I came across this earlier tonight on Facebook, and it seems a propos:
The crap we put up with getting on and off an airplane - The Oatmeal
The crap we put up with getting on and off an airplane - The Oatmeal
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?
Airports however are not private institutions. They are government owned entities so airlines cannot have free reign to make their own policies within an airport.
It's really disgusting how people are just tolerating it like the lemmings they are.
It's really disgusting how people are just tolerating it like the lemmings they are.
In the grand scheme of things I just don't see it as a big deal. Stupid and ineffective, sure, but certainly not any sort of major violation of civil rights worth screaming about and threatening to have people arrested.
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?
Airports however are not private institutions. They are government owned entities so airlines cannot have free reign to make their own policies within an airport.
Lots of airports actually are private; however, I'll grant that most of the big ones are public institutions.
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