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Approved! My latest passport (EU - hurrah) is just a credit card sized plastic card with a photograph and all sort of bio-metric gibberish. Can the short story in this case take the form of a micro print and be read by scanning it into an iPhone or iPad? |
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[xen] I'm slightly surprised that you don't travel with a microfilm reader and a selection of different magnification lenses as a matter of course. Everyone else I know does. |
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Im now also imagining the exact opposite of the idea
. a massive 1,000 page closely written tome with passport features. |
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Story selection could be a somewhat thorny issue for the State department to work out, to avoid ruffling feathers in certain countries, but I like the idea. Imagine a country being offended by a story that vaguely seems supportive of capitalism or greater individual freedom than they allow. |
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No use of a humourous story on the Chinese Passport of course (or for several other countries) |
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I think that this is an infinitely better idea than the changes currently being made to our passports here. [link] |
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No more historical images, just pop-art. |
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Yes, its traditional for everyone, in every country in the world, to grumble about their countrys regular passport redesign and then, 5 or 10 years later, to grumble about the passport design they so hated before being replaced with another one. |
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//massive 1,000 page closely written tome with passport features// Now there's an idea! I've come close to filling all the pages of the passport, but not quite--do they just tape more pages in? Not very classy, or legal, probably. Staples might be legal. |
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[xen]'s idea would allow for never running out of a page to stamp on a 10-year passport! We could mark the voyage using the Librarian's trick of stamping the page that matches the end number of the year, month or day of travel, eg: processing a new book for shelving, the Librarian stamps 'Property of Unseen University*' at the bottom of page 23 for a book purchased in the year 2023. |
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Will they quiz you on the story line? + |
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Did anyone in this story ask anyone else in this story to take any prohibited articles on this flight? |
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It's a metaphor from keeping something in front of something. So, for example, an airline employee might hope to keep your big bag of detcord in front of the check- in desk, and not let it into the hold of the aircraft which waits somewhere behind. |
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Yes stupid to try carrying that on. Should have split it into two small bags. |
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Or maybe we could change the metaphor; maybe "inhibited" would be our friend: "exhibited" probably less so. |
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