When you’re making rules like this, simplicity and objectivity are vital. You don’t want (whether you’re a traveller, a supervisor of the security staff, or a person trying to prevent terrorism) a situation where security staff need to make decisions on their feet based on whether the passenger’s story is good enough or any other kind of judgement call. Hmm, you have shampoo and conditioner, well yes your hair is quite long, you may pass. Oh my, you are almost completely bald, why would you need conditioner, we’re confiscating this, and so on.
Travellers want to be confident their stuff won’t be banned. Staff need to be able to do their jobs as quickly and consistently as possible. And the person who made the rules needs to be sure they will always be enforced as imagined. That’s why you can’t bring 50 ml of stuff in a 600 ml bottle. Reading the label and seeing that it says 600 ml is simple, unambiguous and consistent. It works even if the security staff are not that bright. And there’s no need for a complicated appeal process. Someone else reads the label and says yup, 600 ml, this is a no-go. There’s no argument about whether you have 80 ml left in the bottle or 120 ml left in the bottle. The rule is just about the bottle.
Your little bottles are each under 100ml and all fit in the baggie of freedom? You’re free to go. Nobody stops to say hey, each of these bottles appears to have the very same stuff in it. That would require judgement. The volumes – the 100 ml and the dimensions of the baggie of freedom – have been chosen so that even if you brought 6 or 7 bottles (whatever can fit) of the maximum allowed size all of the same stuff, you wouldn’t be able to do much damage. (And really, checking that they are all labelled as different things wouldn’t do much – we can all make labels.) Also, if you used larger sub-bottles – say 200 ml – you could get more total volume into the baggie, so using small sub-bottles is another way of constraining the total volume.
Designing a very simple and consistent system makes the checking faster. It lets people bring shampoo, conditioner, lotion, toothpaste, shaving cream etc. And it was set up so that it still constrains the bad guys. Sort of. It’s not that hard to circumvent, in reality, since there are exemptions for things that are labelled (eg saline solution, prescription medication) and tremendous trust in labels. But it’s all tradeoffs, and this certainly makes people feel protected. It even has some effect. Nothing is 100%, but the liquid-reducing measures do mean that more conspirators would be required for most terror acts, and more conspirators means more chances to catch them before they even get to the airport.
According to the TSA, the limit is such that it would be impossible to use liquid/plastic explosives to take the plane down, while still allowing us to have our minimal amount of soap and shampoo for these 2-day business trips without having to check in any luggage.
Here’s more from the TSA.
My assumption is that TSA is concerned about what could be concealed within the liquid.
Credit:stackoverflow.com‘