okay, this TSA thing
Nov. 23rd, 2010 02:24 amI've been reading this article about the scans/pat-downs, and I got to a paragraph that's confusing the hell out of me:
Pistole pointed out that the pat downs are not mandatory -- passengers receive them only if they opt out of a screening with advanced imaging technology. The technology is the TSA's best effort, he said, to head off attacks like the would-be Christmas Day bomber last year. Umar Farouk AbdulMutallab allegedly had a bomb sewn into his underwear on a flight from Amsterdam, Netherlands, to Detroit, Michigan. (the bolding is mine)
If all of this is being ramped up due to that incident, don't they have it kind of backwards? The flight was coming IN TO the US from another country. So the full-body scans and pat-downs at US airports...isn't going to make one bit of difference if the would-be bomber is coming from somewhere NOT here. Right?
And then this: There has never been an explosive found on a flight from one U.S. city to another, Pistole acknowledged. But, he pointed out, domestic terrorists exist -- Timothy McVeigh, Eric Rudolph and Ted Kaczynski, for instance -- and there are people who want to do the government harm. While America is "fortunate" that such an incident has not occurred on a domestic flight, he said, it could conceivably happen.
Again, I understand the idea that they're presenting, can't be too careful, we've had domestic terrorists, etc., BUT. The three men used as examples had nothing to do with bombs aboard airplanes. Even Kaczynski's bombs -- he sent them to airLINES, but they weren't found on board any flights.
So, anyone want to try and make this make sense for me? Because things just aren't adding up completely for me.
And now I really think I'm going to go to bed. Also? Very glad I'm not traveling and definitely not planning to fly anytime soon.
Pistole pointed out that the pat downs are not mandatory -- passengers receive them only if they opt out of a screening with advanced imaging technology. The technology is the TSA's best effort, he said, to head off attacks like the would-be Christmas Day bomber last year. Umar Farouk AbdulMutallab allegedly had a bomb sewn into his underwear on a flight from Amsterdam, Netherlands, to Detroit, Michigan. (the bolding is mine)
If all of this is being ramped up due to that incident, don't they have it kind of backwards? The flight was coming IN TO the US from another country. So the full-body scans and pat-downs at US airports...isn't going to make one bit of difference if the would-be bomber is coming from somewhere NOT here. Right?
And then this: There has never been an explosive found on a flight from one U.S. city to another, Pistole acknowledged. But, he pointed out, domestic terrorists exist -- Timothy McVeigh, Eric Rudolph and Ted Kaczynski, for instance -- and there are people who want to do the government harm. While America is "fortunate" that such an incident has not occurred on a domestic flight, he said, it could conceivably happen.
Again, I understand the idea that they're presenting, can't be too careful, we've had domestic terrorists, etc., BUT. The three men used as examples had nothing to do with bombs aboard airplanes. Even Kaczynski's bombs -- he sent them to airLINES, but they weren't found on board any flights.
So, anyone want to try and make this make sense for me? Because things just aren't adding up completely for me.
And now I really think I'm going to go to bed. Also? Very glad I'm not traveling and definitely not planning to fly anytime soon.
no subject
Date: 2010-11-23 10:20 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-11-23 01:08 pm (UTC)Security theater. That's all it is, but it's gone waaaaaaaaay too far. Thank God I'm not needing to fly these days. I haven't been on a plane in a year and a half, and have no plans to fly anywhere until this gets resolved.
no subject
Date: 2010-11-23 02:53 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-11-23 03:30 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-11-23 07:19 pm (UTC)Bruce Schneier has a lot of great information; he's a security expert who refers to it as "security theatre"
I think it's important to remember that more people are killed by drunk drivers in a few months than have been killed by terrorists using airplanes in *decades*.
no subject
Date: 2010-11-24 12:08 am (UTC)Yes, you can opt between the scanner and the pat down - but the TSA agent can, at any time, decide that you need a pat down ANYWAY. So you can be scanned and they still decide to pull you for a pat down - with no justification necessary whatsoever. (In theory, it's because the scanner image isn't clear or something, but in reality they can do it Just Because They Want To.)
Plus, if you've opted for the scanner (say, because you worry that a pat down will be a horribly triggering event for you) and they decide they want to pat you down anyway - YOU CANNOT LEAVE. You cannot say 'you know, that's okay, I just won't fly." If you do, they can fine you and/or file CRIMINAL charges.
So, basically, you end up in a situation where TSA agents can do whatever they want, and you CANNOT SAY NO.