“ carnage" is an adjective which means different things to different people to describe different states of chaos and discomfort and that to me describes the scene at Heathrow.
It’s actually a noun and it has one meaning only: the slaughter of large numbers of people.
Hardly a hanging offence to use it, but I have a lot of sympathy with the questioner
The photograph in the link is unmistakably of a check-in (i.e. departures) zone. There are check-in desks with screens above showing which airline/destination they are handling and a large "B" to denote the zone. There is also a caption which demonstrates that the photo has not necessarily anything to do with the story ("Travellers queuing Heathrow Airport this summer"). It looks fairly typical of a busy departure are at Heathrow.
The text of the story definitely describes the experiences suffered by arriving passengers.
so it might be. with such a seemingly captive audience, why aren't the UK holiday companies capitalising and encouraging, and showing potential holidaymakers how great Britain is?
what they have been doing is charging maximum prices, like £5000 a week for a let in the south-west, or £3000 in north Norfolk. profiteering is not going to encourage people to holiday here. hence the big airport queues.
well maybe there's a fine line - but if the prices alienate potential customers (and I know plenty who looked and walked away), then it's profiteering.
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