favorite souvenirs — a set of thermal detonator-themed Coke, Diet Coke and Sprite bottles — aren’t allowed, the person at the bag-checking counter says.

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“Why not,” you ask, incredulously. “They’re freaking Coke bottles!”

But it’s to no avail. You’re forced to throw out your detonator bottles, and you board your flight crestfallen.

So who’s to blame for this egregious violation of your inalienable right to carry a few soda bottles across the country with you?

Three words: the Transportation Security Administration.

Earlier this month, a person tagged the “AskTSA” Twitter account and asked if the thermal detonator-themed bottles were allowed in suitcases.

“Thanks for asking! Replica and inert explosives aren’t allowed in either carry-on or checked bags,” the TSA replied.

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It’s disappointing, but it’s not all that surprising.

In the “Star Wars” films, “Thermal detonators are grenade-like weapons that pack tremendous explosive power into a small sphere and are used by bounty hunters and military forces such as the Empire’s stormtroopers,” according to StarWars.com.

In real life, thermal detonators are — well, they’re nothing, because there’s no such thing. Still, the toys apparently look enough like actual grenades that the TSA won’t allow them on flights.

According to the agency’s website, “realistic replicas” of both explosives and incendiary devices are banned from checked and carry-on bags.

So what about if a traveler packs the thermal detonator Coke bottle in their bag after taking the dodgy-looking lid off?

Still no, the TSA says.

“Even with a normal bottle cap, this item is still considered a replica and is not allowed in carry-on or checked bags,” the agency tweeted. “If our officers discover a replica item during screening and believes it’s real, the item will be treated as such until advised otherwise by law enforcement.”

TSA spokesman Jim Gregory further explained to The Orange County Register that the coke bottles are banned because “it could create concern that it’s the real thing.”

Lest one think that the TSA has an anti-Star Wars bias, it’s worth noting that the agency is simply not a fan of any sorts of toys or keepsakes that look like weapons, even if its a toy a 5-year-old might play with.

Speaking of toys that 5-year-olds play with, the TSA once confiscated a pink, plastic, dinosaur-shaped hand grenade toy. Likewise, they seized some poor passenger’s bullet-shaped whiskey stones, which are normally used to chill drinks, not to shoot at people.

While the TSA continues its crusade against replicas of weapons that clearly aren’t real, it’s not clear the agency is even able to recognize legitimate threats.

In fact, the TSA actually has a pretty awful track record when it comes to identifying real weapons.

A 2015 Department of Homeland Security investigation, for instance, found that in 67 out of 70 cases, undercover investigators succeeded in smuggling weapons or explosives through security.

And in November 2017, another investigation revealed that TSA agents were still failing to identify test weapons at a high rate.

This time, the failure rate was “in the ballpark” of 80 percent, a source told ABC News at the time.

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Joe Setyon is a deputy managing editor for The Western Journal who has spent his entire professional career in editing and reporting. He previously worked in Washington, D.C., as an assistant editor/reporter for Reason magazine.
Joe Setyon is deputy managing editor for The Western Journal with several years of copy editing and reporting experience. He graduated with a degree in communication studies from Grove City College, where he served as managing editor of the student-run newspaper. Joe previously worked as an assistant editor/reporter for Reason magazine, a libertarian publication in Washington, D.C., where he covered politics and wrote about government waste and abuse.
Birthplace
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