What we lose when we fly this year
When you were a child, your parents told you not to let anyone touch you in your private places except your parents themselves or a doctor. Now that you’re an adult, your husband or wife has superseded mom and dad. But the TSA wants to join the list of trusted touchers.
It is true that TSA officers are just doing their jobs when they put their inquisitive hands into your sexual spaces. They’re not perverts. I suspect they don’t enjoy it any more than you do. But the question is what do we lose with this shocking extension of government intrusion into our privacy?
The most obvious problem with this new checkpoint ordeal—presumably for our safety—is that it’s humiliating. Admittedly, so are the johnnies that that we have to wear in the hospital. But it is doctors and nurses who are looking at us. It is also the nature of medical treatment to be personal and invasive. The government’s job, by contrast, is to protect our personal lives from invasion by others.
This points to a less obvious problem with these airport security measures. They introduce a new relationship between ordinary citizens and their government. So that our government can better take care of us, we are now holding our hands in their air in a posture of complete surrender and vulnerability while they see everything there is to see about us. Then they release us. Then, having proven that you are not a terrorist, you can fly on a privately owned airplane. Many people meekly submit to this. Those who are intensely angry about this (as certainly I would be) control themselves for fear of reprisals—everything from delay to prosecution.
The terrorists like this new arrangement because, through the happy accident of a failed underwear bombing, they prompted our government to strip us of liberties that they hate. Not only that, they also convinced us to submit to this and, more importantly, changed our sense of what to expect by way of liberty.
Our government has been alarmingly compliant in this. It is especially true recently of the Democrats, the party that is in principle committed to big, paternalistic oversight of all our affairs. But we should remember that it was under the Republican Bush administration that we all became indiscriminately suspected of terrorist activity and treated accordingly.
It is interesting to note in all of this how selective our government has been in its sensitivity to public outcry. When enhanced airport screening began, instead of focusing on people who gave reason for authorities to suspect they might be a security risk (behavior, circumstances, perhaps coupled with country of national origin), airport security treated everyone as a potential terrorist. The White House buckled under the fear of squawking against the appearance of racial profiling—or at least the fear of that small but vocal segment of the population that considers it unreasonable under all circumstances.
But when it came to electronically stripping and manually fondling obviously innocent air travelers, the government has been utterly callous to public moral protest. “Get used to it; it’s for your own good” has been the firm message.
Perhaps we should hold our breath, grit our teeth, and just get through those dreadful pre-flight moments for the sake of safe skies. But why should we expect it will end with air travel? When it comes to terrorism, we can’t remain simply reactive. Shouldn’t we consider what terrorists might think of doing next? What about trains, and even commuter trains? Expect an increase in rush hour motor traffic. But an underwear bomber could target a bridge or a tunnel! We’ll need personally invasive pat-downs for everyone entering or leaving Manhattan, even carpoolers. And what about the possibility of an underwear bomber in a public school? Get ready for personal frisking of the kids before the school day begins. Oh, and principals and teachers, too. We have to be fair.
By the way, is it possible for a terrorist to conceal explosives in his or her body cavities? Now there’s an interesting search.
But surely it’s OK. They work for the government. They’re like, you know, doctors and such.

















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back to top28 Comments to “What we lose when we fly this year”
Yes, it is possible.
There was a woman known to the police as a druggie and alcoholic. They picked her up yet again and put her in jail to sleep it off so she couldn’t jump of a building. They did a pat down and in a pocket of her blouse there were bullets. They did not find the gun. Well, she killed herself in the jail cell. It was a small gun, but it did the job. That police station had to get magnetometers after that one.
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And they will do it.
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TSA = Toddler Stripsearch Administration
Democrats are defending this now. Can you imagine the uproar had this been implemented by Bush??
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It probably was Saw…they had to order and manufacture all those xray machines over years right?
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Sawgunner that is why I am not a fan of either party. They both are following the same road, its just that the democrats have the pedal to the metal concerning larger, more invasive government. On election day it feels like the vote is always between choosing between different degrees of wrongness.
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Didn’t Chertoff work for Bush? His company sells the machines.
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Pedophiles and Perverts are lining up to apply for jobs at TSA.
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Many comedians have made the TSA mad.
They have been the butt of MANY JOKES for a long time.
They are now getting even with travellers.
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I still don’t see how RANDOM FRISKING AND X-RAYS of grandmas and children will save us all.
Guys from YEMEN (a known terrorist training camp) do not get a second look?
If terrorists THINK we are profiling potential terrorists, they might not try.
The terrorists are just laughing at us like the keystone cops as we run around in circles trying not to offend them.
IMAGINE, trying not to offend terrorists!
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I hoped they looked at all the other people on the plane with the unsuccessful underwear bomber.
Maybe he was just a decoy for the real terrorist who was on the plane to the US.
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This is a someone well balance article (down right reasonable by the “standards” of world).
But while you’re being so careful, D.C., as to remind us that it was under the Bush administration and not the Obama administration that we all became suspect terrorists by default…
…you could show some self-reflexiveness and remind yourself that is was under the Obama administration and not the Bush administration that conservatives started caring about it!
It’s a little too cute by half to says Democrats are the group “in principle committed to big, paternalistic oversight of all our affairs.”…
…(Which is also too cute by full from a group who wants the government to monitor every pregnancy and investigate every miscarrage as a possible homicide)…
When the Republican party and it’s advocates have such an amazingly AWOL record on protecting personal privacy and individual liberty!
“Don’t touch my junk!” might be the mantra of the common man, but where in tarnation where the conservatives when it was time for “Don’t tap my phone!” or “Don’t strap me to a board and pour water over my face to simulate drowning”?
Where were these movement conservative for personal privacy and individual liberty then? They were lined up the man calling Democrats un-patriotic terrorist sympathizers!
The conservative movement needs some group reflexivity, and it needs it quick!
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Where are the constitutional protests against unreasonable search and seizure? Every TSA agent should be required to a warrant to conduct a search of any passenger whether it be on a plane or a bus or a train — and what is going to happen now that the rules of engagement are going to conflict because passengers on trains are soon to be allowed to carry firearms?
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#7-Pedophiles and Perverts are lining up to apply for jobs at TSA.
Please do not enter into wild rumors that you cannot (or do not attempt) to prove.
As for the administration doing anything about the invasion of privacy: I don’t think they even use commercial airlines to travel, do they?
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Mynock, if you think standards are lacking here, perhaps you would feel comfortable posting in another forum.
There is a world of difference between telephone data mining and a physical search, and you know it. There are LIMITS, and this one has reached those limits.
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I think bomb-sniffing dogs would do a better job protecting us than full body scanners but then mom-and-pop operations rather than the military industrial complex would be getting all the stimulating money.
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Why wouldn’t pedophiles apply for a job at TSA, they get to do what they want without fear of prosecution, and they get a guaranteed paycheck too.
How about a better kind of opt out? Everyone choose a normally busy flying weekend, and STAY HOME. Don’t fly, drive,train or bus, or video chat. How about Christmas weekend?
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My family has chosen to drive (five of us, 12 hours, in a Honda Civic) in part because of these new security measures. I simply could not stand passively by while a federal agent either groped or took nude photos of my wife and kids. We’d leave, and I’d end up having to fight the airlines over $800 nonrefundable tickets.
Given even the possibility of that, driving 12 hours with five of us in a Civic is the better option.
This is a gross violation of our liberties, and am I glad to see many on both the Right and Left speaking out against it. I fear they are too little, too late, though.
I can’t help but bristle at the short memories and politically convenient outrage of most on the Right. You were so willing to trade liberty for security when we civil libertarians were talking about “free speech zones,” police stings on protesters, domestic spying, warrantless wiretapping, extraordinary rendition, or torture. More than just specific policies, you fostered an ethos that said security is our greatest priority, and liberty takes a back seat to that. You applauded with great aplomb at Mitt Romney’s despicable line in defense of Bush’s spying on American citizens: “our greatest civil liberty is the right to be kept alive.”
You told us all to trust the government, because it would keep us safe. You pshawed the arguments that all this TSA nonsense was nothing more than security theater: that taking off our shoes and throwing out our shampoo did not make us one iota safer.
And the Great American Middle bought it. “As long as it keeps us safe,” is their docile response to every outrage. And really what could be more outrageous that this? If 60% of Americans don’t balk at this, what would they balk at? Strip searches and cavity probes are all we have left outside our category of “acceptable security measures”.
So to come along after eight years of nurturing a budding police state and say that these problems are the especial domain of Democrats, “the party that is in principle committed to big, paternalistic oversight of all our affairs,” is just maddening. You had no problem with paternalistic oversight of all our affairs when the pater stuck an R after his name.
Where were you for the last ten years?
(And yes, the Democrats supporting these TSA measures after speaking out against domestic spying are just as craven. A plague on both your houses.)
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JJF, you are right on the nail. Sadly it seems like both “sides” of the political spectrum in the US approves of trading liberty for “security”, if you can call it that, when their party is in power, and speak out only when the other one is. But another part of it is that many don’t care so much about the Patriot Act because many don’t literally feel the government’s presence with their telephone calls or emails like they do with the TSA’s pat down searches and now the body scanners. Many though will take the body scanners, again because it “feels” less invasive, though its effects can last far, far longer, as images can be saved and easily inversed, rendering the full image of a person in full color. With the TSA’s history of ineptitude, as well as one TSA employee getting arrested for having a few thousand of the images, something tells me no amount of oversight will prevent abuse of these machines. I do agree with you, I will drive when I can instead of fly. Unfortunately I can’t drive to South America, so I figure I will someday fly there and just stay. I have been looking at internships over the past few months, with the goal of living overseas and seeing if I prefer it. I have traveled for extended periods of time to get a feel of local cultures and people to see where I might like working and living. The next step is an internship working there, and if I enjoy, I figure I may just stay.
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JJF and ROM116 are right.
Shame on us, all of us, for letting this happen. I’m sorry to say that as a “conservative” I went along with earlier abridgements of lierty. No more!
I am a libertarian, and I will not vote for people in either party whenever I have another option.
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When the Left gives up political correctness, it can cast stones on the conservatives. We are in this mess because people can’t face reality, tell the truth about the enemy, and profile.
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Suggested caption for accompanying photo:
“Okay, now turn your head and cough … “
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Kyle A. (19):
Obama supporter!!
(Effectively … )
Hang tough, bro!
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NJLAWYER (14): There is a world of difference between telephone data mining and a physical search, and you know it.
Frank:Gee, I don’t think James Madison would agree with you:
Talk about special pleading.
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TSA:
Suggested mottos:
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Well, I didn’t support those other things in the Patriot Act, although (to my shame) I didn’t vociferously oppose them either. I didn’t like them, but I didn’t write to my Congress Critter either.
I don’t approve of any of this. We will soon live in a surveillance state/police state. To some degree, we already do.
And, are we safer? Not one whit.
But, the government gains more and more power by using the “safety” tactic.
And, way too many people buy it hook line and sinker.
(How stupid can people get? Honestly, if even I can think of at least three different ways to get around these scanners and pat-downs, don’t they think determined terrorists could do even better????? At best, we’ve made it slightly more inconvenient for them. We’re certainly no safer.)
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Libertarians have been saying for years that it is NOT a Democrat vs. Republican thing. They are effectively the same, with one simply plummeting to the bottom slightly faster than the other.
We are in a battle for our representative democracy against State control.
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Frank,
As a rule I don’t get all that involved in politics–it’s not my calling. (As a woman, I feel perfectly OK with that stance; I believe a woman’s primary role is relationships, not the “outside world” and such things as politics.) I vote, I keep moderately well informed, but I don’t send petitions to Congress and all of that stuff. Usually I don’t know enough detail about a certain situation to know what in a bill is good and what is bad.
But surely it isn’t hypocritical to say I hate the government’s invasion of privacy (and, for that matter, the fact that private businesses seem able to track what I “google” and target me with ads accordingly), but I don’t really see much that I as a private citizen can do about it, nor that I actually have “anything to hide.” (No, the government has no business listening in on my phone calls–but they will be bored to tears if they do! Unless they want to crack down on Christianity, I truly have nothing to hide.)
But then, to say I hate this but don’t see much that I can do about it, but THIS step (the airline security) is going too far–that is how real life works out. I don’t like $2.50 gas but I’ll buy it; at some point I buy less, and at some point I may even buy none. I’m not an activist; I’m a private citizen. I don’t see much point in petitions and letters to Congress, don’t think they do much good. But this particular choice, any reasonable suggestion I’ll get behind. As far as I’m concerned, Congress needs to outlaw it immediately or Congressmen should be looking for new jobs. To say we had to stand up earlier or we have no right to stand up now is to say that every citizen needs to be an “activist,” and the reality is that most of us weren’t called to be–women especially were not, in my opinion.
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What amazes me is how non of the TSA agents seem to be upset about this…
WHy on earth would you want to grope everyone, all day…
Do they hire perverts?
You would think there would be a large backlash from their own employees…instead silence.
I’ll let yall know next week how my flying goes down to and from Belize. Unlike JJF, I cant exactly drive to Belize that easily…
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