The federal government's efforts to beef up airport security amid increasing terror threats is sparking a growing backlash among airline passengers, labor unions and advocacy groups who say the "naked strip search" machines or aggressive pat-downs that screeners use go too far.This is why the day before Thanksgiving has been declared "National Opt-Out Day" by a group who hopes to protest the naked scanners and tie up airport security on the busiest travel day of the year.
"They have wide discretion but they don't have unlimited discretion," said John Verdi, senior counsel with the Electronic Privacy Information Center, or EPIC, a privacy advocacy group that is challenging the government in court.
Last month, the Transportation Security Administration began a slow rollout of high-tech body scanners, funded by $73 million in federal stimulus funds, that give screeners the ability to see beneath a passenger's clothing while they search for weapons. The devices use a low dose of radiation to create a computerized image of a person's body.
"Advanced imaging technology is an integral tool in TSA's layered counterterrorism approach that enables us to stay ahead of evolving threats to aviation security," TSA Administrator John S. Pistole said in a written statement. "We remain committed to deploying imaging technology to protect the traveling public."
At the same time, screeners began "enhanced" pat-downs of airline passengers who opt against the body scanner or set off a metal detector. The new searches require screeners to touch passengers' breasts and genitals.
Homeland Security has a bad habit of overreacting to incidents and arbitrarily declaring new rules following everything that happens. After the shoe bomber tries to light his sneakers on fire we all had to take our shoes off to go through security. Now that the underwear bomber has tried his routine we all have to be subject to naked scanning or federal fondling from the janitors with a badge who staff the TSA.
Just wait until somebody tries to smuggle explosives in a laptop or camera. They'll be banned next and business travel will come to a stop.
Perhaps returning to the standard of "innocent until proven guilty" and doing a little good old fashioned profiling would return some sanity to air travel.
1 comment:
The common sense of our country has gone out the window. Give some of these people a little power, and they take it way too far! It will be a long time before I fly again!
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