Often, there is little or no direct cost to having a few people get away with breaking a rule, but there would be a very large cost to having most people break it. The plastic bag rule supports quick, clear checks on the quantities involved. It only requires passengers to use easily obtained, inexpensive equipment. Large scale non-compliance, with lots of people carrying loose tubes of toothpaste etc., would be expensive in both money and passenger time at security checks.
I think it is important to consider the effect of enforcement and non-enforcement on future compliance.
Most travelers will react to this question by being even more careful to follow the plastic bag rule, especially if changing planes in Dubai. The effect of the security actions will be to tend to increase compliance, improving overall efficiency of the fluid quantity check.
Now suppose a question or answer here had indicated that Dubai security had let the OP’s toothpaste through despite the lack of a plastic bag. What would the effect be on the future conduct of readers? At least some would see a green light not to bother with the plastic bag. That would lead to reduced compliance, and more time spent manually checking the number and size of fluid items each traveler is carrying.
None, except the obvious: following the rules for the sake of following the rules, instead of their intent.
The ziplock bag exists as a convenient (and IMHO rather clever) way to visualize the liquids rules: you’re allowed 1 ziplock bag of size 1 liter/quart containing items with up to 3 fl.oz/100ml of liquid/gel each, and the TSA even brands this as the “3-1-1 rule“. If your items fit in a ziplock bag, they’re likely to comply; if they don’t, further inspection is warranted.
So why would a security checkpoint confiscate another compliant toothpaste tube just because it’s not in a ziplock bag? Because the rules point to the moon (the bag contents), but they worship the finger (the bag itself). And for a low-level bureaucrat, there is no penalty for enforcing the rules too zealously, while using common sense but making a mistake might get them fired. Doubly so in a place like Dubai, where everything is outsourced to the lowest bidder.
Credit:stackoverflow.com‘
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