3 reasons you’ll shut up after being humiliated at the airport

tsascanLike most infrequent air travelers, Vicki Burton just wants to get through security without causing a scene. So on a recent flight from Chattanooga, Tenn., to Miami, she obediently stepped into the airport’s full-body scanner, held her arms up, and waited for the agent to wave her through.

He didn’t.

Instead, a female screener was summoned to give Burton an “enhanced” pat-down. “My breasts were patted down right there in front of God and everybody,” she says. “I wasn’t even afforded the privacy of a screen. I was so stunned, I was just mute. What do you say without being arrested? What should I have done?”

Good question. To paraphrase Secretary of Homeland Security Janet Napolitano, she should have said something.

Why do people keep their mouths closed when they feel violated? A combination of powerful motivators keeps air travelers quiet. Only by understanding these influences can we end them.

Reason #1: you’re not crazy, are you?

Many passengers are afraid that if they speak up, they’ll end up as the hysterical passenger on YouTube — reacting irrationally to what many consider “rational” airport security.

I wrote about this incident after it happened. Although there were good reasons for her reaction, according to her son who taped the entire episode, she was nonetheless tarred as a loonie by TSA supporters (read the comments on her video if you doubt me).

Reason #2: everyone else is doing it

Another effective tool of persuasion: peer pressure. Everyone else is going through the scanner; everyone else is getting patted down. What’s your problem? Don’t you care if there’s a 9/11 sequel?

Besides, American airport security is the “gold standard,” isn’t it?

I encountered these faulty arguments the first and only time I was prodded into a full-body scanner. It was months before the opt-out protest, and the devices were still being tested in only a handful of airports. A friendly TSA agent told me I had nothing to worry about. “We’ve all been through them, everyone else is going through them, and you won’t feel a thing,” she assured me.

Well, if everyone is going through them, then what do I have to worry about?

Peer pressure — the fact that no one else seems to be complaining — keeps you quiet when your conscience tells you to speak up.

Reason #3: you’ll miss your plane

The final, and perhaps the most persuasive trick, is the implied threat that if you resist, you’ll miss your flight. Unfortunately, it’s not an empty threat, and the TSA agent screening you knows it. If a blueshirt believes your attitude is anything less than docile, you could be subjected to a retaliatory wait time.

It doesn’t help that airlines are unforgiving when their passengers miss a flight — a “no-show” in airline parlance. Often, air travelers either have to pay for a new ticket at an expensive “walk-up” fare or get sent to their destination by a less convenient route, missing appointments or a valuable vacation time. No one wants that.

Had Burton stopped, asked to speak with a supervisor, and filed a report, she would have been threatened with these three possibilities: becoming a poster girl for crazy, being made to feel like a problem passenger, or missing her flight.

It wasn’t an anomaly. On her return flight, TSA agents did exactly the same thing to her.

Time to say something

This has to end. There’s no evidence that patting down passengers like Burton has made air travel any safer. The only thing it’s accomplished is to erode a number of constitutional rights we once took for granted, say critics.

If invasive, prison-style pat-downs are accepted by air travelers, then who knows what other kinds of searches the TSA might someday try?

The agency has ruled out more invasive searches, at least for now. But in a recent poll, one-third of Americans said they would be in favor of cavity searches to board a plane. No, you didn’t read that wrong. Cavity searches.

The next time a TSA agent asks you to do something you’re uncomfortable with, say something. You won’t just be helping yourself, but all of the passengers who pass through the checkpoint after you. And if enough passengers speak up, the TSA might stop treating us like inmates when we exercise our constitutional right to travel.

It can’t happen soon enough.

Is it too difficult to speak up at a TSA screening area?

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  • Jill_Ion

    I haven’t given up yet.

    Yet.

  • Jill_Ion

    I haven’t given up yet.

    Yet.

  • http://tsanewsblog.com/214/news/history-repeats-itself-with-tsas-strip-search-tactics/ Lisa Simeone

    Oh, I’ll still fight. Of course. That’s why I write for and edit TSA News every day. But that’s because I think it’s more noble to go down fighting than to sit on my ass doing nothing. I don’t have any illusions, though. I don’t believe this abusive system will improve in my lifetime. And if it ever does, it will have to get worse before it gets better. I’ve quoted Frederick Douglass on this more times than I can count.

  • http://tsanewsblog.com/214/news/history-repeats-itself-with-tsas-strip-search-tactics/ Lisa Simeone

    Oh, I’ll still fight. Of course. That’s why I write for and edit TSA News every day. But that’s because I think it’s more noble to go down fighting than to sit on my ass doing nothing. I don’t have any illusions, though. I don’t believe this abusive system will improve in my lifetime. And if it ever does, it will have to get worse before it gets better. I’ve quoted Frederick Douglass on this more times than I can count.

  • http://twitter.com/johntbaker John Baker

    I really hope that this guy gets counter sued. Sorry but saying you have a bomb in a TSA checkpoint is right up there with screaming “fire” in a crowded building or “gun” at a presidential event. All of them are incredibly dumb acts and not covered by the first amendment.

  • john4868

    I really hope that this guy gets counter sued. Sorry but saying you have a bomb in a TSA checkpoint is right up there with screaming “fire” in a crowded building or “gun” at a presidential event. All of them are incredibly dumb acts and not covered by the first amendment.

  • http://tsanewsblog.com/214/news/history-repeats-itself-with-tsas-strip-search-tactics/ Lisa Simeone

    Baaaaaa.

  • http://tsanewsblog.com/214/news/history-repeats-itself-with-tsas-strip-search-tactics/ Lisa Simeone

    Baaaaaa.

  • TonyA_says

    I’m glad it all worked out for you and you got to Disney. I hate to ask this question – could a TSA agent get fired for using his/her common sense? Are they supposed to do everything by the book or lose their jobs? Maybe the system is preventing TSA agents from using common sense. I just want to know.

  • TonyA_says

    I’m glad it all worked out for you and you got to Disney. I hate to ask this question – could a TSA agent get fired for using his/her common sense? Are they supposed to do everything by the book or lose their jobs? Maybe the system is preventing TSA agents from using common sense. I just want to know.

  • Annapolis2

    Why don’t people speak up? Well, I can tell you that every time I tell my story of being sexually assaulted at an airport checkpoint (a woman penetrated me with a hand-held metal detector), some ignorant bully calls me a liar. I have been told, over and over again, that I am a liar. This is what it feels like to report a sexual assault. So it doesn’t surprise me that many women, including my very close friend who was strip-searched in a private room down to her panties and bra at LAX, have declined to go public with their stories.

    Rape culture tells people that the victims are to blame for sexual assault. The TSA has somehow managed to avoid responsibility for the thousands upon thousands of rapes they have surely committed at checkpoints. If the standard practice is to ram one’s hands up in between people’s legs and buttocks, then yes, penetration is going to happen. There were at least three letters in this batch of 200 that reported penetration: http://www.scribd.com/doc/105000289/104904507-TSA-Complaints-2010

  • Annapolis2

    Why don’t people speak up? Well, I can tell you that every time I tell my story of being sexually assaulted at an airport checkpoint (a woman penetrated me with a hand-held metal detector), some ignorant bully calls me a liar. I have been told, over and over again, that I am a liar. This is what it feels like to report a sexual assault. So it doesn’t surprise me that many women, including my very close friend who was strip-searched in a private room down to her panties and bra at LAX, have declined to go public with their stories.

    Rape culture tells people that the victims are to blame for sexual assault. The TSA has somehow managed to avoid responsibility for the thousands upon thousands of rapes they have surely committed at checkpoints. If the standard practice is to ram one’s hands up in between people’s legs and buttocks, then yes, penetration is going to happen. There were at least three letters in this batch of 200 that reported penetration: http://www.scribd.com/doc/105000289/104904507-TSA-Complaints-2010

  • http://tsanewsblog.com/214/news/history-repeats-itself-with-tsas-strip-search-tactics/ Lisa Simeone

    TonyA, given that they make up their own rules on the spot all over the country, I don’t see how they’re being fired for not doing things by the book. According to Molester-in-Chief John Pistole himself, they’re not supposed to be sticking their hands down your pants, yet they do.

  • http://tsanewsblog.com/214/news/history-repeats-itself-with-tsas-strip-search-tactics/ Lisa Simeone

    TonyA, given that they make up their own rules on the spot all over the country, I don’t see how they’re being fired for not doing things by the book. According to Molester-in-Chief John Pistole himself, they’re not supposed to be sticking their hands down your pants, yet they do.

  • emanon256

    I am not a fan or sympathizer of the TSA by any means, but I am totally with you on this. That was such a stupid thing to say. Anyone with an ounce of common sense would have known better than to make a joke about having explosives at a security check point. Or should I say more than 3oz of common sense.

    As a side note, I routinely see jars of peanut butter get confiscated. My theory is it becomes the TSAs lunch.

  • emanon256

    I am not a fan or sympathizer of the TSA by any means, but I am totally with you on this. That was such a stupid thing to say. Anyone with an ounce of common sense would have known better than to make a joke about having explosives at a security check point. Or should I say more than 3oz of common sense.

    As a side note, I routinely see jars of peanut butter get confiscated. My theory is it becomes the TSAs lunch.

  • KaraJones

    Oh. That makes sense. (You’re much more fluent in online acronyms than I am, LOL! I had to look up your last two.)

  • KaraJones

    Oh. That makes sense. (You’re much more fluent in online acronyms than I am, LOL! I had to look up your last two.)

  • EdB

    Well apparently it didn’t do any good since it came back.

  • EdB

    Well apparently it didn’t do any good since it came back.

  • http://www.facebook.com/geoffrey.millstone Geoffrey Millstone

    I don’t believe that any person will miss their flight if they speak up in a nice way. Check-in is 2 plus hours, 20 minutes in line at the airline, 10 minutes waiting to get “felt up”, and 20 minutes to speak to the supervisor about getting “felt up”. That gives 1 hour and 10 minutes to get to your flight. I will “never” allow my wife or myself to go through the full body scanner, or be “felt up” again. Get names, get badge numbers, be ready to send a letter to your congressmen with the facts. REBEL and get our rights of decency back.

  • http://www.facebook.com/geoffrey.millstone Geoffrey Millstone

    I don’t believe that any person will miss their flight if they speak up in a nice way. Check-in is 2 plus hours, 20 minutes in line at the airline, 10 minutes waiting to get “felt up”, and 20 minutes to speak to the supervisor about getting “felt up”. That gives 1 hour and 10 minutes to get to your flight. I will “never” allow my wife or myself to go through the full body scanner, or be “felt up” again. Get names, get badge numbers, be ready to send a letter to your congressmen with the facts. REBEL and get our rights of decency back.

  • ExplorationTravMag

    As I read this, I was reminded of an incident that received a great deal of attention, one where the person subjected to the invasive search didn’t have to say a word, and he was still arrested and charged – Aaron Tobey, who had the 4th Amendment written on his torso in anticipation of his being searched.(Who also recently won a lawsuit against TSA, to the tune of $250,000) The TSA clowns actually questioned him with regard to his belonging to a terrorist organization; in their pea-sized minds, believing in the protections afforded us by the Constitution is a terrorist act.

    TSA treats everyone who isn’t falling in line like a bunch of robots as a subversive and they prefer to do that. These are people who have little or no power in their private lives and, the second they go to work, have all the power, over thousands of people, every day.

  • ExplorationTravMag

    As I read this, I was reminded of an incident that received a great deal of attention, one where the person subjected to the invasive search didn’t have to say a word, and he was still arrested and charged – Aaron Tobey, who had the 4th Amendment written on his torso in anticipation of his being searched.(Who also recently won a lawsuit against TSA, to the tune of $250,000) The TSA clowns actually questioned him with regard to his belonging to a terrorist organization; in their pea-sized minds, believing in the protections afforded us by the Constitution is a terrorist act.

    TSA treats everyone who isn’t falling in line like a bunch of robots as a subversive and they prefer to do that. These are people who have little or no power in their private lives and, the second they go to work, have all the power, over thousands of people, every day.

  • ExplorationTravMag

    Susan, I completely understand what you’re saying, however, I feel it’s simply a matter of the traveling public being too afraid.

    When flying on airlines, now, the slightest bit of dissension, even if it’s to complain there’s no ice in your drink, can be met with, “Get off the plane” and some lovely men with guns and handcuffs escort you off.

    People are terrified to speak up, anymore. In the age of cell phones and the internet, w/n seconds, a person is made notorious and subject to the scrutiny of a judgmental public. TSA counts on that, as well as other psychological ploys, to keep us all in line.

  • ExplorationTravMag

    Susan, I completely understand what you’re saying, however, I feel it’s simply a matter of the traveling public being too afraid.

    When flying on airlines, now, the slightest bit of dissension, even if it’s to complain there’s no ice in your drink, can be met with, “Get off the plane” and some lovely men with guns and handcuffs escort you off.

    People are terrified to speak up, anymore. In the age of cell phones and the internet, w/n seconds, a person is made notorious and subject to the scrutiny of a judgmental public. TSA counts on that, as well as other psychological ploys, to keep us all in line.

  • naoma

    I have been patted down in public and seen men given such a complete pat down that I was embarrassed. Up and down the legs — as far “up” as they could go from the front and the back. I asked a policeman nearby if this was frequently done. He said sometime they get more “vigorous.” Once my flat stomach was exposed about an inch when I went through a puffer machine. Woman looked at me like I’d committed a crime and said “pull down your t-shirt.” I did not say anything. But some women come on half-dressed. Quiet is best.

  • naoma

    I have been patted down in public and seen men given such a complete pat down that I was embarrassed. Up and down the legs — as far “up” as they could go from the front and the back. I asked a policeman nearby if this was frequently done. He said sometime they get more “vigorous.” Once my flat stomach was exposed about an inch when I went through a puffer machine. Woman looked at me like I’d committed a crime and said “pull down your t-shirt.” I did not say anything. But some women come on half-dressed. Quiet is best.

  • http://tsanewsblog.com/214/news/history-repeats-itself-with-tsas-strip-search-tactics/ Lisa Simeone

    Jill, exactly. Which is precisely what Martin Niemoller pointed out 70 years ago, but people still haven’t learned the lesson:
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_they_came

  • http://tsanewsblog.com/214/news/history-repeats-itself-with-tsas-strip-search-tactics/ Lisa Simeone

    Jill, exactly. Which is precisely what Martin Niemoller pointed out 70 years ago, but people still haven’t learned the lesson:
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_they_came

  • BillCCC

    Anyone dumb enough to mention explosives at a security checkpoint deserves what they get.

  • BillCCC

    Anyone dumb enough to mention explosives at a security checkpoint deserves what they get.

  • John H.

    We are a conformist society, which works against acting as an individual and speaking out. Not only does that cause our fellow travelers to side against us but it enables the TSA agents to violate our constitutional rights. I’m sure that in TSA training that cultural norm is mentioned. It sure got a lot of German and Japanese citizens “going alone,” even to that terribly destructive ending.

  • John H.

    We are a conformist society, which works against acting as an individual and speaking out. Not only does that cause our fellow travelers to side against us but it enables the TSA agents to violate our constitutional rights. I’m sure that in TSA training that cultural norm is mentioned. It sure got a lot of German and Japanese citizens “going alone,” even to that terribly destructive ending.

  • naoma

    Personally, I think she was getting “out of hand.” This could have been handled more quietly. It was terrible to hear the screaming. Once I almost said to a female screener who was squeezing my breasts “I’ll take them out if you insist.”
    But, I kept quiet.

  • naoma

    Personally, I think she was getting “out of hand.” This could have been handled more quietly. It was terrible to hear the screaming. Once I almost said to a female screener who was squeezing my breasts “I’ll take them out if you insist.”
    But, I kept quiet.

  • Daisiemae

    Predators always seek easy prey. They only attack people who seem vulnerable and unlikely to fight back. Elderly people appear more vulnerable to a predator.

  • Daisiemae

    Predators always seek easy prey. They only attack people who seem vulnerable and unlikely to fight back. Elderly people appear more vulnerable to a predator.

  • KaraJones

    I wonder if they mixed it with my expensive goat yogurt that was confiscated last week. : (

  • KaraJones

    I wonder if they mixed it with my expensive goat yogurt that was confiscated last week. : (

  • KD

    As a woman, I often find I have to get manually patted down because my bra sets the metal detector off. Lovely. Or maybe ironic? Once time the screener said, “I think I know what the problem is,” even before I got the manual pat down. If it’s a predictable problem, why not find some way to fix it?!

  • KD

    As a woman, I often find I have to get manually patted down because my bra sets the metal detector off. Lovely. Or maybe ironic? Once time the screener said, “I think I know what the problem is,” even before I got the manual pat down. If it’s a predictable problem, why not find some way to fix it?!

  • http://tsanewsblog.com/214/news/history-repeats-itself-with-tsas-strip-search-tactics/ Lisa Simeone

    KD, because they’re not interested in fixing it. It’s not about security; it’s about obedience.

  • http://tsanewsblog.com/214/news/history-repeats-itself-with-tsas-strip-search-tactics/ Lisa Simeone

    KD, because they’re not interested in fixing it. It’s not about security; it’s about obedience.

  • Walhon

    What gets me is as a service contractor for our local airport, I enter “sterile” areas of the terminal building all the time while doing maintenance, and have NEVER been through their check point. This includes those times when there are departing passengers waiting. Not saying that I mind, but still that’s just plain silly. TSA is more interested in bothering passengers than they are security.

  • Walhon

    What gets me is as a service contractor for our local airport, I enter “sterile” areas of the terminal building all the time while doing maintenance, and have NEVER been through their check point. This includes those times when there are departing passengers waiting. Not saying that I mind, but still that’s just plain silly. TSA is more interested in bothering passengers than they are security.

  • LeeAnneClark

    Or my Mom’s expensive chocolate sauce that she was bringing home as a Christmas gift. I’m sure some corpulent TSA goon enjoyed that for lunch. Mixed with the peanut butter, it would have been a porcine TSA clerk’s feast.

  • KaraJones

    Oh, wonderful. So if we have big boobs and require underwire, we’re more fun to pat down. Why would they fix it? >:-(

  • KaraJones

    Oh, wonderful. So if we have big boobs and require underwire, we’re more fun to pat down. Why would they fix it? >:-(

  • LeeAnneClark

    How can it be free speech when you can be detained, barred from your flight, thrown out of the airport, or even arrested for saying something completely reasonable? Such as “please do not shove your thumb up my vagina”? I was threatened with being tossed out of the airport for saying those exact words. Another time I was threatened with being barred from my flight for saying “I do not consent to have my genitals touched.”

    Free speech is defined as “the right, guaranteed by the First Amendment to the US Constitution, to express beliefs and ideas without unwarranted government restriction”. And yet, expressing my belief that I should not have to consent to having my genitals touched resulted in my being detained by the government. That right there was a violation of my Constitutional rights.

    Methinks you need to revisit your warped idea of what the term “free speech” means. If “exercising their right to free speech” can result in a government agency detaining them, preventing them from traveling, or even having someone arrested, that is not “free”. That’s tyranny.