Yuki-Anne wrote:I have a problem with this because you don't have a choice.
If you want to fly, you have to 1. let someone see you naked
or 2. let them touch you in uncomfortable areas.
This is a violation of our 4th amendment rights against unreasonable search and seizure
If they have probable cause against me, then I will submit to a search, but me choosing to use an airplane is NOT probable cause.
Psycho Molos (post: 1437949) wrote:Yay Peanut is a genius!!!
Yuki-Anne wrote:I have a problem with this because you don't have a choice. If you want to fly, you have to 1. let someone see you naked or 2. let them touch you in uncomfortable areas.
goldenspines wrote:Its only stealing if you don't get caught.
Nate (post: 1437964) wrote:You do have a choice. Submit to the search, or don't fly. See? Choice.
You may say "But that's not fair!" Well guess what? If you want to go to a job, you have to submit to drug testing. If you refuse, you don't get the job. Sucks, huh? But that's the way it works.
That's not exactly true, as evidenced by other posts people have made.
Well if you won't let them look at you through the scanner, what else are they supposed to do? They're not mind-readers.
Debatable.
So what's probable cause? Hmm? How are you going to justify "I think that person might have a bomb or a weapon" outside of a scanner or a search? Anything you can come up with would be shot down as racist because saying "That guy looks Middle Eastern, he probably has a weapon or bomb" is racial stereotyping. Besides, it's not like middle-aged white men and women have never tried to hijack planes or bring on dangerous materials before. So sorry, but your argument about "probable cause" does not stand.
I'm not even going to touch the last paragraph because of what Corrie said.
Ok, I've been frisked a couple of times at airports before and honestly they aren't really touching you in what I would consider to be uncomfortable areas. I wouldn't call the process comfortable because its still some stranger touching you, but it's not like they're sexually harassing you while they're doing it (well...in the context at least...) and its always a member of the same sex. Obviously my impressions are my own opinion and I can understand someone being way more uncomfortable then I was while having it done, but it's not groping and, frankly, I don't think they do a thorough search if they assume you aren't a threat (which was probably the case with me), which means there is way less touching involved then you would think. I still say that while I don't like what TSA is doing, I'm not complaining about it. It's a lot harder to pull a 9/11 now then it was before 9/11 though that isn't really saying much...
Ella Edric (post: 1437894) wrote:Yeah Im all for keeping our airlines safe as well, but this is just way over the top. Talk about intrusive!
TopazRaven (post: 1437897) wrote:Ew! Talk about a major invasion of privacy!
blkmage (post: 1437967) wrote:This line of reasoning is predicated on the fact that such intrusive searches are necessary for security, which is debatable. The question shouldn't be "what choices do I have for being exhaustively searched?" but "how exhaustive does a search need to be for there to ensure a reasonable amount of security?" So far, the implication is that we should trust this government agency and it can arbitrarily decide what is reasonable without any accountability or transparency.
blkmage wrote:Apparently, they're stepping up how aggressively they're supposed to search you in addition to the body scanning, so your prior experience might not apply anymore.
goldenspines wrote:Its only stealing if you don't get caught.
Peanut (post: 1437979) wrote:True, but I think more invasive searches would equal safer flights. For instance, mandatory strip searches would make it very hard to conceal weapons or explosives when you get on planes however, for obvious reasons, they aren't done because of how major of an invasion of privacy they are. I know these machines are doing basically the same thing, however I think most people would agree that, given the choice between the machine or a strip search, they'd take the machine. Anyway, as you said this whole issue falls on the balancing act between security and privacy. I don't think TSA has done a great job at this but I do think they've done a decent job at it and have shown a good deal of restraint. Then again, I do tend to lean more towards the side of security over privacy especially when it comes to flying. When I was a kid I loved going to the airport and being able to go to the gates without having a boarding pass or having to go through insane security. Now, though, as I look back I realize just how easy it really was for something like 9/11 to happen and as a result, I completely understand and submit to what TSA has done to fix the problem. Now, with that being said, I still do hate going through security at airports so its not like TSA is my favorite government agency in the world...
Nate (post: 1437991) wrote:Wait, how would a metal detector pick up explosives? Last I checked C-4 contains no metal components.
Roy Mustang (post: 1437985) wrote:This is how I would make most people happy in the pat down search.
Males get a pat down search by former 1980's and up playboy bunnies.
Females get a pat down search by Chippendales
Kids get a pat down by Barney the Dinosaur
Everyone wins!
[font="Book Antiqua"][color="Red"]Col. Roy Mustang [/color][/font]
goldenspines wrote:Its only stealing if you don't get caught.
ich1990 (post: 1438007) wrote:What bothers me most about these scanners is that there are far more efficient and less invasive ways of improving airport security (assuming more security is necessary: we haven't had single successful terrorist attempt on an airplane for the past nine years, despite tens of thousands of flights).
For instance, a couple of flights back I accidentally brought a 12" long steak knife with me and they didn't catch it, despite running it through the scanner. So, for starters, they could improve security by using the equipment they do have, properly.
Maybe after they start catching the steak knives and we continue having problems with terrorists blowing up our planes I will approve of more invasive security. Not before.
EDIT: Make that tens of millions of flights without terrorist incident.
Besides, it's not like middle-aged white men and women have never tried to hijack planes or bring on dangerous materials before.
Yuki-Anne wrote:Also, I'm sorry, but the whole "don't like it, don't fly" argument is actually kind of insulting to somebody in my position.
If I ever want to see my friends and family again, I have to fly.
Not that I'm at all condoning racial profiling
When was the last time a middle-aged white woman tried to hijack a plane?
assuming more security is necessary: we haven't had single successful terrorist attempt on an airplane for the past nine years, despite tens of thousands of flights
You can't stop a terrorist attack by searching for the explosives any more than you can stop crime by taking away everyone's guns.
Yes, the government must zealously work to make us as safe as possible and to take every reasonable step to make sure security breaches like the ones that led to the Christmas Day attempted attack are not repeated. But we need to act wisely. That means not trading away our privacy for ineffective policies. We should be investing in developing technologies such as trace portal detectors (a.k.a. "puffer machines") that provide a layer of security without invading privacy, and in developing competent law enforcement and intelligence agencies that will stop terrorists before they show up at the airport.
Ultimately, it is up to the American people to figure out just how much privacy they want to abandon to block a few particular means of carrying out terrorist attacks. The ACLU represents those who value privacy in this debate. But when Americans make that decision, they should do so with their eyes wide open, without any illusions that this will prevent all attacks on airliners, much less attacks on shopping malls or all the infinite number of other plots and targets that terrorists could come up with if they are not stopped by competent law enforcement and intelligence agencies.
Nate (post: 1438275) wrote:One might say that's because of the increased security. However, that's difficult to determine. I'm not saying it is, otherwise we get into the "This rock keeps tigers away because there aren't any tigers around now are there?" Still, I don't think decreasing security is going to help matters, especially since it would almost certainly be reported on national news, and do you really want potential terrorists to hear "Airports around the country have announced that they've removed lots of security measures because people don't like them"? I know I wouldn't.
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