Seems like it's starting to get a little personal in here.
I have no clue what you mean by this, but I think it could be an insult of some kind. Whatever, you clearly are seeing the distinction I am trying to make nor do you see Arrgh's point so it's sort of pointless to continue to try and explain. I think we have both made our points very clear and easy to understand and you simply just don't get it.
If you have no clue what I meant, why are you assuming there is an insult?I have no clue what you mean by this, but I think it could be an insult of some kind.
I understand that it is a private service and that will always be the standard argument for anything. The problem I have is how far should we allow private sevices to go in usurping our rights? You can say, "well you have a choice" all you want, but when the choices are do what we say or don't fly then it's not much of a choice is it? We all may not have to fly, but at some point, you may need to get somewhere faster than a train, bus, boat or car can take you. Look at at&t, if you want a smart phone then you can get any service provider you want. If you want an iphone, you have to choose at&t, so yeah you have a choice, but not really. I think if private companies are going to participate in counter terrorism they should be subject to our lawss including the constitution. How far should they be allowed to go?
Couldn't be as offensive as you trivializing what happen with Rosa Parks....and I find your allegation offensive.![]()
If you have no clue what I meant, why are you assuming there is an insult?I have no clue what you mean by this, but I think it could be an insult of some kind.![]()
I understand that it is a private service and that will always be the standard argument for anything. The problem I have is how far should we allow private sevices to go in usurping our rights? You can say, "well you have a choice" all you want, but when the choices are do what we say or don't fly then it's not much of a choice is it? We all may not have to fly, but at some point, you may need to get somewhere faster than a train, bus, boat or car can take you. Look at at&t, if you want a smart phone then you can get any service provider you want. If you want an iphone, you have to choose at&t, so yeah you have a choice, but not really. I think if private companies are going to participate in counter terrorism they should be subject to our lawss including the constitution. How far should they be allowed to go?
However far they want. As long as the airlines want security screening by the TSA then this is the way it will be.
If you're concerned about timing then plan your trip better and well in advance.
Everyone is grossly overreacting to this. They'll only do a pat-down if you refuse a body scan. So just take the fifteen seconds it takes and move on. Its not as bad as locker rooms from gym class and its a hell of a lot faster. So just cowboy up everyone.
I understand that it is a private service and that will always be the standard argument for anything. The problem I have is how far should we allow private sevices to go in usurping our rights? You can say, "well you have a choice" all you want, but when the choices are do what we say or don't fly then it's not much of a choice is it? We all may not have to fly, but at some point, you may need to get somewhere faster than a train, bus, boat or car can take you. Look at at&t, if you want a smart phone then you can get any service provider you want. If you want an iphone, you have to choose at&t, so yeah you have a choice, but not really. I think if private companies are going to participate in counter terrorism they should be subject to our lawss including the constitution. How far should they be allowed to go?
However far they want. As long as the airlines want security screening by the TSA then this is the way it will be.
If you're concerned about timing then plan your trip better and well in advance.
Everyone is grossly overreacting to this. They'll only do a pat-down if you refuse a body scan. So just take the fifteen seconds it takes and move on. Its not as bad as locker rooms from gym class and its a hell of a lot faster. So just cowboy up everyone.
Would you allow someone in that locker room to take a picture of you naked?
Would you allow someone in that locker room to take a picture of you naked?
The difference is that the 'picture' is deleted immediately after viewing.
Would you allow someone in that locker room to take a picture of you naked?
The difference is that the 'picture' is deleted immediately after viewing.
No one seriously believes that, do they? We have no idea what these TSA people are doing in that booth. They could be in there with their damn iPhones recording everyone who comes through. We'd never know, right? The TSA says these machines don't store images, but why trust them?
And yes, I believe the TSA definitely has all four wheels off the road on this one. When the choice is between these two things:
1) Walk through a machine that spits out a picture of you naked, and exposes you to God knows how much radiation in the process;
or
2) Get felt up by some perverted piece of shit in a uniform,
then I would say we need to do a massive overhaul here. Our rights are being violated left and right. This must end. NOW.
All this airport security has tipped the balance too much in favour of annoying legitimate passengers.
Truth is, you can't eliminate the risk of terrorism. More controversially, I also disagree with the current popular thesis that "one should always try to reduce it as much as possible". That degree of reduction requires increasingly extreme levels of intervention in daily life. The tipping point of acceptability is NOT at the point of maximum reduction of risk, but actually arrives significantly before that point. We're seeing that with the public resistance to these pat-downs. Yes, they would probably increase security... but so what if it is unacceptable to our quality of life?
The greatest victory of terrorism isn't killing people, it's altering people's lifestyles sufficiently that the issue behind the terrorism become predominant in people's thinking. Losing a plane, say, every 20 years is far less intrusive on the average person's life than increasing airport security to a point where the risk drops to say, once every 30 or 40 years.
Of course, some security is required, but the systems currently in place are confused, partially redundant and efficient. Streamline and simplify to achieve a less intrusive balance between security and ease of travel, should be the watchword now.
The operative word there is want.If someone wants to visit their family for thanksgiving and they live far away then they need to take a plane. If they only have 3-4 days off because they have a shitty job that doesen't provide vacation days and it would take more time than what it's worth to drive then they have no choice, but fly. They then go to the airport and are picked to be searched without probable cause and they refuse, then they can't get on the plane. There is no choice, you are forced into the system. You can't refuse on the grounds of it bieng unconstitutional because the constitution is bieng usurped.
I want to be with my Aunt for Thanksgiving... I've wanted to see her many times in the last 15 years... but wanting isn't equivalent to a right to fly to see her. I couldn't afford the plane ticket, so no matter how much I wanted to see her, I couldn't.
If you want to fly enough to pay the high ticket prices, then you also want to fly enough to put up with the searches.
Luxuries (like flying) are not rights. Confusing them as such diminishes the meaning of the word rights to something trivial... and that is more dangerous to the Constitution and the rights it protects.
TSA agents want to get it over with as fast as possible and people like you insist on insulting them and making their lives miserable. How about reading this article: http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20101123/ap_on_re_us/us_airport_security_tsa_officers
If you want to talk radiation, you get more being on the plane than being scanned.
TSA agents want to get it over with as fast as possible and people like you insist on insulting them and making their lives miserable. How about reading this article: http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20101123/ap_on_re_us/us_airport_security_tsa_officers
The "I was only following orders" defense has been proven to be invalid. If those TSA goons don't like having to enforce those rules, no one's forcing them to work there.
If you want to talk radiation, you get more being on the plane than being scanned.
I rather doubt that.
If you want to talk radiation, you get more being on the plane than being scanned. If you're paranoid about radiation then stay home and indoors, because you get radiation exposure every second outside. And you'd also have to avoid dentists. And Doctors. And God forbid using a microwave.
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