SPRINGFIELD, VA — The Transportation Security Administration announced today that it will be ending its long-standing “shoes off” policy at airport security checkpoints, after an internal poll revealed that 58% of TSA agents openly admitted to having a foot fetish. What began as a post-9/11 safety protocol has, over the years, morphed into a government-funded toe-peep show masquerading as counterterrorism.
“If we’d known what this really was from the start, we would’ve had them paying us for the job,” said TSA Administrator Brian Anderson. “We’re supposed to be protecting the skies, not creating free content for foot freaks.”
“For years, we told people removing their shoes was essential for detecting threats,” added a TSA spokesperson. “But the real threat was the growing number of agents breathing a little too heavily during pat-downs that somehow always made it all the way down to the pinky toe.”
Multiple agents were found to be conducting “full-leg security sweeps” that inexplicably stopped at the arch of the foot and lingered. Reports describe unnecessary sock removal, extended squatting, and one agent who brought his own lavender-scented foot wipes “just in case someone was sweaty from a connecting flight.”
Travelers have long suspected the truth. “I was wearing Converse,” said one man departing from O’Hare. “The guy took ten minutes unlacing them, looked me dead in the eye, and said, ‘Security is in the details.’”
Even the infamous “random screenings” appear to have been anything but. The review found a 70% increase in “random selection” for passengers wearing sandals, slides, or those little barefoot running shoes that already feel like a cry for help.
And yet, the pat-downs continued: deep, deliberate, and often uncomfortably sensual. One agent reportedly asked a traveler if they were “hiding any sole-powered explosives” before tracing the curve of their arch with what witnesses described as “concerning focus.”
As part of the policy reversal, TSA says agents will be reassigned away from shoe screening duties based on their browser history, sock commentary habits, and whether or not they’ve ever said the phrase “let them puppies breathe” out loud.
Several former agents have already pivoted to subscription-based platforms, offering private “security simulations” with names like TSA After Dark and Feet First Clearance, where for a low monthly fee you can experience the thrill of getting your sneakers slowly untied by someone who whispers, “this is for your safety.”


