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August
18, 2009
TSA and Its
Brethren
Going in a
Bad Direction Without Wanting To
by Fred Reed
After hearing acount after account from friends
and acquaintances of rude and sometimes abusive
behavior by federal officials in Immigrations, TSA,
and others, I spoke by telephone to a fellow at TSA
in Washington. He was agreeable and helpful, which
is not a response one always gets in the capital.
Anyway, I subseqquently wrote him a letter,
reproduced below, which addresses matters that in
the past have been of interest to readers.
Dear Mr. ,
After our conversation of last week (and I
appreciated your taking the time) I thought
carefully about the problem of "TSA" -- which, as I
mentioned, has become a catch-all world for
everything people don't like about governmental
intrusion on traveling. It is true that in airports
the emigrations officers are much more obnoxious
than the genuine TSA personnel.
I discussed the matter with a group of friends
who, like me, are roughly in their mid-sixties --
that is, who remember the United States as it was
years ago. We agreed that we are seeing an anger in
the United States, chiefly directed at government,
that is new to us. There was widespread anger
during the war in Vietnam, but it was directed at
the war, not the government in general. Today we
have something different.
There is a sense that the government now is not
only hostile to the public, which it never was
before, but out of control. The degree of
intrusiveness has grown from almost none to almost
unrestrained -- or so people feel.
A few examples:
It is widely assumed by sane and educated people
that NSA monitors all email; whether this is true I
am not sure, but it is believed. Habeas corpus
seems to have gone away. The Fourth Amendment no
longer seems to exist, "random" searches on the
street being legal. Finances are tracked. You can't
buy a commuter train ticket without a governmental
ID, information from which goes into a computer (my
experience on MARC).
Police are more militarized and more aggressive.
The financial crisis is seen, with ample evidence,
as the result of corruption and lack of federal
regulation. A million people are said to be on the
no-fly list. Metal detectors proliferate.
Toothpaste and deodorants are confiscated at
airports. The country is seen to be in serious
decline while the government spends a trillion a
year on the Pentagon and wars of mysterious
purpose. Children are forced to take Ritalin. The
bureaucracy is unresponsive: It takes a year even
to get records from the VA, any dealing with IRS
can turn into a years-long nightmare even if it is
only a routine matter, and the paperwork is so
complex that you can't do anything without a
specialized lawyer. I could go on for pages.
This is the context in which "TSA" (in the sense
mentioned above) operates. I do not suggest that
much that TSA does is illegal. Anything is legal
that Congress says is legal, except in the unlikely
event that the Supreme Court disagrees. Rather I
question whether much of "security" actually
accomplishes what it is supposed to accomplish, and
whether the benefits outweigh the harm done.
Consider the inspection of all photos in a
passenger's camera, which recently happened to me.
It is grossly intrusive and potentially
humiliating. Depending on circumstances, the
traveler may have nude pictures of his wife, or
pictures of himself engaging in sex with a Thai
transvestite. Neither is illegal, and neither is
the government's business.
Do these searches in any sense inhibit the
dissemination of child pornography? Yes -- for
about a week. Once the pedophiles learn of the
searches -- and people who smuggle extremely
illegal photos make a point of being aware of such
things -- the measure becomes worthless. The
malefactor puts the memory card with the porn in
his back pocket, and leaves a card of innocent
photos in the camera.
Of course "TSA" could go through the traveler's
pockets and do a detailed search of his luggage for
a tiny chip secreted in a pair of dirty socks. TSA
personnel do not have tight connections. A friend
recently showed me a memory chip, four gig I think
it was, no larger than a pencil eraser. Will "TSA"
begin doing random body-cavity searches? Does minor
and ineffective inconvenience to the pedophile
offset massive inconvenience and indignity to the
innocent?
So much of "security" is so obviously pointless
that one wonders why it exists. If you randomly
search one in fifty passengers boarding Amtrak at
rush hour, you do not detect the terrorist
ninety-eight percent of the time. In the case of a
suicide bomber, the detection leads to an immediate
explosion and, unless you conduct the inspection
robotically in a blast-proof room, several
dead.
To the public, at any rate to the many people
with whom I have discussed the matter, the air of
federal fear seems almost demented. I have had an
(actual) TSA woman solemnly examine a pair of
tweezers to determine whether they were blunt-nosed
(acceptable) or pointed (posing a threat of
hijacking). Do we really believe that a team of Al
Quaeda terrorists are going to leap up brandishing
tweezers? Equally absurd is that a woman cannot
enter the US consulate in Guadalajara with her
lipstick. Yes, I know it could contain a cyanide
dart or a hidden vial of Tabun. So could
anything.
This,
while not solemnly written, makes a variety of
points that occur to many, many people.
How much security is enough? Any amount of
intrusion whatever can be justified on grounds of
slight or imaginary benefits. Those strip-scanners
that famously reduce travelers to near-nudity are
loathed by women; have they actually accomplished
any desirable end, except for the manufacturer?
People in the federal security business tend to
believe that surveillance is for the safety of the
public, then to believe that more surveillance will
produce more safety, and finally to fall into the
rationale that "if you are doing nothing wrong, you
have nothing to fear from inspections etc." Police
in general tend naturally to believe this. Always,
always, it leads to abuses that render the public
fearful of the police. For this reason the Fourth
Amendment was propounded.
In my eight years as a police reporter for the
Washington Times, the police needed probable cause
to conduct a search, this being defined as "an
articulable reason to believe that a specific
person was committing a specific crime." (Sometimes
they lied when they wanted probable cause, but the
requirement nonetheless provided a degree of
protection for the public.) Walking through Penn
Station in Baltimore does not meet the definition
of probable cause, yet the PA system constantly
announces that people are subject to random
search.
The knowledge that one may be searched at any
time is intimidating, and being searched,
humiliating. Yes, it is legal. A judge can always
be found who will find constitutional almost
anything. Yet the ability to say "no" to causeless
searches was a thing that distinguished America
from the Soviet Union. It no longer does.
Finally, there is the tendency for industry to
see federal programs as money spigots. (Having long
covered the Pentagon, I know the game well.) A
company comes up with a better x-ray scanner at
$170 thousand per each, times 2500 or however many
airport security gates. That's money. There are
also the contracts for training TSA personnel, for
maintenance, and for upgrades. A race ensues to
come up with an even better scanner, or nitrate
sniffer, of blast-proof trash cans for Metro, which
can then be sold to the government.
So it isn't just the rudeness and bullying of
Immigrations people, or the confiscation of
toothpaste and shampoo and bottled water. It is the
sense that the government, if not quite an enemy
perhaps, is not friendly, and is endless trouble.
For a large and, I thank, growing number of people,
the most fervent wish is that the government leave
them the hell alone.
Sincerely,
Fred Reed
Reed
Archive
Copyright 2009 by Fred Reed and reproduced here by
permission of the author.
About
the Author (by the author):
Fred Reed is a Marine combat veteran, police
reporter, amateur biochemist, former long-haul
hitchhiker, and part-time sociopath living in
Mexico. Fred, a keyboard mercenary with a
disorganized past, has worked on staff for Army
Times, The Washingtonian, Soldier of Fortune,
Federal Computer Week, and The Washington
Times. He has been published in Playboy,
Soldier of Fortune, The Wall Street Journal, The
Washington Post, Harper's, National Review, Signal,
Air&Space, and suchlike. He has worked as a
police writer, technology editor, military
specialist, and authority on mercenary soldiers. He
is by all accounts as looney as a tune.
Visit the "Fred
on Everything" website to read his previous
columns and sign up for his regular e-mail
feature.
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The essays in A Brass Pole in
Bangkok, are sometimes wildly funny,
sometimes deadly serious, always merciless
in their unmasking of the pretenses and
charlatans of society. Fred, a former
Marine, subscribes to no ideology ("an
ideology is just a systematic way of
misunderstanding the world") but
exuberantly wreaks havoc on practically
everything, and delights in everything
else: the psychotherapy swindle, squalling
feminists, race racketeers, damn fool
wars, red-light districts in Asia, and
tequila fests in Mexico, where he
lives.
A
Brass Pole in Bangkok: A Thing I Aspire To
Be, by Fred Reed
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Buy Fred's new reprehensible book,
Nekkid In Austin! Another
collection of Fred's collected outrages,
irresponsible ravings, and curmudgeonry
from "Fred On Everything" and some
innocent magazines that, he says,
foolishly published him. Wildly funny,
sometimes wacky, always provocative essays
on the collapse of America.
Nekkid
in Austin: Drop Your Inner Child Down a
Well, by Fred Reed
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