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FedEx DVDs held at U.S. Customs until video declaration form completed (2012) (plus.google.com)
85 points by dredmorbius on Dec 2, 2013 | hide | past | favorite | 21 comments


I've just double-checked dates (G+ doesn't show them for original shares, and the original FB post was deleted): this was actually posted in January of 2012, so it's nearly 2 years old.

In which case I'd be really interested to know what the follow-up on this is / has been.



"EFFECTIVE 07/01/2001"

Weird that we've never heard of it before now.


Don't forget, the terrorists hate us for all our freedoms.


I don't understand why customs needs this.. it's perfectly legal for them to just take whatever they want or deny whatever they want entry for no reason as I understand it.

If they don't want Occupy videos they can just reject them. This form isn't needed to accomplish that.

What is its real purpose?


It has been widely speculated that the customs form that they pass out on the airplane en route to the USA is not about stopping bad guys but about getting them to lie on official paperwork so that there is a documented crime to cite as a reason to deport/jail them.


Pretty much my initial thought on this. As with pretty much any other declaration.


What about about the customs form you get when flying from the USA to another country?


The ones here in Uruguay and especially Argentina are mostly concerned about illegally entering or withdrawing cash (US Dollars mostly).

You have to declare cash above a certain amount, and I believe excess cash can be confiscated.

There are also other questions (for example: if you're bringing animal products - we had very damaging outbreaks of foot and mouth disease, the mad cow scare, etc)


That's exactly what is on the customs forms going into the US, too. Of course, that doesn't fit into the conspiracy theories.


The I-94 form asks such questions as "have you ever been or are you now involved in espionage or sabotage; or in terrorist activities; or genocide; or between 1933 and 1945 were involved, in any way, in persecutions associated with Nazi Germany or its allies", "have you... procured or attempted to procure a visa or entry into the U.S. by fraud or misrepresentation?", and "are you seeking entry to engage in criminal activities?"

http://www.immihelp.com/visas/i-94w.html



Yes, I know. I'm fairly confident it's the form tedunangst referred to, and to travellers, the distinction is mostly academic, since they're both handed in at customs.


That's not a customs form, to clarify.


It's there because old laws require it, and customs enforces the law. You can't amend the law in Congress, because changing immigration or obscenity laws are opening Pandora's box to all sorts of nonsense. It happens all of the time -- New York had a law on its books until a few years ago that affected auto leasing that was based on an 19th century problem... Rented horses whose poor training or health caused accidents. Because of this law, you could hold a car company liable for an accident -- which made it impossible to lease cars in New York! Changing the law was held hostage in the legislature for many years.

If you declare that the shipment doesn't contains "bad" things, and it does, and it's inspected, than yes you'll be guilty of filing a false instrument or lying to a federal agent -- serious crimes. That's just the reality of life, not a conspiracy as others have implied.


I'm confused, what if the videos contain information about Obama murdering Americans with drones? Would that be illegal for import?


It's illegal in parts of the US to film the things going on inside factory farms. That are real events that are actually happening, so I don't think the fact that what you mention is actually happening will make a difference. If they don't want you to know about it, they'll make it illegal.

This is so similar to the Chinese people not being educated about Tienanmen Square it's eerie.


I personally had no problem importing the famed video of Obama beating a tax payer to death with a quadcopter, though your mileage may vary.


The author of the post was importing videos from a vendor. How can she swear to what the contents are? Well, in this case there's a basis for confidence that they're training videos, but she may not have seen them. If you ordered, for example a fictional film on the basis of a recommendation, or someone sent you a data disc, you might have little idea. Will the government refuse it admission if you can't swear that its content is within the guidelines?


But: internet.


They have that covered.




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