In April I wrote about the TSA’s pride in its work displaying the New York skyline and declaring ‘Never Again’.

Yet they do seem to forget, because the TSA has a 95% failure rate detecting dangerous items through the checkpoint, it was a 91% rate a decade ago, over 20,000 TSA employees have been accused of misconduct (about half of them multiple times), screeners have manipulated the process to fondle attractive passengers and don’t have a very good track record when responding to a crisis.

But the next time you show up at the airport and hand over your drivers license to the document checker, they may just be working on their best Jack Nicholson impression.

Reader Scott who sent me the photo above in April, shared this one he captured at the TSA checkpoint in the Maui airport. Picture quality isn’t ideal, but while you have a right to photograph it’s often advisable to be discreet when you do, and I think it’s the message here that’s most relevant.

As Scott wrote to me, “It’s not often you see pictures of plane crashes proudly displayed in an airport.”

It’s also especially bizarre because positive bag matching has not been required for domestic flights for at least 6 years.