New Zealand granny fined US$1,995 for bringing chicken sandwich into Australia (www.scmp.com)
from throws_lemy@lemmy.nz to world@lemmy.world on 25 Nov 2023 13:47
https://lemmy.nz/post/3742703

#world

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darkdemize@sh.itjust.works on 25 Nov 2023 14:03 next collapse

That’s dumb. I understand restrictions on uncooked meats, but what harm could a cooked chicken breast do? This is what happens when officials blindly enforce rules without understanding the purpose of the rule in the first place.

Selmafudd@lemmy.world on 25 Nov 2023 19:44 next collapse

Brah so we should test all chicken breast coming into the country to make sure it’s cooked? Who the fuck is paying for that? Or maybe you just don’t bring a fucking chicken burger on the plane…

nixcamic@lemmy.world on 25 Nov 2023 20:34 next collapse

It’s a case of common sense. Obviously an accident, obviously cooked. Throw it in the trash and move on with life. You crazy black and white maniacs that think every rule has to be applied 100% in every case with no possibility of anything ever happening that maybe doesn’t make sense or isn’t the intention of the people who wrote the rule are like 50% of what’s wrong with society.

Pancito@lemmy.world on 25 Nov 2023 21:03 next collapse

As a German I feel deeply insulted.

Selmafudd@lemmy.world on 25 Nov 2023 21:35 next collapse

Us crazy black and white maniacs is why Australia doesn’t get to enjoy the wide array of pest and dieses the rest of the world has.

Fuck this gandma and her chicken burger. Entitled people like her are actually what’s wrong with society.

nixcamic@lemmy.world on 25 Nov 2023 22:08 collapse

You can accomplish your goals while not being a dick about it.

steakmeout@lemmy.world on 25 Nov 2023 23:53 collapse

You started with name calling and proceed to define others as dicks.

nixcamic@lemmy.world on 26 Nov 2023 00:12 collapse

Yes I called the people who charged a grandma $2000 for accidentally bringing a sandwich that has zero chance of carrying avian influenza dicks. Why you’re choosing to take that personally is beyond me.

steakmeout@lemmy.world on 26 Nov 2023 01:39 next collapse

So you’re ageist too. Got it.

thejodie@programming.dev on 26 Nov 2023 02:11 collapse

False. We love all chicken sandwiches regardless of how old they are.

nixcamic@lemmy.world on 26 Nov 2023 02:37 collapse

No he’s right I think I do start to discriminate against chicken sandwiches once they’re more than a week or so old.

thejodie@programming.dev on 26 Nov 2023 02:44 collapse

Oh I see how it is. You’re like the Leonardo DiCaprio of chicken sandwiches.

nixcamic@lemmy.world on 26 Nov 2023 02:45 collapse

That’s what my friends call me.

sukhmel@programming.dev on 26 Nov 2023 08:48 collapse

Avian influenza dicks are what I’d really would not be happy to see in a sandwich burger

youngGoku@lemmy.world on 26 Nov 2023 01:13 next collapse

I have a feeling the granny probably pissed someone off along the way. I’m sure sometimes it gets thrown away and everyone moves on.

HeartyBeast@kbin.social on 26 Nov 2023 09:28 collapse

You and I obviously have no idea what happened at the security gate, or the extent to which she tried to argue about it or hide it. I’ve travelled in and made mistakes in the past and the result was a stern ticking off. I suspect there was more to this.

darkdemize@sh.itjust.works on 25 Nov 2023 21:22 collapse

If you can’t tell the difference between raw chicken breast and a piece of fried chicken on sight, please don’t ever work anywhere near the food industry.

Selmafudd@lemmy.world on 25 Nov 2023 21:36 collapse

If you don’t know chicken can look cooked on the outside but be raw on the inside please don’t ever work anywhere near the food industry.

darkdemize@sh.itjust.works on 25 Nov 2023 21:45 collapse

Who the fuck is smuggling half-cooked chicken breasts for this ‘gotcha’ of yours? Oh, that’s right, no one.

Selmafudd@lemmy.world on 26 Nov 2023 02:25 collapse

You understand most of risk DAFF is trying to mitigate is accidentally introduction of pests and dieses right?

And I can’t fathom how so many people think customs have the man power to check every hamburger passagers may be inclined to hide in their luggage. Unknown and unprocessed meat is a risk, cheapest and safest way to reduce the risk is to ban it.

But you know, you guys continue to enjoy your airplane hamburgers along with rabies, brown marmorated stink bugs, khapra beetles, giant african snails and all the other shit we manage to keep out with strict quarantine laws.

Maalus@lemmy.world on 26 Nov 2023 03:32 next collapse

Okay, it is banned. Tell them to throw it away. Don’t fine the everliving shit out of them for a cooked sandwich.

meathorse@lemm.ee on 26 Nov 2023 08:17 next collapse

That’s generally the rule - if you’re not sure, declare it, then if it’s not allowed, it’s binned. There are even signs all over the place through Aus (& NZ) customs saying exactly this.

If you don’t declare it and it’s found or it looks like you’ve tried to hide it (wrapped in luggage) then that’s when you get in trouble for it.

Selmafudd@lemmy.world on 26 Nov 2023 20:08 collapse

I’ve worked in imports for 20 odd years and would have witnessed ABF & DAFF (and their previous 5 or 6 names) seize or hold hundreds of thousands of items. I’ve never seen a fine issued for a simple mistake, they’re normally reserved for when there is deceit or concealment.

jimbo@lemmy.world on 27 Nov 2023 02:10 collapse

Unknown and unprocessed meat is a risk

A risk of what? And why would that risk not apply to the people coming in who’ve been eating that meat?

rabies, brown marmorated stink bugs, khapra beetles, giant african snails

All things that are not typically found in chicken sandwiches…

Selmafudd@lemmy.world on 27 Nov 2023 02:16 collapse

What risk from meat?? Where the fuck have you been for the last 4 years brah??

jimbo@lemmy.world on 29 Nov 2023 02:13 collapse

I’m still waiting. What’s the risk from a cooked chicken sandwich and why would that risk not apply to the human eating that same meat?

Selmafudd@lemmy.world on 29 Nov 2023 04:46 collapse

Fucking hell you’re a thick cunt.

Chicken meat can be contaminated with Avian Influenza. And why isn’t the risk the same if a person ate it on the plane… Because humans aren’t avian.

The law isn’t made around 1 granny and her fucking sandwich right? All different meats contain different risks, the level of risk is different depending on the country of origin, type of supplier ie commercial vs personal use. It’s how quarantine works lad.

jimbo@lemmy.world on 29 Nov 2023 05:18 collapse

The law isn’t made around 1 granny and her fucking sandwich right?

No shit, that’s why law enforcement almost always has some leeway to handle situations on a case by case basis. Lady coming in with a COOKED chicken sandwich from New Zealand? Not a biothreat.

Kind of funny you calling someone else a thick cunt when you’re dead set on inventing/wildly exaggerating the existence of a threat.

zik@lemmy.world on 26 Nov 2023 10:10 next collapse

It’s a genuine biosecurity risk in Australia. Australia (and NZ) are very susceptible to pathogens from outside so this kind of thing is taken very seriously in both countries.

CrayonRosary@lemmy.world on 26 Nov 2023 19:52 next collapse

You probably shouldn’t let any people in then.

“Nope, don’t worry about that. It’s the chicken sandwiches that are the problem.”

jimbo@lemmy.world on 27 Nov 2023 01:56 collapse

It’s a genuine biosecurity risk in Australia.

A cooked chicken sandwich? And letting in people who’ve eaten the sandwiches isn’t a biosecurity risk? Hmm. I’m questioning the genuineness of the concern.

timkenhan@sopuli.xyz on 26 Nov 2023 10:20 collapse

You should be thankful it’s cooked.

If it’s undercooked? Believe it or not, straight to jail.

C126@sh.itjust.works on 27 Nov 2023 02:23 collapse

That’s dumb. I understand restrictions on uncooked meats, but what harm could a cooked chicken breast do? This is what happens when officials blindly enforce rules without understanding the purpose of the rule in the first place.

Overcooked? Also jail.

stifle867@programming.dev on 25 Nov 2023 14:17 next collapse

“Chicken meat poses a significant biosecurity risk to Australia, particularly the risk of highly pathogenic notifiable avian influenza (HPNAI) virus which can cause severe disease and mortality across Australia’s poultry industry, and may also affect wild bird populations.”

We do have a reputation for taking these things very seriously, as we should. We were even going to kill Johnny Depp’s dogs at one point but settled for the “hostage video”. Despite that, it does seem excessive in this case and should have been overturned on appeal at the very least.

Thankfully someone stepped up and ended up paying the fine on their behalf.

[deleted] on 25 Nov 2023 15:08 next collapse
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stifle867@programming.dev on 25 Nov 2023 15:23 collapse

Great, then declare it and there shouldn’t be any problem. Where the problem comes in is people not declaring it. If it’s hidden somewhere in their luggage or on their person how is anyone supposed to know that?

Granted it is harsh in this case which I already said but customs has no interest in letting people skirt the rules just because.

Fosheze@lemmy.world on 25 Nov 2023 15:36 next collapse

Who in their right mind would think they need to declare a sandwich?

fluxion@lemmy.world on 25 Nov 2023 15:40 next collapse

Don’t forget to declare your half-eaten bag of airplane peanuts as well.

HeartyBeast@kbin.social on 25 Nov 2023 15:57 collapse

You can either declare them or put them in the bio security bins in arrivals.

stifle867@programming.dev on 25 Nov 2023 15:50 next collapse

Perhaps anyone listening to the plane announcements, looks at any one of the multitude of signs on arrival, or anyone (everyone) who fills out the incoming passenger card? It’s not at all unclear what you have to do when you’re there. They make it clear to declare everything at multiple points. There is no penalty for declaring something even if it’s not allowed in.

On the first side of the incoming passenger card, half of it is taken up by the question:

Are you bringing into Australia:

[…]

  1. Meat, poultry, fish, seafood, eggs, dairy, fruit, vegetables?

  2. Grains, seeds, bulbs, straw, nuts, plants, parts of plants, traditional medicines or herbs, wooden articles?

  3. Animals, parts of animals, animal products including equipment, pet food, eggs, biologicals, specimens, birds, fish, insects, shells, bee products?

Blue_Morpho@lemmy.world on 25 Nov 2023 16:42 collapse

The tourists are all made of raw meat!

stifle867@programming.dev on 25 Nov 2023 16:47 collapse

And the same applies! You have to be declared. If you try and smuggle a human in there’s probably steep fines associated if you’re caught.

HeartyBeast@kbin.social on 25 Nov 2023 15:56 next collapse

The people who see the massive signs all the way through the arrival hall with pictures of stuff like sandwiches. Seriously, you can’t miss them

Fosheze@lemmy.world on 25 Nov 2023 16:20 next collapse

Never been in an aussie airport so I’ll take your word for it. Still though having to declare a sandwich is beyond absurd. I get the reasoning for raw foodstuffs but a cooked chicken sandwich isn’t carrying anything that granny couldn’t also just be carrying in her body.

HeartyBeast@kbin.social on 25 Nov 2023 16:30 collapse

You might find it absurd, but it is quite common. The same rules about cooked food now apply, for example when travelling from the UK to France - that sandwich could have been seized when travelling into Europe - there were some travellers who were caught out travelling to France following Brexit. https://food.ec.europa.eu/animals/animal-products-movements/personal-imports_en

stifle867@programming.dev on 25 Nov 2023 17:30 collapse

And the same in the US except with ever larger fines than AU www.cbp.gov/travel/…/agricultural-items

KevonLooney@lemm.ee on 25 Nov 2023 19:03 collapse

The US only cares about uncooked food: meat, fruit, etc. I’ve personally declared Reese’s peanut butter cups, as a joke. They look at you like this:

<img alt="" src="https://i.imgflip.com/8786ic.jpg">

halcyoncmdr@lemmy.world on 25 Nov 2023 22:06 collapse

Uncooked foods, and more specifically things with seeds. A primary concern is about new species being introduced and becoming invasive.

HeartyBeast@kbin.social on 26 Nov 2023 09:19 collapse

.. and canned meat and soup, if you look at the regulations-particularly beef

SkippingRelax@lemmy.world on 26 Nov 2023 05:13 collapse

And you are told in a dozen languages even before stepping out of the plane. But everyone in this thread who’s never crossed a border think you can just go to other countries and do the fuck you want because they know better

5BC2E7@lemmy.world on 25 Nov 2023 21:53 collapse

Don’t forget to declare any stuff that might get trapped on your shoes. Iirc people have been jailed for having “marijuana traces” on them.

EDIT: not sure why people are voting down but this actually happened: www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=188…

interceder270@lemmy.world on 25 Nov 2023 16:25 collapse

Real talk, how did they find it if she didn’t ‘declare’ it?

stifle867@programming.dev on 25 Nov 2023 16:29 next collapse

They found it after they went through her backpack.

Extra info: if you declare everything, even if it’s something that’s definitely not allowed, you will not get into any trouble. I’m talking about food and stuff not drugs or guns. They just don’t want people to not be declaring things that then slip through without inspection. That’s why there’s a heavy fine if they have to “catch” you. A lot of things are okay’d to be brought in after inspection.

interceder270@lemmy.world on 25 Nov 2023 17:02 collapse

How’d they find it in her backpack?

Do they just search people’s luggage in addition to having them ‘declare’ things?

stifle867@programming.dev on 25 Nov 2023 17:09 next collapse

They do “random searches” just like any other country but I find it more likely in this situation that they saw something on the scanner which prompted them to search the bag. Even if you compare the process to the USA it’s pretty much identical. You still have to declare everything except the USA has even steeper fines than Australia.

HeartyBeast@kbin.social on 26 Nov 2023 09:22 collapse

Random searches are a standard part of going through the green channel in most countries. There are also sniffer dogs. Several years ago I watched a lady get stopped because a softer dog had detected an apple in a Tupperware box in her luggage.

MostlyHarmless@sh.itjust.works on 25 Nov 2023 19:30 collapse

Everyone is searched going through customs. There are also dogs trained to sniff out everything.

Obi@sopuli.xyz on 25 Nov 2023 22:51 collapse

I hope the dog got to eat the sandwich.

[deleted] on 25 Nov 2023 16:08 next collapse
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stifle867@programming.dev on 25 Nov 2023 16:18 next collapse

And what I got from other commenters is that their countries hate pieces of gum and shrivelled blackened oranges. It’s not unique to Australia although as an island nation especially prone to biosecurity threats we do have a reputation for taking it more seriously. It’s not a difficult thing to get caught with if you’re paying any sort of attention. You can make mistakes and accidentally (or even purposefully) bring stuff in as long as you own up to it. There’s signage everywhere explaining in words and pictures what is and is not allowed. The custom agents ask you. There’s literally every chance to declare.

It’s not as harsh as it sounds, it’s only when you get caught that it becomes a big deal. It’s like if you got pulled up by the cops. If you try and lie or simply don’t even recognise that you were speeding you’ll probably get a ticket. The analogy breaks down in the “admit fault” side of things because the cop can ticket you anyway, where under our biosecurity law you cannot be punished for declaring goods that would not be allowed in.

[deleted] on 25 Nov 2023 20:19 next collapse
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stifle867@programming.dev on 26 Nov 2023 00:31 collapse

The very next sentence says:

The analogy breaks down in the “admit fault” side of things because the cop can ticket you anyway

[deleted] on 26 Nov 2023 06:49 collapse
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HeartyBeast@kbin.social on 26 Nov 2023 09:23 collapse

Do you have a passport? You shouldn’t visit Europe either - similar restrictions

barsoap@lemm.ee on 26 Nov 2023 11:42 collapse

Yep no meat no dairy. Which also applies to the UK, yet another Brexit dividend.

The chance that any random sandwich carries something nasty is small, but there’s two other factors: a) If it does carry something nasty, the implications are huge and, certainly not least, b) you don’t need to bring a sandwich. Noone needs to bring a sandwich. Get one once you arrive. And if you just can’t stand airline food then be vegan for a couple of hours it won’t kill you. Live solely off chocolate during your flight if you want.

interceder270@lemmy.world on 25 Nov 2023 16:25 next collapse

We were even going to kill Johnny Depp’s dogs at one point but settled for the “hostage video”.

Let me guess, it’s because he was rich and famous.

stifle867@programming.dev on 25 Nov 2023 16:33 next collapse

I think it was more about sending a message. In a way yes because he is famous, but in the way that they wanted to leverage that as a deterrence. It wasn’t about “letting him off the hook”. It was about using him as a platform to say to the world “we do not fuck around when it comes to this”. If you’ve seen the hostage video you know what I mean 🤣

interceder270@lemmy.world on 25 Nov 2023 16:35 collapse

I have not seen this hostage video.

Is it easy to find?

stifle867@programming.dev on 25 Nov 2023 16:40 collapse

Here’s a short news story about it with some additional context youtu.be/4a7ExWd698w

Here’s the original clip youtu.be/Q2BDtdkyxFk

If you search Johnny Depp hostage video you will find it. We don’t talk about she who must not be named.

PipedLinkBot@feddit.rocks on 25 Nov 2023 16:40 next collapse

Here is an alternative Piped link(s):

https://piped.video/4a7ExWd698w

Piped is a privacy-respecting open-source alternative frontend to YouTube.

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interceder270@lemmy.world on 25 Nov 2023 17:01 collapse

Thank you!

I can see how this might be a win-win for both parties. Yeah, JDepp gets off cause of his fame. But the AU government also gets to use that fame to send a message to everyone else.

stifle867@programming.dev on 25 Nov 2023 17:06 collapse

They were never really going to kill the dogs. The full context was along the lines of “well you can do the right thing, or we will have no choice but to…”. I’m not aware of any cases where they’ve actually euthanised a pet, famous or no. It’s an absolute last resort as they would rather just quarantine them. But yeah, pretty funny and a win for the government.

Marsupial@quokk.au on 26 Nov 2023 08:29 collapse

In Australia under a rightwing government? No, they wouldn’t have given a shit about that.

It was because he broke biosecurity laws. Something we take seriously here after witnessing how rabbits, foxes, and canetoads fucked up the environment.

rainynight65@feddit.de on 26 Nov 2023 07:53 collapse

We were even going to kill Johnny Depp’s dogs at one point but settled for the “hostage video”.

That was just Barnaby Joyce grandstanding and making a big deal out of ‘we apply the rules to everyone, no matter if they’re rich or famous’. No fucking way he would have ever laid hands on those dogs. The man was and still is a fucking embarrassment to politics and Australia.

stifle867@programming.dev on 26 Nov 2023 07:56 collapse

Agreed and I made a similar point in a few of my other comments. If you look at the original context it was more of a “well you have to abide by the rules and the dogs should be quarantined but if you’re not willing to do that then we would have no other option”.

FlyingSquid@lemmy.world on 25 Nov 2023 14:37 next collapse

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.

businessinsider.com/australia-airport-food-fine-p…

toallpointswest@mastodon.cloud on 25 Nov 2023 14:44 next collapse

@FlyingSquid @throws_lemy Who the hell declares a sandwich????

FlyingSquid@lemmy.world on 25 Nov 2023 14:46 next collapse

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.

stifle867@programming.dev on 25 Nov 2023 14:50 next collapse

We do. There’s announcements on the flight and there’s signs everywhere.

The department spokeswoman pointed to biosecurity announcements on flights which told travellers what their declaration obligations were, as well as signage about it around arrivals areas in Australian airports.

FlyingSquid@lemmy.world on 25 Nov 2023 14:52 collapse

Ok, so basically this woman didn’t pay attention to anything and got fined for it.

stifle867@programming.dev on 25 Nov 2023 14:55 next collapse

It was probably a lack of attention combined with a genuine mistake. She claims she slept through the flight. Lots of people are also unaware how strictly we deal with it and think they’ll be fine instead of fined. We have an entire TV show about it.

I don’t want to be too harsh on her as it’s relatively minor and the fine amounted to 10% of their combined remaining life savings. It was her mistake.

ColeSloth@discuss.tchncs.de on 25 Nov 2023 15:26 next collapse

You aussies charged her $2,000 for a harmless cooked sandwich. It was too old to eat and just garbage by the time she arrived to Australia. Instead of simply tossing it…$2,000. Y’all suck.

Marin_Rider@aussie.zone on 26 Nov 2023 03:11 collapse

there are signs all through the airport and she will be asked as well. she had opportunities to declare it

ColeSloth@discuss.tchncs.de on 25 Nov 2023 15:17 next collapse

She’s 77 and she had probably planned to eat it on the flight. It was a cooked chicken sandwich. Think she planned on keeping it for like 6 hours in her purse?

FlyingSquid@lemmy.world on 25 Nov 2023 15:19 collapse

Armstrong said she packed the sandwich in her bag before the flight

Yes, it sounds like she did.

Railison@aussie.zone on 26 Nov 2023 07:07 collapse

Moreover, she declared on her landing card that she had no plant or animal material on her possession. Being a New Zealander she should know better. What an idiot.

evranch@lemmy.ca on 25 Nov 2023 14:58 collapse

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

FlyingSquid@lemmy.world on 25 Nov 2023 15:00 collapse

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 on 25 Nov 2023 14:56 collapse

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.

stolid_agnostic@lemmy.ml on 25 Nov 2023 21:28 collapse

Crossing in Washington the guard got angry at us because one of us was from DC, one from Vegas, and one from Seattle. He was offended that we came from different places.

WashedOver@lemmy.ca on 25 Nov 2023 23:42 collapse

It sucks how people are left up to the whim of the guards working. If they are having a bad day, odds are you will too.

darkdemize@sh.itjust.works on 25 Nov 2023 14:48 collapse

That same info was also in the linked article.

FlyingSquid@lemmy.world on 25 Nov 2023 14:49 collapse

Like I said, the link didn’t load for me.

darkdemize@sh.itjust.works on 25 Nov 2023 15:16 next collapse

I was merely letting you know. There’s no need to downvote factual information.

FlyingSquid@lemmy.world on 25 Nov 2023 15:16 collapse

I didn’t downvote anything.

stifle867@programming.dev on 25 Nov 2023 15:58 collapse

Could it have something to do with it being Chinese state media? I’m not aware of any ad blocker that is that overzealous but it might be a possibility?

Chozo@kbin.social on 25 Nov 2023 14:59 next collapse

"Flightless" for a reason, grandma.

robocall@lemmy.world on 25 Nov 2023 17:42 next collapse

Granny shoulda watched that show, “border security: Australia”

qupada@kbin.social on 25 Nov 2023 20:53 next collapse

To make it worse, we have our own in New Zealand, which is the (worldwide) original of that format. The Aussie series is a spin-off.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Border_Patrol_(New_Zealand_TV_series)

cyd@lemmy.world on 26 Nov 2023 03:34 collapse

Funny thing is, NZ is actually stricter on this issue than Australia.

Nihilore@lemmy.world on 25 Nov 2023 21:32 next collapse

That’s a chicken burger in the picture, love when there’s an article about aus/nz but using American nomenclature

Pulptastic@midwest.social on 26 Nov 2023 01:10 next collapse

Burger is ground meat and chicken sandwiches are often made of whole meat. Cheapo ones are mechanically separated which would count as ground, but the one in the photo is not.

Marin_Rider@aussie.zone on 26 Nov 2023 02:55 next collapse

nope we’d call that a burger in aus/nz

Nihilore@lemmy.world on 26 Nov 2023 05:32 collapse

Over here if it’s on a bun it’s a burger, if it’s on sliced bread it’s a sandwich, simple as

rainynight65@feddit.de on 26 Nov 2023 07:54 next collapse

Precisely this. American terminology applies in America only.

CrayonRosary@lemmy.world on 26 Nov 2023 19:50 collapse

I’m sorry, but we invented English. We say what words are valid in the language.

Girru00@lemmy.world on 27 Nov 2023 01:40 collapse

LOL, America did what now? Invented English? Met an English fella the other day, born and raised in New York.

Reddfugee42@lemmy.world on 27 Nov 2023 05:07 next collapse

Britain speaks Old English. We speak the newest one.

CrayonRosary@lemmy.world on 04 Dec 2023 23:40 collapse

I don’t like having to use /s, but there are people like you.

grayman@lemmy.world on 26 Nov 2023 10:33 next collapse

What about sandwiches made with rolls and bagels?

Also, I see the aussie point, but, in the US, burger is short for hamburger, which refers to the meat itself. Do you only say ground beef too? Or is ground beef also called hamburger?

And also… Is a burger not considered a type of sandwich?

I hadn’t heard of this dialect difference. Fun stuff!

brisk@aussie.zone on 26 Nov 2023 11:20 next collapse

The meat is beef mince or minced beef (not ground). It’s formed into and cooked as a patty, which is one component of a delicious hamburger.

I think most people would say yes to “is a burger a type of sandwich” but that’s a very different question to would you call a burger a sandwich, which an Aussie would not.

Nihilore@lemmy.world on 26 Nov 2023 19:54 next collapse

A roll is a roll and a bagel is a bagel, a sub is a sub, they’re not really called sandwiches here unless it’s on sliced bread

rainynight65@feddit.de on 28 Nov 2023 02:35 collapse

A bagel is a bagel. Two halves of a bagel with something on between are still a bagel. The same goes for a roll. A sandwich is two slices of bread with something in between.

Pulptastic@midwest.social on 26 Nov 2023 18:11 collapse

A Cuban sandwich is on a bun, is that a burger? Same goes for cheese steaks and French dips and subs, served on buns, is burger?

CrayonRosary@lemmy.world on 26 Nov 2023 19:50 collapse

No, no, it has to be a round bun.

Xyre@lemmus.org on 27 Nov 2023 02:10 collapse

So White Castle doesn’t count as a burger? 🤔

Reddfugee42@lemmy.world on 27 Nov 2023 05:05 next collapse

You’re expecting logic from the Alcatraz continent?

EurekaStockade@lemmy.world on 27 Nov 2023 06:05 collapse

White Castle does not exist in AU/NZ so the round bun criteria is still consistent

doggle@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 27 Nov 2023 23:17 collapse

It even converted to USD. But for real y’all call it a chicken burger?

Alexstarfire@lemmy.world on 26 Nov 2023 01:48 next collapse

What shitty article. No explanation of anything. Get this shit out of here.

Yoz@lemmy.world on 26 Nov 2023 10:33 collapse

ChatGPT at your service kind Sir.

No_Ones_Slick_Like_Gaston@lemmy.world on 26 Nov 2023 11:35 next collapse

“Don’t risk it for a Bisquit”

CrayonRosary@lemmy.world on 26 Nov 2023 19:48 collapse

Bisquick has ruined your spelling.

No_Ones_Slick_Like_Gaston@lemmy.world on 26 Nov 2023 20:31 collapse

Got me, apologies on this, but it was nesquick

cantrips@lemmy.world on 27 Nov 2023 02:38 next collapse

Same thing happened to me with a Tim Hortons bagel. Border guards with small dicks having a power trip. The best part? The question on the computer was “are you importing any xyz…”. I was not importing it, I was eating it at the airport. Still had my Nexus taken.

Additional_Prune@lemmy.world on 28 Nov 2023 02:57 collapse

I remember flying back from Spain one time and a young woman behind me in line to clear customs had two Spanish sausages, long ones, on top of her luggage. They were a no-no. Clearly, she did not give a fuck. Customs let her through.