Workingman wrote:The thing is that we supposedly have a problem with child trafficking and we have a duty to do something about it. If that upsets the feelings of a few snowflakes then so be it. If they do not like it they can always take staycations in cotton-wool land.
Mrs S had exactly this problem when travelling with two of our Grandchildren. The problem was that the border officer would not take a reasonable answer and started insisting that #1 Grandson tell her what his Grandmothers name was. To which #1 Grandson replied "Nana". Which he felt was quite reasonable. He was 9 at the time.
Mrs S was getting more and more agitated as the border officer was not taking that for an answer, when #2 Grandson (5 at the time) stuck his head between the front seats and said, with a smirk on his face, "I know what her name is" and promptly told her.
What the border officer didn't seem to realise is that we don't live with #1 Grandson and he only ever saw her in a family situation. I don't call her by her first name, I call her darling, the kids call her Mum (including the married in kids), so he had no chance. #2 Grandson used to live with us and was regularly there when visitors arrived calling Mrs S by her first name. As our daughter never married his father, he still had our surname. So he had no issue answering these questions but he was never asked because his name was the same.
I think that the border officer suddenly realised that the other child was a Grandson and decided to give it a rest at that point.
After this event, Mrs S, realising what the situation was, had our daughter write us a permission letter which could be produced at customs if required. However it's a moot point now as he's 22 and 6'4".
The main point here was the attitude. The border officer was aggressive, pushing and threatening. In a situation where it was absolutely 100% clear these children were not in the threat bracket, she acted as if they were. If she was not able to do her job, they should pull her back in for training. That will only happen if people complain.
I have travelled that border all my life. Things have changed and changed very much in the last 10 years. If you asked Mrs S about whether this woman should have complained, I'm guessing she would probably have supported her, having been in that situation. Mrs S is no shrinking violet and quite capable of giving as good as she gets. But when you have two children with you from two daughters, it changes your willingness to go on the attack with a border officer.