That's a stupid comment, since the whole point of the federal courts is to determine what the law is by interpreting the Constitution.Sounds like a bullshit way to get around the law.
Wouldn't it be a whole lot easier to have an armed guard on each plane?
Wouldn't it be a whole lot easier to have an armed guard on each plane?
Americans have become so paranoid that now anything intended to keep them safe is misinterpreted as an "assault" on their rights. To me, it comes down to a simple equation -- want to be safe? You have to put up with security procedures. But being safe is relative -- some terrorist will figure out a way past these procedures. Might as well worry that, statistically speaking, you're liable to die in a car crash first. You can't live your life in fear!
The law is what the Courts say it is. The Supreme Court determines what is Constitutional. That is their function. They don't have to "think up ways to skirt the law" because they decide what the law is. And it's not "a judge" finding ways, it's the court of appeals, which is a panel, deciding what the Constitution requires. They are the ones who determine whether any particular judge has made an error of law.That's a stupid comment, since the whole point of the federal courts is to determine what the law is by interpreting the Constitution.Sounds like a bullshit way to get around the law.
Federal courts are suposed interpet the law, not create ways to skirt the law. The Constitution is clear that you can't search people without a warrant or probable cause. If a judge is finding ways for the federal government to get away with searching people without warrants, then that is bullshit. Hence my comment. It's activism, not judging. Judges have been known to make mistakes by the way.
To be free, we MUST be safe. The lack of safety equals chaos, and where there is chaos there can be no freedom.
Americans have become so paranoid that now anything intended to keep them safe is misinterpreted as an "assault" on their rights. To me, it comes down to a simple equation -- want to be safe? You have to put up with security procedures.
I'm unsure how not wanting to be ogled in your green-tinted birthday suit or groped just to catch a red-eye to Cleveland (which is punishment enough) makes one paranoid. It seems contradictory since we're calling for less (or preferably smarter) security procedures, not more. People demanding more excessive security measures even though they're not likely to stop terrorists - who know what to avoid now - would seem to fit the paranoid bill more rather than the other way around. I'm not a hot woman, so I'm not too worried if someone wants to see my toned naked physique in all of its glorious splendor, but I could certainly see how a women might feel creeped out by it if she keeps getting singled out, as is actually happening.
I don't think that most people feel more safe from these procedures at all. I think they feel more inconvenienced and harassed and embarrassed due to increasingly pointless and invasive knee-jerk reactive security measures. I already felt perfectly safe flying, but not from the security checks, just because the chances of something happening are so incredibly slim. I stay away from flying now unless I absolutely have to not because of terrorism, but because of the security hassle before you even get on the plane. I guess if the goal is to stop terrorism on airliners by trying to discourage people from flying as much as possible it's the right way to go.
If anything, the fact that their security measures are always reactive to the last incident that actually happened or would have happened if not for incompetence of the terrorist or the reaction of the passengers (but always after the terrorist already got the device on the plane) gives me less confidence in them. They haven't shown an ounce of initiative, forward-thinking, or rationality. They prevent passengers from carrying liquids, nail files, and ink cartridges though, like that's going to stop anything. People joke that the next time when a terrorist carries a bomb in a body cavity that means there are going to be random body cavity searches for passengers, but deep down there's a tinge of seriousness in it because given everything else the TSA has done that's sadly not out of the realm of possibility.
But hey, clearly the TSA knows what they're doing and never goes too far. How could an agency that feels-up children (AKA Terror Tykes) and then tells them it's all part of a "fun game" (you know, like child molesters do) possibly be wrong? Note, I'm not actually calling them child molesters here, I'm calling them incompetent for the fact that they clearly didn't even consult with any child psychologists before coming up with that brainfart of an idea.
It's about the fact that I go into an airport I am subject to search without a warrant or probable cause. As others have pointed out, there is no other choice. I either buy the ticket or not.
When you buy a ticket, it's an informed choice. You are at that point accepting that you maybe searched. It's that simple. You have accepted it. You don't need a warrant for such occassions. You are saying, I accept that you may need to search me for the safety of everyone.
If you don't want to be searched, scanned, whatever, don't buy the ticket. Is that simple enough for you to understand?
Mr Awe
Except that you are entering an agreement with a private company (the airline), and yet you may be searched by a government entity (TSA). Therein lies the gray area. Does the government have the right to interpose itself into a private transaction?
Your anger is somewhat contradictory. You complain that TSA has never caught any terrorists, but then claim that the actual chance of terrorism is extremely small. So maybe TSA has never caught one because there aren't any formal terrorists plots.. has TSA caught 19 Saudis trying to hijack a plane and use it as a weapon? No because there hasn't been any. Does TSA confiscate weapons from passangers. Yes every single day.
Americans have become so paranoid that now anything intended to keep them safe is misinterpreted as an "assault" on their rights. To me, it comes down to a simple equation -- want to be safe? You have to put up with security procedures.
I'm unsure how not wanting to be ogled in your green-tinted birthday suit or groped just to catch a red-eye to Cleveland (which is punishment enough) makes one paranoid. It seems contradictory since we're calling for less (or preferably smarter) security procedures, not more. People demanding more excessive security measures even though they're not likely to stop terrorists - who know what to avoid now - would seem to fit the paranoid bill more rather than the other way around. I'm not a hot woman, so I'm not too worried if someone wants to see my toned naked physique in all of its glorious splendor, but I could certainly see how a women might feel creeped out by it if she keeps getting singled out, as is actually happening.
I don't think that most people feel more safe from these procedures at all. I think they feel more inconvenienced and harassed and embarrassed due to increasingly pointless and invasive knee-jerk reactive security measures. I already felt perfectly safe flying, but not from the security checks, just because the chances of something happening are so incredibly slim. I stay away from flying now unless I absolutely have to not because of terrorism, but because of the security hassle before you even get on the plane. I guess if the goal is to stop terrorism on airliners by trying to discourage people from flying as much as possible it's the right way to go.
If anything, the fact that their security measures are always reactive to the last incident that actually happened or would have happened if not for incompetence of the terrorist or the reaction of the passengers (but always after the terrorist already got the device on the plane) gives me less confidence in them. They haven't shown an ounce of initiative, forward-thinking, or rationality. They prevent passengers from carrying liquids, nail files, and ink cartridges though, like that's going to stop anything. People joke that the next time when a terrorist carries a bomb in a body cavity that means there are going to be random body cavity searches for passengers, but deep down there's a tinge of seriousness in it because given everything else the TSA has done that's sadly not out of the realm of possibility.
But hey, clearly the TSA knows what they're doing and never goes too far. How could an agency that feels-up children (AKA Terror Tykes) and then tells them it's all part of a "fun game" (you know, like child molesters do) possibly be wrong? Note, I'm not actually calling them child molesters here, I'm calling them incompetent for the fact that they clearly didn't even consult with any child psychologists before coming up with that brainfart of an idea.
Your anger is somewhat contradictory. You complain that TSA has never caught any terrorists, but then claim that the actual chance of terrorism is extremely small. So maybe TSA has never caught one because there aren't any formal terrorists plots.. has TSA caught 19 Saudis trying to hijack a plane and use it as a weapon? No because there hasn't been any. Does TSA confiscate weapons from passangers. Yes every single day.
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