The TSA as we know it is dead — here’s why

If you don’t believe the TSA is doomed after watching yesterday’s House Aviation Subcommittee hearing, then you’ll have to at least agree that the agency as we know can’t continue to exist as it does.

For starters, TSA Administrator John Pistole refused to testify before the committee on the innocuous subject of “common sense” improvements to America’s airport security, reportedly because the committee has no jurisdiction over his agency. (That’s odd — I always thought Congress funded the federal government, but maybe I wasn’t paying attention during government class.)

One by one, panelists took turns excoriating the agency charged with protecting America’s transportation systems. It was plainly clear why Pistole was a no-show, and it had nothing to do with jurisdiction; it would have been an openly hostile crowd.

Charles Edwards, the Department of Homeland Security’s acting inspector general, described the TSA as bureaucratic and dysfunctional. Stephen Lord of the Government Accountability Office, suggested the agency was ignoring the thousands of complaints from air travelers. And Kenneth Dunlap, who represented the International Air Transport Association, criticized the current TSA as expensive, inconsistent, and reactive.

“As this mushrooming agency has spun out of control,” the committee chairman, John Mica, concluded, “passengers have not been well served.”

The congressmen present in the hearing agreed with many of the criticisms, but it’s the solutions that would have sent Pistole running for the exits. On the conservative end, critics recommended aggressively reforming the TSA to create a smaller, more responsive agency that fulfills its mission of protecting and serving air travelers.

But some went much further. Charlie Leocha of the Consumer Travel Alliance, who represented the interests of air travelers on the committee, said the TSA should not just be downsized, but also limited to protecting only air travel (something it currently isn’t).

In his testimony, he described a future TSA that more closely resembled the pre-9/11 security system, which used magnetometers (metal detectors) as its primary screening method, had employees that dressed in non-threatening uniforms, and banned only the most dangerous weapons, such as guns and explosives, from aircraft.

The real security work would take place behind the scenes, prescreening every passenger with the help of technology and through coordination between intelligence agencies, law enforcement, and airlines.

“The mass screening of passengers would be replaced for the great majority of passengers
with a Trusted Traveler program that seamlessly checks passengers before they fly, while at the same time being respectful of their privacy,” says Leocha. “Every passenger is already prescreened for every flight.”

Such an agency would be called the TSA in name only. In fact, it would be better named the Airport Security Administration, although that acronym might be problematic.

With a powerful congressional committee like this lining up behind sweeping TSA reform, it is not a question of if, but when Congress — which by the way, does sign the TSA’s checks — acts to dismantle this $8-billion-a-year security boondoggle.

I’m not just saying that because I’m CTA’s ombudsman and helped devise some of these solutions. Anyone who doesn’t believe the current TSA is a federal disaster area with an impossibly sprawling mandate isn’t in touch with reality.

The TSA as it exists can’t die soon enough.

Is the TSA as we know it dead -- or will it just be reformed?

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  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Rob-Wilson/664265403 Rob Wilson

    These idiots in D.C. wouldn’t know how to kill a government bureaucracy if you took it out back, blindfolded it, and handed a twelve gauge to these fools. It’s another scam for power, control and bankrupting the nation while screwing its citizens.

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Rob-Wilson/664265403 Rob Wilson

    I’m with you, Brooke. Withdraw until – if ever – they close this mother down.

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Rob-Wilson/664265403 Rob Wilson

    Dead right, Alex. TSA was the initiative of John Mica, REPUBLICAN. But now that there is a bureaucracy that is in place, no dem in their right mind (as if any of them have a mind to begin with) would do ANYTHING to reduce the number of voters sucking money from the feds.

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

    1. You’re wrong that “No one HAS to fly.” Some people are forced to fly for work. They can’t afford to quit their jobs. Others are forced to fly for medical procedures.

    2. You’re obviously not up on the news. The TSA is infesting everywhere. Google “VIPR” and then come back.

    3. You don’t like it? Then you don’t fly. Let the rest of us, the ones who are guided by reason and not by fear, live our lives freely and fly in freedom and dignity.

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

    BD, enough already with this baloney left/right false dichotomy! Both parties are at fault. Both parties are gutless. The worthless wankers in Congress are from both parties. This is a bi-partisan mess and needs a bi-partisan solution.

    We’re all in this together. Quit playing Divide-and-Conquer. That’s exactly what our overlords would like us to do.

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

    Brava, Brooke. I’ve done likewise. I used to fly a lot. I stopped in 2010, just before the Reign of Molestation was implemented. I love travel more than I can say, and I’ve taken no end of sh*t for my decision from family and friends. I don’t care. They’re wrong, and when they, eventually, get the grope of a lifetime, they’ll realize it.

    In the meantime, I’ve discovered, to my surprise, that I can afford to take the QM2 across the ocean. No TSA thugs handling me or my belongings. We’re already booked for spring.

  • nateabele

    This is ignorant at best, and dangerous at worst. The federal government is not, in any sense, responsible for peoples’ safety, in any context whatsoever. This runs entirely counter to the founding principles of this country.

    On the contrary, the federal government is responsible for ensuring peoples’ *liberty*, especially from unwarranted searches as seizures by government organizations & officials at all levels (to be clear, ‘unwarranted’ means one has not committed and is not suspected of committing a crime).

    In the instance of air travel, we have private individuals engaging in private business with private companies. The government has no place here.

    People are perfectly capable of holding airlines accountable by choosing not to fly if they believe said airline’s security standards are not adequate to their personal safety. This is otherwise known as freedom.

  • TonyA_says

    Do you always fly to Pudong direct from the USA? Or do you sometimes fly via a non-Communist country like Japan, So. Korea, Taiwan or even Hong Kong.
    If you do, did you experience anything different as far as airport security in those countries?
    Here is where I am going with all these questions:
    1) People do not like those scanners. They are public enemy #1.
    2) Foreign (International) flights to the USA has a different protocol because the USA requires it. That protocol often requires manual inpection of all hand carry, throwing away of all water bottles including those bought inside the secure zone, and the lottery SSSS selectee process.
    3) International flights not involving the USA or Israel is quite similar to pre 911 security except for liquids
    4) mostly all other countries domestic flight use handy carry and luggage xray only and passengers walk through magnemometer. No shoes removed. Wands used if machine beeps. Laptops usually separated and from hand carry.
    5) USA Pat downs are thorough. International ones cannot be called a pat down. What they do is feel if you are carrying. That is why it is quick and light handed in my opinion. Next time bring a stopwatch and time it.

    First tell me if I am wrong or you have a very different experience.
    Then, try to figure out why the TSA process has to be very different than other countries. Why do we have machines and they dont? I am sure you have experienced the crazy crowd in PVG or BJS. Why dont they use scanners there? Maybe because it slows down the whole process. Hong Kong is another great example. It has also plenty of money to spend on their beautiful airport. Why haven’t I seen a scanner there?

    Japan is even stricter than China IMO. You cannot go to Japan if you were convicted of a Drug violation. Sometimes they even ask you if you have a weapon in your suitcase. But no scanners.

    So maybe getting rid of the scanners as Charlie Leocha says is a good start.
    We all might be amateurs but we can compare and we have a brain that can ask why it is so different here.

  • TonyA_says

    Do you always fly to Pudong direct from the USA? Or do you sometimes fly via a non-Communist country like Japan, So. Korea, Taiwan or even Hong Kong.
    If you do, did you experience anything different as far as airport security in those countries?
    Here is where I am going with all these questions:
    1) People do not like those scanners. They are public enemy #1.
    2) Foreign (International) flights to the USA has a different protocol because the USA requires it. That protocol often requires manual inpection of all hand carry, throwing away of all water bottles including those bought inside the secure zone, and the lottery SSSS selectee process.
    3) International flights not involving the USA or Israel is quite similar to pre 911 security except for liquids
    4) mostly all other countries domestic flight use handy carry and luggage xray only and passengers walk through magnemometer. No shoes removed. Wands used if machine beeps. Laptops usually separated and from hand carry.
    5) USA Pat downs are thorough. International ones cannot be called a pat down. What they do is feel if you are carrying. That is why it is quick and light handed in my opinion. Next time bring a stopwatch and time it.

    First tell me if I am wrong or you have a very different experience.
    Then, try to figure out why the TSA process has to be very different than other countries. Why do we have machines and they dont? I am sure you have experienced the crazy crowd in PVG or BJS. Why dont they use scanners there? Maybe because it slows down the whole process. Hong Kong is another great example. It has also plenty of money to spend on their beautiful airport. Why haven’t I seen a scanner there?

    Japan is even stricter than China IMO. You cannot go to Japan if you were convicted of a Drug violation. Sometimes they even ask you if you have a weapon in your suitcase. But no scanners.

    So maybe getting rid of the scanners as Charlie Leocha says is a good start.
    We all might be amateurs but we can compare and we have a brain that can ask why it is so different here.

  • Dobber

    I don’t believe anything meaningful will happen. If anything does change, it’ll likely just be more lip service. Or perhaps more accurately, lipstick on a pig.

    The TSA culture is poisonous. The only way to reform it would be to get rid of most of it’s management.

    I just don’t see it happening when so many politicians actually seem pleased to have this federal jobs program in place.

  • PostPainter

    We do need some sort of screening to feel safe as we board an airplane.

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

    PostPainter, no one’s saying we don’t need screening. None of us have ever said that.

  • JimDavisHouston

    Let’s face the facts The TSA will be around for a long time. That’s how our Government works. They’ll spend Billions trying to reform, and every time it will be a failure. Pistole is just another arrogant turd, and sadly, I believe he’ll continue his crap.

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

    lorcha, if any of our Congressional wankers had a tenth of the grit the British displayed during the Blitz, we wouldn’t be where we are today.

  • SoBeSparky

    Considering the differences between the 18th and 21st centuries (high seas vs. the skies), and the clear intents of the framers, here are a few powers of the federal government as delineated in the Constitution:

    “The Congress shall have Power To lay and collect Taxes, Duties, Imposts and Excises, to pay the Debts and provide for the common Defence and general Welfare of the United States.

    To regulate Commerce with foreign Nations, and among the several States, and with the Indian Tribes;

    To define and punish Piracies and Felonies committed on the high Seas, and Offences against the Law of Nations;

    To provide for calling forth the Militia to execute the Laws of the Union, suppress Insurrections and repel Invasions;

    To make all Laws which shall be necessary and proper for carrying into Execution the foregoing Powers, and all other Powers vested by this Constitution in the Government of the United States, or in any Department or Officer thereof.”

    Lets just consider the 3,000+ victims of September 11, 2001, and the many tens of thousands of relatives and friends. You assert the federal government does not have the primary responsibility to prevent this massive bloodshed?

    The U.S. clearly has authority to provide for the common Defence and general welfare, to regulate commerce between the states, to punish piracies and felonies and Offences against the Law of Nations, to call forth the militia to suppress insurrections and repel invasions, and to make laws to carry out the above purposes.

    Putting aside all the over-reaching adjectives, your post claims the federal government does not have these powers when they are outlined above, and have been consistently interpreted by the U.S. Supreme Court for over 200 years. While the Commerce Clause may have been too broadly interpreted on some occasions, it always has been clear that transportation between the states is the purview of the federal government.

    Whether you want to pigeonhole terrorism as piracies, felonies, invasions, war or insurrections, most readers will discern the intent to have violent threats against large groups in the United States to be handled by the federal government.

    Finally, most argue that one submits to the search as a part of one’s voluntary decision to travel by air, just like one submits to the regulation of driving (including a test and valid license) by one’s voluntary decision to drive a vehicle. To have an unregulated safety environment in the air would be just as disastrous as unbridled driving on the highways without licenses, laws, signs and regulations to protect the populace.

    Ben Franklin is credited with creating the symbol of the rattlesnake representing the colonies. At first (1754) the snake was cut up into pieces, representing the colonies, powerless separately during the French & Indian War. Later on combined as a whole with thirteen rattles, it came to represent the nation, a potent symbol of American unity against the British. Finally, it became transformed from newspaper artwork to a famous flag representing the power of the union and a common defence.

    To say that providing for the common defence against rebellion, insurrection, felonies, piracy and war has no part in the federal government strikes at the very nature of the union and the snake, “Join or Die.” “Don’t Tread on Me.” These were wise men, indeed.

  • http://twitter.com/ZombiePrepNet Zombie Prep Network

    Whoever the TSA chick is in the picture – that’s a nice pan of muffins she’s got.

  • http://twitter.com/ZombiePrepNet Zombie Prep Network

    If I could choose which TSA agent put HER hands inside my underwear, I’d fly every day. But I get to have my boys fondled by a dude when I fly.

  • nateabele

    Since it’s clear you’ve never studied the history and origins around most of what you cite (particularly the general welfare and interstate commerce clauses, of which most peoples’ understanding is egregiously perverted), and I don’t have the time or interest sufficient to compile a comprehensive list of citations, I’m just gonna leave these here…

    http://www.cato.org/pubs/journal/cj16n1-11.html

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Letter_of_marque#21st-century_American_reconsideration_of_Letters_of_Marque

    Along with a couple quick notes:

    > Finally, most argue that one submits to the search as a part of one’s voluntary decision to travel by air

    Indeed, it would be an entirely different matter if the security were provided by a private entity (whether the airline or not), but the 4th Amendment is binding on all activity carried out by government, federal, state, and local.

    > To have an unregulated safety environment in the air would be just as disastrous as unbridled driving on the highways without licenses, laws, signs and regulations to protect the populace.

    Your inability to correctly formulate an argument is nothing if not consistent. Hint: passengers don’t drive planes, and enacting standard-setting security regulation is not equal to imposing (and carrying out) specific implementations of security procedures, particularly when those implementations are in violation of the law, as well as established jurisprudence going back hundreds of years, not to mention common decency.

    > To say that providing for the common defence against rebellion, insurrection, felonies, piracy and war has no part in the federal government strikes at the very nature of the union and the snake

    You’re conflating separate, unrelated ideas on several different levels here.

    Also, the idea of what the federal government should be differed sharply from how we see it today. See also the debate between Jeffersonian Republicanism and Hamiltonian Federalism.

  • TonyA_says

    Re: Lets just consider the 3,000+ victims of September 11, 2001, and the many tens of thousands of relatives and friends.

    OK I do that. I am local to the area. No relatives or my personal friends died, but parents of my kids’ friends did. Do you really, really, think that they believe the TSA would have prevented 911? I have yet to hear that from anyone here.

    The basic question is why should AMERICANS undergo these pat downs and dangerous scanners at all? Why isn’t a magnetometer or wand good enough? This is crazy if you ask me.

  • cjr001

    And that’s really what it comes down to: the Congresscritters don’t want to be the ones called out when there’s another attack (and it’s *when*, not *if*).

    Never mind that TSA will never stop a terrorist. As long as TSA puts on a good show, the critters think they have political cover.

  • cjr001

    “No one HAS to fly. No one.”

    No one has to fly.
    No one has to take the subway.
    No one has to get on a boat.
    No one has to take a bus.
    No one has to drive down the street.
    No one has to go to a sporting event.
    No one has to visit a mall.

    No one has to look so damn silly to continue on with the “no one has to fly” routine when TSA wants to get their blue-gloved hands on EVERYTHING.

  • SoBeSparky

    It is unfortunate you obfuscate and demean the messenger rather than understand the consistent standing interpretations of the Constitution. Your citation of the Cato Institute speaks for itself for those who know of its background and ideology.

    In “your world,” all these laws, regulations and interpretations are unconstitutional. The problem is that the governing powers as outlined in the Constitution do not agree with you, year after year.

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

    SoBeSparky, before you or anyone else goes around trying to use the supposed trump card of “9/11! 9/11!” you should know that the 9/11 families themselves don’t agree with you:

    http://www.911familiesforamerica.org/?p=6141

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

    SoBeSparky, practically our entire military is privately subcontracted.

  • SoBeSparky

    Tony, I never asserted any such thought.

    Really, my sentence relates to the power of the federal government to regulate air safety. The poster was declaring there was no federal authority to create the TSA.

    I thought I clearly said, in context, what I meant:

    “You assert the federal government does not have the primary responsibility to prevent this massive bloodshed?

    The U.S. clearly has authority to provide for the common Defence and general welfare, to regulate commerce between the states, to punish piracies and felonies and Offences against the Law of Nations, to call forth the militia to suppress insurrections and repel invasions, and to make laws to carry out the above purposes.”

    That is the sum of my comment relating to 9/11. No where did I imply anything would have, could have, might have, or should have been prevented only if….

    nateabele contends passenger screening should be completely deregulated. I strongly disagree. No “free market” creates a safe and effective passenger safety program, just like it did not create a safe and effective oil drilling program, or safe and effective drug research and marketing program.

    The federal government is far from perfect. However, what would be the frequency of BP-type oil explosions and Thalidomide drugs without the federal government regulation and control of certain activities? Imagine all these companies doing what they feel will protect their reputation as their only criterion. That is nateabele’s position.

    No federal control and regulation, nateabele suggests. My response was, tell the survivors that the federal government has no role to prevent a similar horror.

    Why isn’t the magnetometer enough? Why isn’t a propeller enough? Why aren’t horses enough? Why do we need e-readers? I am not in a position to analyze these passenger scanning technologies, and most of the readers here probably are not either. So I am an amateur. Scientific advancement requires us to place a good deal of trust in others. All this is beyond most of our abilities. We know the results, but we do not know how the technology works.

    Change happens and when analysts conclude new techniques are better, more efficient, etc., then we should seriously consider their findings instead of yearning for yesteryear. Trust me, yesteryear (before 2001) was no picnic either. Lots of lines, lots of searches, lots of inconsistencies from airport to airport. People were just as upset, but did not have a single lightning rod such as the TSA presents.

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

    “Scientific advancement requires us to place a good deal of trust in others. All this is beyond most of our abilities. We know the results, but we do not know how the technology works.”

    Sorry, not in the case of the scanners, which have been proven to be ineffective. By actual security experts who actually study security. You don’t have to be Einstein to understand this.

  • SoBeSparky

    With all due respect to the survivors, this individual does not claim to speak for the relatives of 3,000+ people. She is the co-founder of an organization. That is all we know. We know of no poll, vote or convention at which this group would form a general opinion and authorize Ms. Burlingame to speak for them.

    Frankly I cannot even find what kind of an organization this is, how many members it has, who funds it, etc.

    To generalize from one person’s opinion to tens of thousands is a huge stretch.

  • TonyA_says

    Yup Hitler, Stalin, and Mao had so much power all right. No one questioned them (or they got killed). Look what happened.

    As much as people hate lines (not just in airports), they hate nude-o-scopes and being groped more. The latter is just UNAMERICAN.

    In my opinion, it is the right of every American to question government (to be specific – petition the Government for a redress of grievances) and the rest of the Bill of Rights that makes this country great.

    People HATE those scanners and pat downs and they are making their government know about it. They could care less about technology or science. They want their privacy.

  • Extramail

    I’d love for you to suggest that title to the congressional committee and see how many figured it out before they voted on it? Wanna take a bet on how many would vote on it without even reading it?

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

    SBS, I’m saying quit trying to capitalize on 9/11. 9/11 happened. It’s not the only terrorist attack in this country’s history. More people are killed every year in car accidents than have been — or ever likely will be — by terrorism in this country. 9/11 isn’t a trump card. Just because 9/11 happened doesn’t mean we should throw away our rights, as millions of people are clearly willing to do.

  • SoBeSparky

    First one must define ineffective. Then one should examine all technical evaluations, both good and bad. Finally, this should be translated to layman English.

    There are too many specious assertions on the internet without commonly accepted attributions. I trust very little on the internet unless it is general knowledge or verifiable.

    You might be able to assert some experts say they are ineffective. Or that other companies think their machines are better. But to flatly unequivocally state “proven to be ineffective,” is too broad without some powerful attribution to a consensus of opinions.

  • Extramail

    And, what is congress going to say when that ” when” happens? “It was the other parties fault,” just for starters.

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

    SBS, we have provided the evidence umpteen times, at this blog and at TSA News. You’ve read it. Now we’re supposed to do it all over again in this comment thread?? So that you can again claim it’s not credible or in comprehensible English or blah blah blah? God, some people are tiresome.

  • Extramail

    Because we can’t profile in this country. But, we can allow TSA agents to physically assault us. Makes sense, huh?

  • nateabele

    Indeed, and it’s your kind who believe in such illogical absurdities as the federal government being a check and balance on it’s own power.

    Congressional and judicial interpretations are just as philosophically irrelevant as the Federalist Papers are practically irrelevant, and we’re the worse for it.

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

    Extramail, it’s a false dichotomy. We don’t have to settle for “It’s Either Profile or Assault.” Crude profiling of the sort many people propose — and which the TSA, predictably, already engages in, as many news reports have revealed — doesn’t work. I’m not going to repeat all the obvious reasons why. By now people should be able to figure it out.

    What TSA apologists — and racial/ethnic profilers — never answer is a simple question: Why, in all the years when we weren’t being scanned or groped, weren’t planes being blown out of the sky left and right?

    Could it be because, contrary to fearmongers’ claims, “The Terrorists!” aren’t, in fact, everywhere?

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

    Pre-Check is a boondoggle. And an extortion racket.

    After you pay your 100 bucks, you might not have to take your shoes off, you might not have to take your coat off, you might not have to take your laptop out, you might not get scanned, you might not get groped. Might might might.

    More importantly, it’s ethically indefensible. It’s the very embodiment of “All animals are equal but some animals are more equal than others.”

    People who sign on to Pre-Check are not only paying protection money to an abusive agency, they’re metaphorically spitting on their fellow passengers.

    We’ve written about this countless times at TSA News:

    http://tsanewsblog.com/6652/news/tsa-continues-to-trumpet-pre-check-boondoggle/

  • MarkieA

    A friend of mine, a few years back, told the TSA that he was uncomfortable having a male patting him down. He got a female instead. No lie!

  • TonyA_says

    SoBeSparky

    I just want to add that it was the brave AMATEURS on flight UA93 (from Newark EWR, NJ) who fought the terrorist, hijackers so the airplane could not be used as a missile to kill more Americans. So when push comes to shove the AMATEURS give up their lives or liberty. I guess the new name for the 99% is AMATEURS. You are correct since in French, an amateur is a “Lover of” … life, liberty and justice for all.

  • TonyA_says

    Lisa, I cannot see the reason why the TSA cannot simply pre-check everyone when they are already doing Secure Flight at least 72 hours before the flight. I cannot see the difference if they simply get someone’s ID ahead of time and check his/her records. What’s one more number to give away when they already have all the information about us?

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

    Tony, I think you’ve answered your own question. They already have all the information (and more) they need on us. Why pay an extra 100 bucks to maybe might perhaps sometimes possibly could be spared getting assaulted?

  • Daisiemae

    Tiresome,yes. Beyond belief. Why is everyone catering to this person by continually engaging him?

  • Daisiemae

    Tiresome,yes. Beyond belief. Why is everyone catering to this person by continually engaging him?

  • y_p_w

    I friend of mine used to be into weapons. I remember he showed me some of the stuff he bought, including plastic or composite blades that supposedly wouldn’t show up on a metal detector. What he intended to do with them was another matter.

    I don’t believe they were effective slicing weapons, but they could probably be used to stab someone.

  • Edmund Ruffin

    The TSA is just another federal jobs program. Unfortunately, that is the way the p.c. military is going, just another jobs program with ‘equal’ rights for women and sodomites.

  • TonyA_says

    Honestly, so what? That’s not gonna take a plane down.
    By the time he stabs one or two, the rest of the passengers will get him pinned down on the floor. Also the air marshal is armed.
    Not enough reason to hassle the whole flying public with dangerous scanners that is not even guaranteed to catch his weapons.
    As Charlie Leocha said, concentrate on explosives if we can.

  • technomage1

    Or because the threat has changed. Terrorism has always been present but the risk has increased for attacks in the US following the end of the Cold War. Additionally, attacks where the main objective is mass casualties have increased worldwide.

  • http://www.facebook.com/katherine.coull.1 Katherine Coull

    Chris, did you happen to see CNN tonight with asegment on drones that are designed to resemble creatures? They had fish tank with a very real-looking guppy creature swimming around. It’s designed to investigate our harbors, shipyards, ships and other possibly terrorist targets. The other drones are ‘mules’ (not the drug smuggling ones) and horses. This idiotic research and development is being funded by the the TSA. I couldn’t believe it, and on second or third thought, it’s only natural, considering everything about them. Even paranoids have real enemies.
    Happy Holidays to all.

  • Anonymoose

    Can’t even get a hot TSA woman to pat you down either.

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

    technomage1, yes, more people around the world are killed by terrorism than are or ever have been in this country. People in other parts of the world suffer more from terrorism than we do. So why won’t Americans grow up and acknowledge that, instead of running around screaming like maniacs from an episode of The Twilight Zone?

    Why are Americans still driving, when around 35,000 of them every year are killed in traffic accidents? As many in gun shootings? How many 9/11s is that? More are struck by lightning than killed by terrorism. More drown in their bathtubs than are killed by terrorism. More choke on sandwiches. So let’s all stop eating, bathing, and driving! Better yet, let’s post TSA types to monitor our behavior every waking hour. After all, Anything For Safety!