Maybe someone knows, but does the US ever guarantee citizens will be able to enter the country? I thought not, but I couldn't turn up anything on google (only stuff about de facto refusals via the no fly list). Of course, if that were the case, the State Department could just say that, rather than mumbling about a rule change.
There's a book called Airport about JFK that has some stuff about bird control, but I've forgotten most of the details. But basically they end up killing birds because there isn't an across the board solution, including killing the birds.
Does the gluten free meal bear a suspicious resemblance to, say, the kosher meal or the vegetarian meal? I'm always amused that there are three or four vegetarian/vegan meal options on the website, but, in reality, there's only the one. (Of late, it seems that the Asian vegetarian meal, theoretically not available on flights between the US and Europe, was made vegan if it wasn't already and they've killed all the birds with one stone. On the plus side, I'd rather have the Asian meal.)
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There's a book called Airport about JFK that has some stuff about bird control, but I've forgotten most of the details. But basically they end up killing birds because there isn't an across the board solution, including killing the birds.
Does the gluten free meal bear a suspicious resemblance to, say, the kosher meal or the vegetarian meal? I'm always amused that there are three or four vegetarian/vegan meal options on the website, but, in reality, there's only the one. (Of late, it seems that the Asian vegetarian meal, theoretically not available on flights between the US and Europe, was made vegan if it wasn't already and they've killed all the birds with one stone. On the plus side, I'd rather have the Asian meal.)