jimlongley wrote:Beiruty wrote:I listened to a very good NPR talk show about this subject.
Experts agree:
1) The TSA is conducting a "theater" of security measures, to prove that they are doing something or to their best ability to screen passengers and avoid airplane hijacking.
2) The serening procedures are introduced reactively to prior events.
3) the serening is not very effective for imagined and hard to detect terrorist acts that can bypass existing security measure. Example, underwear bomb and the body cavity bombs and in the future implanted bombs (all of this were openly discussed on the air)
4) terrorists are observing, testing, and bypassing or avoiding existing security measures.
5) Security measures are VERY VERY expensive.
However, the hard measures introduced resulting in a fact that hijacking airplanes is very tough and not feasible. One major reason cited, a hijacker would beaten till death on any airplane!
As a long time, although no longer emplyed there; "TSA Thug" as someone called me in a different thread, I have to agree, particularly with point 4. Part of my job, for a while, was testing other airports, and I was able to take a .380 through passenger screening 7 times out of 10 tries, and I wasn't even trying very hard.
That said, those who call us, the laid off engineers, retired military, and various other professionals who, due to economic necessity or other factors, found ourselves vastly underemployed at TSA; "Thugs" need to put yourselves in our shoes for a while before calling us names.
I don't know one TSA screener that enjoys patting down a few hundred people a day while being blamed for all of the ills of airline travel - we are there to do a job, a job dictated by YOUR politicians, not by us, and believe me, we know how ineffective pat downs can be.
All TSA pat downs are conducted by same gender personnel, not to say some of them are not gender switchers, and without liberal application of drinking alcohol I don't know any who really enjoy even the prospect, much less the act, of feeling up our fellow man or woman right out there in public while suffering the slings and arrows of the unknowing, and often unwashed, traveling public.
And while I suppose that there might be some twisted souls out there who could raise some sort of reaction to the backscatter pictures, if you really consider what the screeners are looking at, what they are looking for, and how many of those pictures per shift they have to examine, I have to think that the "porn" aspect is only in the twisted minds of those who want to find something to criticize about TSA.
So gripe, abuse, and threaten all you want, but all you are really doing is making it worse for yourselves, because the average screener pretty much agrees with the evaluation that TSA is reactive and pat downs are invasive, but thinks that you are being idiots by objecting to backscatter while getting ready to take a higher dose of radiation while flying on a plane, and every little noise you make while in line merely strengthens their resolve to make the process as uncomfortable for you as it is for them.
Take the bus.
Jim, a thoughtful response, but you're presenting one side of the story, which perhaps was your intention. I don't know.
Here's my reaction.
MOST of the TSA security checkin folks are probably like
most cops — just trying to their jobs to the best of their understanding of the law, and the best of their training proficiency. Probably a few, just as with a few cops,
are thugs who get some kind of sadistic kick out of having the public at their mercy. But I will grant you that most probably are not that way at all. They're just trying to do their job. I don't fly that often, but I
do occasionally fly; and in my travels, I have personally witnessed both. Most TSA people I've encountered have been friendly and professional, but I have actually witnessed one thug for whom the best descriptive begins with "a" unnecessarily shouting at and browbeating an old man who had done nothing wrong. This happened right in front of me, and I heard every word of the exchange and saw every action. You'll just have to take my word for it that the TSA guy was way, WAY out of line, and if a supervisor had witnessed it, then he should have been disciplined. This was at Phoenix Sky Harbor. OTH, all the other TSA people I dealt with at that airport were quite friendly.
THIS was a jerk, and he needed his butt kicked by someone in authority. On that trip, I was flying to San Luis Obispo, California, out of DFW, and I had to go through a TSA inspection TWICE each way - due to a terminal change at Sky Harbor. The TSA folks at DFW were pleasant and professional without being overly friendly. The TSA folks at San Luis Obispo (a small regional airport) were downright awe shucks friendly - but professional. The TSA folks at Sky Harbor, like I said, were for the most part pleasant and professional - except for this one absolute
jerk who wasn't worthy to carry the old man's jockstrap.
But other than that, I don't hold the boots on the ground TSA inspectors responsible for the state of affairs - which state I despise. I hold the departmental leadership of Napolitano and Pistole responsible. Napolitano, who had serious objections (well, she was serious about it, but she wasn't to be taken seriously) objections to enforcing border security when she was Governor of Arizona. In fact, she protested that the building of the fences along the California border was funneling illegals into Arizona, but she didn't give enough of a rip about it to push for building fences in Arizona. And her response to the current conditions along the Arizona/Mexico border is to recommend that citizens of the U.S. do not go closer to the border than 60 miles. In other words, she would rather cede a major portion of the state to Mexico than she would enforce the protection of the border. She is a pimple on the hind parts of progress. And yet this blister of a cow of a toad has no problem subjecting the nation's passengers to measures that she would not countenance being applied to people sneaking into this country illegally. She is not morally qualified for the position she holds.
And Pistole is nothing more than her pit-bull. He's not making any decisions without her permission, and I'm guessing she keeps him on a short leash.
I'm with terryg on this one. Nothing personally against the street level TSA folks, but I'd rather have more freedom, even if it means more danger, than less of it. And my dignity may mean nothing to you, but it means a great deal to me; and those pat-downs
ARE demeaning. That doesn't mean that the officer doing the patting down necessarliy
likes doing it. They're just doing their job. I would imagine that it is like a urologist giving a male patient a rectal exam. Neither party to the transaction particularly enjoys it. But in the doing of their job, TSA agents
ARE robbing passengers of their dignity - whether or not that is their intention. I read one account just yesterday of a young woman who was wearing a skirt experiencing an "enhanced" pat-down. The female TSA agent rapidly ran her hand up the inside of the woman's thigh, and connected with her private parts hard enough to lift the young woman off her heels. She was in tears from the physical pain of the blow, and it took nearly 45 minutes for the pain to wear off. There is simply no excuse for this. It doesn't matter whether or not the young lady was being a "you know what." Striking her in the genitals hard enough to cause 45 minutes of physical pain was unprofessional, and uncalled for. TSA agents are not legally empowered to retaliate by punishing travelers who don't like having to cooperate with intrusive examinations and are therefore somewhat vocal about it.
But, as more and more Americans grow more and more frustrated with the experience, tempers are sure to be closer to the boiling point on both sides of the line. And now that TSA employees are starting to get their backs up, more and more travelers are opting to leave the airport. In retaliation, the TSA has begun filing charges against people who choose to leave the airport rather than complete the procedure. That's just wrong, and I hate them for enforcing a stupid, STUPID policy.
TSA stripping (in public) and searching 8 year old boy at airport
TSA pat-down leaves traveler covered in urine
The Israeli method of handling this is
FAR more intelligent. Expensive? Yes, but so is what we already have. Time consuming? Yes, but so is what we already have. Successful? Very successful, and for much longer than we've been doing it. Invasive and undignified? No,
nothing like what we have.
We
do need air travel security, but the taxpayers deserve better than this. We should be demanding that the Israeli system be put into place here.
“Hard times create strong men. Strong men create good times. Good times create weak men. And, weak men create hard times.”
― G. Michael Hopf, "Those Who Remain"
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