by Pa Rock
Infrequent Flyer
I was in town grocery shopping early yesterday afternoon and not checking my phone every two minutes like sad people do - and by the time I got home I found two emails from my youngest son who lives in the Kansas City area. He seldom emails, so that had my attention.
Tim's first email informed me that he was at his local airport, Kansas City International (KCI), awaiting a flight to New York for several days of work-related (writing) activity in the Big Apple. The second email, which had arrived thirty or so minutes later, said that he was still at the airport but no longer inside. The entire place had been evacuated and he was now with hundreds of other stuck travelers standing outside on the tarmacs. Eventually, a couple of hours after that I got a third email saying that he was finally airborne and headed to NYC.
During the afternoon I sifted through various internet sites collecting what information was available on the situation at the Kansas City airport. Good, independent news is a rare commodity these days, but I finally focused of coverage from the Associated Press (AP). That service reported that the evacuation started around 11:15 in the morning when police canine units began arriving in the airport and people were suddenly informed to evacuate the building immediately. Airports, and that airport in particular, are zoos on their best days, but throw in a complete evacuation and you undoubtedly have enough drama and comic opera to create a television movie of the week, or maybe a whole series!
During the melee, which lasted around three hours, some flights into KCI were diverted to other airports, the planes that were allowed to land had to remain on the tarmacs with their passengers staying on board, and the people who were trying to leave Kansas City stood around on the tarmacs checking their phones and watching YouTube videos. Eventually, not long after 2:00 p.m., FBI Director Kash Patel announced that the threat had been "reviewed and deemed not to be credible." But whether the threat was credible to Kash or not, the airport's multi-level parking garage was shuttered for a couple of additional hours. Local vehicle traffic was also impacted by the situation at the airport.
As of this morning there still appears to be no news regarding what the actual threat entailed or how it was delivered. Two obvious possibilities spring to mind, at least to my old gray mind. One is that the threat was engineered by some disgruntled TSA employee who is pissed because he hasn't been paid in weeks (thanks to our useless GOP Congress), and the other would be a protest of some sort related to the new war in the Middle East, the one the United States helped to initiate. Either way, the buck should stop on Trump's desk, but it was Sunday and he was undoubtedly out playing golf in Florida or somewhere exotic on our dime. Trump's flights are never interrupted.
One other item of note, AP used a file photo for their story - a picture of one of the smaller terminals at the old Kansas City airport, the one that was bulldozed a few years ago to make way for the five-story shopping center with runways. The airport shops probably didn't sell many eight dollar sodas yesterday!
Flying America's friendly skies has long been a nerve-wracking and humiliating experience. Now, thanks to the ineptitude of the Trump administration, it looks as though this spring and summer will be much worse that usual. Also, as the price of oil keeps going through the roof thanks to Trump and Bibi's war on Iran, the price of airline tickets will soar higher than the planes themselves. This would certainly be a good time to renew the national conversation about upgrading the nation's passenger rail service and incorporating high-speed rail across the country like other modern nation have done.
But while we can afford endless war, we cannot afford nice things for the people who live here and pay the taxes, things likes adequate health care, food security, livable and affordable housing, and a national transportation system that would meet the needs of all Americans.

