When will Australia get modern entry procedures?

This one always puzzled me, for packaged processed food like chocolate bars, chips and the like, how would they know it came from the plane and not from the point of origin (and why would it matter )?

I get these rules are written with the semi-fresh/ frozen and reheated food served up during meal service in mind, so I suspect no one is ever going to be prosecuted if they bring in a mars bar they took from the plane.
True story… passenger behind me on a Cathay Pacific flight a few weeks ago was approached about how they wanted their Kosher meal opened.

They asked the crew if they could forgo opening and heating and if they could ‘take it home?’.

The crew member said ‘you want to take this off the aircraft?’ [passenger nodding]

‘Errr… no’ 🤣

And then there’s the Aussie flight engineer who was getting leftover meals and bread rolls from cabin crew and trying to bring those into Australia! Caught by Border Force!
 
And then there’s the Aussie flight engineer who was getting leftover meals and bread rolls from cabin crew and trying to bring those into Australia! Caught by Border Force!
The reason i always tick yes is because i was caught by the Beagle once (and ticked no).
An apple was found - this was part of the welcome fruit basket when we were at the Datai Langkawi. We stashed it in the luggage meaning to eat it on our travels but completely forgot about it.

Sadly Beagles are not used anymore after 2018.
Apparently Labs are easier to train.
i guess this is part of modernising the entry procedures.
 
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The reason i always tick yes is because i was caught by the Beagle once (and ticked no).
An apple was found - this was part of the welcome fruit basket when we were at the Datai Langkawi. We stashed it in the luggage meaning to eat it on our travels but completely forgot about it.

Sadly Beagles are not used anymore after 2018.
Apparently Labs are easier to train.
i guess this is part of modernising the entry procedures.
There is a huge pool of specially bred Labs with the aim to improve the abilities of the dogs over generations.. They are part of a multinational breeding program that in my time included Australia, USA and the UK. Dogs have not been 'taken off the street' since 1993 as the failure rate was too high. The multinational nature means that inbreeding does not cause problems as breeding dogs are swapped between the various countries.




 
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Commercially packaged and unopened snacks such as chocolate bars or crisps. I declare them. Not gonna throw away good food. You never know when you’re gonna want a snack at 2am when you have jet lag! Not trying to bring in the leftover steak or apple 😆

Yes, exactly as @Aeryn said, if it's highly processed food that doesn't normally need to be declared, you can take it (and not declare it).

Anything you normally would have to declare, can't be taken from the plane. Eg, a sandwich, diary (including packaged yoghurt, cheese etc).

At the end of the day the rule is for the most conservative approach to stop people doing silly things. If you start to blur the line (you can bring cheese and crackers, but the cheese has to be from a certain list of countries so you better check with the airline as to where they purchased your cheese....) Just easier and safer to tell people not to do it. Give people an inch and they'll take the entire galley home.
 

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