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Dead Constitution See other Dead Constitution Articles Title: Here’s a reminder that the TSA still sucks and we’ve become way too complacent about it In his NBC interview last month, NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden critiqued the governments willingness to exploit tragedies like 9/11 to justify programs that have never been shown to keep us safe but cost us liberties and freedoms that we dont need to give up. While Snowden had the NSA in mindthat agencys massive illegal invasion of our privacy rightfully received plenty of attention in the last yearhis words could just as easily apply to another security agency weve become all too comfortable with. The TSA. Sure, theres still the occasional op-ed suggesting that the Transportation Security Administration be abolished, and yes, Americans have long been fairly ambivalent about this program. But nonetheless, weve grown sadly complacent about the TSA. Although there is an anti-TSA minority, as this recent poll shows, the bulk of Americans believe that the TSA makes air travel safer, and that the security checkpoints are an effective way to prevent terrorism. That couldnt be further from the truth. Despite the extensive security theater rigmarole to which were subjected every time we fly, the TSA has never caught a single terrorist. In fact, a leaked report showed that when undercover government agents tried to get fake bombs through TSA checkpoints at major airports like LAX and Chicago OHare, the TSA missed 60-75% of the bombs (Private security agents, to contrast, missed fake bombs only about 20% of the time. I dont know about you, but I know which option would make me feel safer). If the TSA were only ineffective, that would be bad enough. But its not just a waste of timeits an annoying, invasive, expensive, and even dangerous waste of time. Remember air travel before 9/11? It wasnt necessarily fun, but it wasnt an awful, time-sucking hassle, either. Today, flying is inconvenient at best. Is it safe to arrive at the airport two hours early? Better make it three. Am I wearing shoes I can take on and off easily? Have I put all my tiny bottles in a quart-size bag? Will my dignity fit in the same baggie too? If youve flown in the last decade, you know what Im talking about. TSA checkpoints are a hugely inconvenient attack on our privacy and individual rights, yet weve become accustomed to TSA abuses over the yearsjust like the proverbial frog gets used to the boiling water. Dont forget, this is the agency that made an 82-year-old breast cancer survivor strip to the waist. This is the agency that charged a man with a felony for a joke about peanut butter. This is the agency that forced a woman to drink her own breast milk to prove it wasnt explosive. This is the agency that says, Were not detaining you. You just cant leave. For the privilege of these assaults on our civil liberties, we taxpayers contribute about $8 billion annuallyon top of $606 billion in estimated lost tourism revenue from unreasonable procedures over past decade. And then theres the ways the TSA actually makes us less safe. Aside from the agencys aforementioned failures to actually stop terrorists and find bombs, the TSA makes airports more dangerous in two key ways. First, by making dozens or even hundreds of people line up for slow-moving security checkpoints, the TSA creates a prime opportunity foryou guessed ita terrorist attack. The most insecure part of the airport is the TSA checkpoint itself, as it gives would-be terrorists a large, stationary crowd in which to wreak havoc. Second, the TSA lulls us into assuming that once were past security, all is safe. In reality, were not any safer at all. Darlene Storm notes at Computer World, [A] marginally resourceful and MacGyver-esque individual can breeze through terminal gift shops, restaurants, magazine stands and duty-free shops to find everything they need to wage war on an airplane. In short, the TSA gives us plenty of fondling but not much real security. And while Americans are increasingly accepting the TSA as a fact of life, the TSA is busy expanding its reach and bolstering its strength. In addition to wanting armed guards at checkpoints, the TSA is now conducting warrantless searches on valet-parked cars at some airportsa practice the agency denied on its blog despite ample photo evidence. Meanwhile, TSA agents are popping up at concerts and football games, train stations and bus stops. This expansion is so poorly justified that even the Department of Homeland Securitywhich is not exactly known for prioritizing civil libertiesis questioning whether TSA teams operating outside airports are properly trained and deployed based on actual security threats. Those questions are well-founded, since internal TSA documents have revealed that the TSA itself does not believe that terrorists are even targeting planes anymore. If theres any evidence that TSA programs outside of airports are better justified than those inside airports, Ive yet to hear of it. So if they TSA isnt stopping terrorists and admits that terrorists dont want to hijack airplanes anymore, why is this monstrous agency still plaguing our airports? Edward Snowden nailed it: The TSA is the epitome of a program which has never been shown to keep us safe but cost us liberties and freedoms that we dont need to give up. The TSA is a classic example of our government exploiting a tragedy to expand its prying reach into every aspect of our lives. Now is not the time to become complacent. Poster Comment: "While Snowden had the NSA in mindthat agencys massive illegal invasion of our privacy rightfully received plenty of attention in the last yearhis words could just as easily apply to another security agency weve become all too comfortable with." No, we haven't ALL become comfortable with the pervs and rights destroyers in the TSA. I have been saying it should be abolished as long as it has been in existence. Didn't protect anyone on its first day and hasn't to this day. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
#1. To: James Deffenbach (#0)
It is all about control and the people of this country have gone along with it since it stated. I know people that are against the TSA BUT they still fly, when confronted with the fact, they make 20 excuses, all suck.
The ONLY place I have flown since they instigated that $#it was somewhere I couldn't reasonably go to in a car (Brazil). And I couldn't afford to charter a plane to take me there. If I could get to where I wanted to go any other way I would never get on a plane again, not as long as I was going to be treated like a criminal before I even set foot on the plane.
Americans who have no experience with, or knowledge of, tyranny believe that only terrorists will experience the unchecked power of the state. They will believe this until it happens to them, or their children, or their friends. Paul Craig Roberts "When plunder becomes a way of life for a group of men living together in society, they create for themselves in the course of time a legal system that authorizes it and a moral code that glorifies it." Frederic Bastiat
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