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One Minute Entry into USA

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They're using facial recognition at LAX. He get off the plane, you follow the sign and the waving dude to the USA section, where there is an armed homeland security guy standing next to a screen, by the time you stand in position to look at the screen it's already recognized you and he says have a nice day. One minute entry. No passport stamps.

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  • That is no argument to visit the USA, no need.

  • I live here duh. You couldnt use the systems anyway its for us only

  • Not always.  I'm a US citizen.  The IO still usually asks you what countries you went to while you were away and how long you were out of the country.  Answer those wrong and you will be pulled aside

2 hours ago, Yagoda said:

They're using facial recognition at LAX. He get off the plane, you follow the sign and the waving dude to the USA section, where there is an armed homeland security guy standing next to a screen, by the time you stand in position to look at the screen it's already recognized you and he says have a nice day. One minute entry. No passport stamps.

 

If you are a citizen of the country, then that's how it should be! No questions, no third degree, no BS, welcome home sir! That's how it is in the UK via automated e-gates (just slide in passport and look at screen - same as exit BKK), hell, we even extend that to Americans, Canadians, Europeans, Japanese, Koreans, Australians and New Zealanders. 

 

My Cambodian GF just got a U.S. tourist visa. This will enable her visit with me to New York in August (assuming Cambodia is not on the no travel list by then). Fingers crossed. Just wonder what our welcome to the U.S. will be.

 

On 6/21/2025 at 12:50 AM, soi3eddie said:

 

If you are a citizen of the country, then that's how it should be! No questions, no third degree, no BS, welcome home sir! That's how it is in the UK via automated e-gates (just slide in passport and look at screen - same as exit BKK), hell, we even extend that to Americans, Canadians, Europeans, Japanese, Koreans, Australians and New Zealanders. 

 

My Cambodian GF just got a U.S. tourist visa. This will enable her visit with me to New York in August (assuming Cambodia is not on the no travel list by then). Fingers crossed. Just wonder what our welcome to the U.S. will be.

 

If you are traveling together she can accompany you in the queue for U.S. citizens to save time.

On 6/20/2025 at 11:53 PM, Yagoda said:

They're using facial recognition at LAX. He get off the plane, you follow the sign and the waving dude to the USA section, where there is an armed homeland security guy standing next to a screen, by the time you stand in position to look at the screen it's already recognized you and he says have a nice day. One minute entry. No passport stamps.

 

That's good news and good to know. 

 

But not if I'm then going to have to wait an hour in the customs queue where they're going through suitcases looking for stuff like dried meat.  That's where I always got hung up in LAX, IAH, Seattle, etc.  Breezed through the IO and got the "Welcome home, sir".  Then onto the hourlong customs queue.  (Edit:  Though, in fairness, it wasn't always that long, but often enough...  Also, I've never had my bags searched unless I actually declared something.  But I'm amazed at how many Asians try to sneak in food.)

 

Has that gotten any better?  I've only flown out of the USA post Covid.  Not back in yet.

 

On 6/20/2025 at 10:53 PM, Yagoda said:

They're using facial recognition at LAX. He get off the plane, you follow the sign and the waving dude to the USA section, where there is an armed homeland security guy standing next to a screen, by the time you stand in position to look at the screen it's already recognized you and he says have a nice day. One minute entry. No passport stamps.

That is no argument to visit the USA, no need.:post-4641-1156694572:

2 minutes ago, ujayujay said:

That is no argument to visit the USA, no need.:post-4641-1156694572:

You should stay out anyway, you need some money for that

  • Author
15 minutes ago, ujayujay said:

That is no argument to visit the USA, no need.:post-4641-1156694572:

I live here duh. You couldnt use the systems anyway its for us only

  • Author
51 minutes ago, ThreeCardMonte said:


I have Global Entry and the face recognition was used at SAN on my last trip in April (avoid Songkran).

 

Not sure if it’s for Global Entry only or everyone.

I stayed thru Songkran, Im usually gone by then.

 

The Face Lanes were for everyone who had a US passport. Really a pleasant arrival.

  • Author
56 minutes ago, impulse said:

 

That's good news and good to know. 

 

But not if I'm then going to have to wait an hour in the customs queue where they're going through suitcases looking for stuff like dried meat.  That's where I always got hung up in LAX, IAH, Seattle, etc.  Breezed through the IO and got the "Welcome home, sir".  Then onto the hourlong customs queue.  (Edit:  Though, in fairness, it wasn't always that long, but often enough...  Also, I've never had my bags searched unless I actually declared something.  But I'm amazed at how many Asians try to sneak in food.)

 

Has that gotten any better?  I've only flown out of the USA post Covid.  Not back in yet.

 

Ive never had a customs search upon return, nor have a I ever been hung up in Customs. Lax, JFK, Seattle are my usual arrival airports. In JFK the Vegetable beagle was hanging around the baggage sniffing. The only people that had to wait in a line were the ones the beagle was interested in. 

 

It was a pretty painless process and quite efficient.

 

LA is a overpriced Socialist hellhole obviously. $36 for a BLT, thanks minimum wage laws.

1 hour ago, ThreeCardMonte said:


If she has a return ticket it shouldn’t be a problem.

 

A lot depends on the interviewing officer.  Some are easy.  Some are dic—.

 

 

While it shouldn't be a problem, immigration can invent a problem and refuse entry.  It happens every day.

In Hawaii, at least of the illegals are overstays.  Not sure about the numbers elsewhere.

On 6/21/2025 at 4:39 AM, jimmybcool said:

Yup.  LAX is fast for IS citizens these days.  

Not always.  I'm a US citizen.  The IO still usually asks you what countries you went to while you were away and how long you were out of the country.  Answer those wrong and you will be pulled aside and questioned like I was recently.  I've had more problems entering my own country than any of the other 100+ countries I've been to.

9 minutes ago, Jake44 said:

Not always.  I'm a US citizen.  The IO still usually asks you what countries you went to while you were away and how long you were out of the country.  Answer those wrong and you will be pulled aside and questioned like I was recently.  I've had more problems entering my own country than any of the other 100+ countries I've been to.

 

Sorry you got a bad entry.  I can only speak for myself.  Way back when (Like in the early 2000s) entry was bad.  Long queues, 40 minutes or more for US citizens.  Then long queues at customs.  Every time.

 

Last few years I have gone thru in less than 10 minutes total.  Using the facial recognition machines.  I don't check luggage though so that helps.  Maybe I just have that trustworthy look about me.  🤣

  • Author
23 minutes ago, Jake44 said:

Not always.  I'm a US citizen.  The IO still usually asks you what countries you went to while you were away and how long you were out of the country.  Answer those wrong and you will be pulled aside and questioned like I was recently.  I've had more problems entering my own country than any of the other 100+ countries I've been to.

When? I saw them question no one. Were you using facial recognition.?

 

11 minutes ago, jimmybcool said:

Maybe I just have that trustworthy look about me

Also depends on where you were and where you are flying from.

On 6/20/2025 at 8:53 AM, Yagoda said:

No passport stamps.

The US entry did not have passport stamps since early 2020. The IO only enters electronic I-94 in their system. Now, the electronic I-94 are generated from facial scan in a selected few airports and will be widely available in most airports by the end of 2025. 

8 minutes ago, Yagoda said:

When? I saw them question no one. Were you using facial recognition.?

In Trump's era, they are questioning more and more people if you have an active YouTube political channel that talks against Trump's policies or an immigration lawyer

Do you think customs cares about used stuff?  What if I bring two used laptops, a few watches, and lots of used electronic stuff?  I wonder how the tax versus depreciation stuff works?  no, no receipts.  I don't keep those things.  

 

12 minutes ago, Quentin Zen said:

Do you think customs cares about used stuff?  What if I bring two used laptops, a few watches, and lots of used electronic stuff?  I wonder how the tax versus depreciation stuff works?  no, no receipts.  I don't keep those things.  

They may confiscate your things. They once tried to confiscate my prescription medication that I bought in Thailand but luckily I had a doctor's prescription. 

1 hour ago, Jake44 said:

Not always.  I'm a US citizen.  The IO still usually asks you what countries you went to while you were away and how long you were out of the country.  Answer those wrong and you will be pulled aside and questioned like I was recently.  I've had more problems entering my own country than any of the other 100+ countries I've been to.

Correct. 

  • Author
1 hour ago, Knight Rider said:

In Trump's era, they are questioning more and more people if you have an active YouTube political channel that talks against Trump's policies or an immigration lawyer

Or alternatively, there are a lot of folks with a pro terrorist agenda

4 hours ago, impulse said:

 

That's good news and good to know. 

 

But not if I'm then going to have to wait an hour in the customs queue where they're going through suitcases looking for stuff like dried meat.  That's where I always got hung up in LAX, IAH, Seattle, etc.  Breezed through the IO and got the "Welcome home, sir".  Then onto the hourlong customs queue.  (Edit:  Though, in fairness, it wasn't always that long, but often enough...  Also, I've never had my bags searched unless I actually declared something.  But I'm amazed at how many Asians try to sneak in food.)

 

Has that gotten any better?  I've only flown out of the USA post Covid.  Not back in yet.

 

Twice I've seen mid-aged Thai women stopped by border force / customs at Sydney International airport. Both times I had wood objects which I declared, got inspected, no problems, net please.   But there can be a wait queue.

 

The 2 Thai women had large suitcases and bags opened displaying large amounts of meat, poultry, fruit and veg, herbs etc.,  and both times the Thai women were abusing the customs officers In Thai and Thai speaking officers trying hard to get the women to understand that these items cannot be brought into Australia and why. And the translators sharing that the women were claiming that Thai people cannot be checked and it's not legal to stop people from carrying food to feed their families. All the food was confiscated and big fines paid. 

3 hours ago, Yagoda said:

When? I saw them question no one. Were you using facial recognition.?

 

Also depends on where you were and where you are flying from.

 

If you saw me you would know it really IS the trustworthy look I have.  🤣

4 hours ago, Yagoda said:

Ive never had a customs search upon return, nor have a I ever been hung up in Customs. Lax, JFK, Seattle are my usual arrival airports. In JFK the Vegetable beagle was hanging around the baggage sniffing. The only people that had to wait in a line were the ones the beagle was interested in. 

 

It was a pretty painless process and quite efficient.

 

LA is a overpriced Socialist hellhole obviously. $36 for a BLT, thanks minimum wage laws.

$22 hot dog.  Only had 20 dollar bill, no credit card, did not eat in transit.  Found bubbler for free water in out of the way place filled up my water bottle.  But no problems at Imm. or customs.  Always had a lot of problems in Seattle.  Wife and kids could not stand in line with me. 

4 hours ago, ThreeCardMonte said:


Primarily Japanese?

No Filipinos.

On 6/20/2025 at 11:53 AM, Yagoda said:

They're using facial recognition at LAX. He get off the plane, you follow the sign and the waving dude to the USA section, where there is an armed homeland security guy standing next to a screen, by the time you stand in position to look at the screen it's already recognized you and he says have a nice day. One minute entry. No passport stamps.

I’ve seen this at IAD, SFO, and EWR.   The process takes seconds.  

4 hours ago, scorecard said:

And the translators sharing that the women were claiming that Thai people cannot be checked and it's not legal to stop people from carrying food to feed their families. All the food was confiscated and big fines paid. 

 

Of course they were saying those things. Ignorant arrogant fools. 

 

Do you know who i am ?

When i arrive my country in Scandinavia its no officers where i go entering passport control.Its just a scanner and i let it read my passport and it also takes a picture too.Deal done.My ex mother in law from Thailand visit 6 times and then i followed her to the passport control and she had to show her passport and proofe of travel insurance.

12 hours ago, Yagoda said:

 

LA is a overpriced Socialist hellhole obviously. $36 for a BLT, thanks minimum wage laws.

Here’s a short list

1. Highest Cost-of-Living in the Nation

California has the highest cost-of-living burden in the country under Gavin Newsom. 

2. Soaring Crime

According to a recent report by the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) on crime rates in 2022, while nationwide crime has gone down, California's crime rate is consistently spiking and went up in 2022 by a staggering 13%. 

The passage of Proposition 47 and Proposition 57 in California (both championed by Gavin Newsom) are key drivers of the increase in crime

3. Worst Homelessness Crisis in the Nation

Despite California spending over $24 billion on homeless prevention programs from 2018 to 2022 alone, California’s homelessness crisis has gotten far worse under Newsom’s leadership. From 2007 to 2022, homelessness nationally has fallen 10%, but it has increased in California by a staggering 31.6% according to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. In fact, California represents roughly 12% of the US population – but has a third of the homeless population. 

under Newsom,

The bedrock of our functioning republic is the public’s trust in our election system and the integrity of election results. But Gavin Newsom has actively undermined election integrity in California by: reducing the amount of polling centers, greenlighting ballot production policies that lead to duplicate ballots, refusing to clean voter rolls, and much more.

In fact, our audit of the 2022 California Election found that the state failed 9-out-of-10 election integrity metrics and found ample evidence of fraudulent voting.

5. Helping Human Traffickers While Creating a Border Crisis

Gavin Newsom has supported Joe Biden's reckless “open borders” policy, which has resulted in record numbers of illegal immigrants crossing every month since Biden took office,

6. Failing Schools – And Attacks on Parents

California schools are failing and are more concerned about spreading toxic curriculum than core competencies under Gavin Newsom. Test scores in California have shown a steep decline in reading and math achievement for 3rd through 11th grade. Of the most shocking results, only 13% of students in Bakersfield met the state standard for math, and only 41% of students in Los Angeles Unified were proficient in reading.

Newsom has turned a blind eye to these results and has been focused on attacking parents and removing parents’ “Right to Know” about what their children are learning and whether they are having challenges over their identity. 

7. Negligence Creating an Insurance Crisis

Under Newsom, several insurers have announced plans to increase rates or pause or cease coverage in California.

The insurance crisis is caused by three drivers:  

First, massive surge in inflation under Newsom and Joe Biden has caused the cost of home damage repair (construction/appliance costs) to skyrocket way above the assumed models that insurance companies expected when they set premiums in 2019-2023.

Second, the severity of wildfires is worse because Newsom has failed to implement proper forest management practices.

Third, the state insurance regulations prevent insurance companies from providing cost-efficient policies that reflect rapidly changing market conditions.

Newsom has failed to address these causes and has instead attempted to blame “Climate Change” for the insurance crisis.

8. A Pattern of “Pay-to-Play” Politics

Gavin Newsom appears to have engaged in pay-to-play politics by receiving millions from state contractors and developers and rewarding them with billions in state contracts and housing subsidies. Conveniently, these same special interests donate to his wife's 501c3 foundation, from which she has drawn more than a million dollars in compensation.

Newsom also recently took a lot of heat over “Panera-Gate” — in which he allegedly exempted Panera from a $20 per hour minimum wage increase bill after a Panera owner donated to Newsom’s campaign.

9. Failed Green New Deal Policies (Energy, Water Rationing)

Newsoms’ “Green New Deal” policies have resulted in the shutdown and restriction of nuclear and natural gas plants, leading to a reliance on unreliable solar and wind energy sources. He has also imposed mandates, taxes, and regulations on gas and energy, resulting in the highest rates in the nation and a crushing burden on working families. 

In fact, consumers are forced to pay higher utility rates to fund government-mandated "public purpose" programs, such as welfare assistance, climate change programs, and wildfire preparedness. There is also a "High Usage Charge," which is basically a "Hidden Usage Charge," on all energy bills, penalizing consumers for using over a certain amount of energy.

By choking energy production, politicians have forced California to import 30% of its energy each year from neighboring states. These failures have led to increased energy costs for Californians and a strain on the state's electrical grid.

Newsom has also been negligent in his mismanagement of the state’s water supply. Only 5% of California's water is used for residential, retail, and commercial consumption, while 40-45% is used by agriculture and 50-55% is directed out to the ocean. 

Environmental restrictions have also led to less usage of rivers, such as the case of the Delta Smelt. New technologies to enhance water supplies have been rejected by Newsom and state politicians.

10. Destroying Direct Democracy by Gutting Citizen Initiative Rights

US Citizens or others with Global Entry typically get waived thru pretty fast at the big US airports...LAX SFO JFK MIA DFW PHL...not sure about the other airports.

There are also other options like MPC that is quick.....they just waive you thru....Welcome back Tom, Welcome Back Dick, Welcome Back Harry.  Line normally less than a minute.\

They have you hold your PP open to picture page.  They've probably already scanned APIS info the airline shared with them at departure.....hop skip jump, you're in.

If they're looking for you, you'll be flagged and pulled out of line for additional questions.

 

Now non-US citizens without Global Entry....lines can be super long...maybe 2 hrs or more, visa or no visa.  Almost every airport I see that line is LONG and SLOW....but maybe that is no different than most countries.  Good citizens get in fast, Boys on the Bad Guy list (non-citizens) get more scrutiny.  I have not heard one legit tourist getting harrassed upon entry to US.  However if you lie on your application and plan to come to work, marry, cause trouble, you may be refused entry, just like every other country.

On 6/23/2025 at 4:02 PM, westsail said:

If you are traveling together she can accompany you in the queue for U.S. citizens to save time.

 

This had been my experience for a number of years as well, but in May last year my wife and I were turned away from the US citizen line at JFK and were told we had to use the non-citizen line. Perhaps it now depends upon the airport one arrives at.

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