Ummmmm..Maybe I'll just let the story speak for itself.........

Moderators: carlson1, Charles L. Cotton
Bah. On a good day, they might be the last line of defense against long lines to use the airplane's facilities.mamabearCali wrote:Great, and these are the guys entrusted as "the last line of defense against a terrorist" as they like to tout themselves. We are doomed.
Dave2 wrote:Bah. On a good day, they might be the last line of defense against long lines to use the airplane's facilities.mamabearCali wrote:Great, and these are the guys entrusted as "the last line of defense against a terrorist" as they like to tout themselves. We are doomed.
Since when?Heartland Patriot wrote:but, I know they are unionized and nothing will happen to the miscreant at all...
I wouldn't say I'm eager to bash the TSA, it's just that someone trying to get attention for their website has more credibility...VoiceofReason wrote:I agree with the comment posted on the original article.
YepISaidThat
9:43 PM EDT
Oct 24, 2011
Always a little suspicious when something like this happens to someone trying to get attention for their website.
Everyone is so eager to bash the TSA they might believe anything.
Or a good one . . .sjfcontrol wrote:I gather the agent got a bad vibe...
Perhaps it is what the TSA already does/has done that makes just about anything said about them believable.VoiceofReason wrote:I agree with the comment posted on the original article.
YepISaidThat
9:43 PM EDT
Oct 24, 2011
Always a little suspicious when something like this happens to someone trying to get attention for their website.
Everyone is so eager to bash the TSA they might believe anything.
VoiceofReason wrote:I agree with the comment posted on the original article.
YepISaidThat
9:43 PM EDT
Oct 24, 2011
Always a little suspicious when something like this happens to someone trying to get attention for their website.
Everyone is so eager to bash the TSA they might believe anything.
Well, here is an update. They are firing the TSA employee.VoiceofReason wrote:If and I repeat if a TSA employee did put that note in that woman’s luggage he/she should get a couple of weeks “on the street” without pay or fired outright. I believe I read that it was being investigated. Hopefully they will have video to prove one way or the other.
"It's easy to scapegoat one individual here, but the problem with the note is that it's representative of the bigger privacy intrusions that the U.S. government, through the TSA and other sources, levels every day," she wrote Wednesday after learning of the employee's suspension.
"As much as this is a funny and titillating story, when I put the note on Twitter for what I thought was a relatively limited audience, I was hoping it would open up a bigger conversation about privacy rights (or lack thereof) in post-9/11 America. It unfortunately hasn't done that, and instead has turned into a media circus," she said.
"The note was inappropriate, the agent in question acted unprofessionally when s/he put in my bag, there should be consequences and I'm glad the TSA takes these things seriously. But I get no satisfaction in hearing that someone may be in danger of losing their job over this. I would much prefer a look at why 'security' has been used to justify so many intrusions on our civil liberties, rather than fire a person who made a mistake."
"Like all federal employees, this individual is entitled to due process and protected by the Privacy Act.