• Flying Squid@lemmy.worldM
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    7 months ago

    The link didn’t load for me, but this link has an interesting bit at the end-

    “Meat has strict import conditions which can change quickly based on disease outbreaks,” the spokesperson said, adding that passengers can be fined up to 6,260 Australian dollars, or around $4,100, for bringing unauthorized food items into the country.

    It’s not the first time a passenger has been fined for bringing an undeclared item through an Australian airport. In August, a passenger was fined $1,200 for walking with a rose at an airport in Australia. And in August last year, a passenger was fined $1,870 for packing McMuffin sandwiches on a flight from Bali to Australia.

    https://www.businessinsider.com/australia-airport-food-fine-passenger-sandwich-passenger-pension-2023-11

      • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldM
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        7 months ago

        Apparently someone who doesn’t want Australia to fine them. The real question is why Australia doesn’t let people know this before they enter the country when the TSA easily lets people know about all the things they can’t bring on a plane with signs before they even go through a security checkpoint.

        • evranch@lemmy.ca
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          7 months ago

          Some of these rules are just silly and arbitrary. Once I was driving down to the USA from Canada and I had a banana sitting on the dash for a snack.

          The customs agent angrily tells me “You can’t bring a banana into America”. So I chomped down the banana, and offered the peel for disposal.

          “I don’t want the peel, you can keep the peel”

          I looked confused and asked how the peel was any different from the whole banana, and he’s just like “move along, next vehicle”

          I think he was just hungry and wanted to swipe my banana

          • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldM
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            7 months ago

            My father visited the USSR in the late 80s. When he left, he was required by law to return all of the Soviet money he had exchanged. He offered all of his rubles and then he emptied his pockets and he had a handful of kopeks in them and put them on the desk. The customs guy looked down at them and said, “you keep kopek.” And that’s how I got a few Soviet kopeks as a kid to add to my coin collection.

      • WashedOver@lemmy.ca
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        7 months ago

        At the US Canada border crossing, if you don’t declare a pack of gum or a candy bar for a inspection it can be used as an “issue”

        I was warned of this a few years ago as they asked me if I wanted to declare anything before they started their random vehicle inspection.

        One time I was driving my Gf’s car and at some point a orange had rolled under her seat and had turned into a dried out black ball.

        They let me off with a stiff warning that I was lucky since I didn’t declare and they could tell it was an accident. They have to be concerned about the orange crops (in Florida I guess?) I was told. I was crossing in Washington State though.