> iPhone in hand, with my digital ticket ready to board; so easy and pleasant.
Most airlines provide the same digital boarding passes, I often travel with my pass added to Apple Wallet.
> If an alternative airport wanted to do things a little different, such as "fly at your own risk" "no lifeguard on duty", aka no TSA b.s., I'd happily take the "at your own risk" option rather than the TSA controlled situation we're subjected to currently.
The problem here is that it's not just "your own risk" if that plane is directed at a populated area.
Directed by whom? There is no conceivable threat that would make a pilot agree to fly their plane into a building, and reinforced cockpit doors make it implausible to enter the cockpit without damaging the airplane past the point of flying - and passengers wouldn't stand for it anyway.
It's a crap comparison, anyway - the TSA is better at finding toys than they are at finding bombs and weapons. Dogs and x-ray detectors could do just as well, and "alternative airports" could choose to have those.
Most airlines provide the same digital boarding passes, I often travel with my pass added to Apple Wallet.
> If an alternative airport wanted to do things a little different, such as "fly at your own risk" "no lifeguard on duty", aka no TSA b.s., I'd happily take the "at your own risk" option rather than the TSA controlled situation we're subjected to currently.
The problem here is that it's not just "your own risk" if that plane is directed at a populated area.