It's been an interesting year so far for the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) and its contradictory rules on passenger identification and new screening implementations. In recent weeks, Congress decided to investigate the TSA for overly forcing Americans to submit to facial recognition , which travelers are legally allowed to opt out of if they wish. Meanwhile, after REAL ID mandates rolled out earlier in the year, some passengers have experienced trouble getting through TSA checkpoints with their perfectly legal tribal IDs , despite this form of identification being federally recognized as a REAL ID alternative. Yet again, another REAL ID complaint has arisen—only this time, the problem stems from one U.S. state's clerical blunder.

The TSA has been denying some passenge

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