oh yeah, El Al would leave me standing places over and over again, just ignore me, then if I moved or tried to talk to someone new I would get finger wagged at. It was UBER frustrating.
'Out Of Gas'
Natter 67: Overriding Vetoes
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, nail polish, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
I've heard from more than one friend that they had to have an extensive interview when leaving Israel as a young American woman travelling alone, but not that they missed their flights or anything. But that's a profile they pay special attention, to, apparently. (Or did 5-10 years ago.)
I've been interviewed fairly regularly in line at the Paris airport. The most extensive was a little over 20 years ago when I had flown to visit my family shortly after my mother died. The agent stopped me because she thought "I looked upset." It wasn't the most fun I've had, but I thought it was perfectly reasonable.
I finally just updated my location on the map here. I feel significantly less awesome now that there's no person on the map in China, but now it's where I actually am, which was probably a good idea.
Work was rough today. There were lots more teachers out than substitutes available so they threw me in a lecture hall and 4-6 classes at a time. It was thrilling.
To actually reply to something being discussed, Israel's airport security seems so sensible to me. A quick interview is such a fantastic idea. I would assume Israel's bigger airports would be as busy as most US airports, right? With the exception of maybe LAX and O'Hare and things. I can't believe they get their screening process done so quickly. Ours just seems slow and inefficient.
I learned today it's a good thing I don't teach elementary school. One hour volunteering in Sara's classroom during "centers" and I was ready to blow. They do. not. shut. up
Bwahahahaha! I tell Owen's teacher every week when I volunteer in the classroom that they do not pay her enough for what she does.
Creepy but interesting: A pinhole camera made from an old human skull.
B&N just called to tell me that they have the new color Nook available. i put my name on the waiting list on tuesday and was told it would probably be three weeks, which i was okay with since i really technically don't have the money for it. now it's available and i'm all grabby hands. to be fair though, i wouldn't really have any more money in three weeks than i do now. i was planning on using Christmas money to buy it. so...do i charge it? or do i wait and act like a responsible adult? *siiiiiiiiiigh*
Native Americans visited Europe 1000 years ago
Five centuries before Columbus reached the Americas, Vikings briefly settled on the northern tip of Newfoundland. Now the DNA of four Icelandic families reveals it wasn't just Europeans traveling to the Americas...at least one Native American went back with them.
Eleven modern Icelanders carry an unusual variant of mitochondrial DNA known as C1e. This particular variant is very closely related to those found in Native Americans but practically unheard of in Europe. Mitochondrial DNA is only passed down by the mother, so the common ancestor who originally possessed the C1e must have been a woman.
Research shows all these people are descended from generations of Icelanders, meaning the mitochonidrial DNA can't have come from a relatively recent immigrant. Indeed, based on Iceland's centuries of isolation, the only real way to account for this finding is that a Native American woman lived and had children on Iceland about 1000 years ago.
Of course, that fits perfectly with the known Viking expeditions in the Americas, but until now it was thought it was only Europeans who made the voyage across the Atlantic. Now we know at least one Native American woman made the trip, and it's possible future DNA research will reveal more Amerindians came with her.
Now I wish we knew this woman's story - it'd be fascinating....
Oh, man, tommyrot, I'm going to be dreaming about that woman tonight.
Is Scola still around? Because, {{{{{Scola}}}}}
That is such an interesting story!
I'm sorry, Tom, and I hope that the long-term effect is a positive one, even though right now, it is anything but.
I don't know if things immediately jump to "stopping" -- I assumed it's more "let's talk to that person a little more and doublecheck their ID," or something else that 1) is still part of SOP and 2) isn't humiliating and invasive. Because the same thing would also happen to people acting oddly because they're afraid of flying, or they're tired, or whatever. That's fine.
I know that it happens in US airports often enough (as it's happened to my brother) that I doubt it's any worse there, as well.