Big Sis Caught Lying To American People

Lumi

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Big Sis Caught Lying To American People

Steve Watson
Infowars.com
November 15th, 2010


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Homeland Security head Janet Napolitano, now forever known as Big Sis ? a reference to George Orwell?s 1984 ? has been caught telling some big lies in an attempt to quell an enormous public backlash against the full body scanning technology and invasive pat-down procedures that have been implemented by the TSA in airports nationwide.
In a blatant propaganda piece published by USA Today, Napolitano describes the scanning machines as safe and the pat-downs as ?discreet?, in the face of a flood of complaints from scientists, pilots, flight attendants, privacy groups, parents, Muslim groups and everyday passengers, all rebelling against over the top security.
?AIT machines are safe, efficient, and protect passenger privacy.? Napolitano writes in an article in which every single claim she makes can be easily disproved and revealed to be outright lies.
Lie: The scanners are safe
?They have been independently evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration, the National Institute of Standards and Technology, and the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory, who have all affirmed their safety.? Napolitano claims, expecting the public to simply swallow the claim that NIST and the FDA are somehow ?independent? of the federal government.
As for Johns Hopkins University declaring the scanners safe, tell it to Dr Michael Love, who runs an X-ray lab at the department of biophysics and biophysical chemistry at the Johns Hopkins school of medicine. Love told AFP two days ago that ?statistically someone is going to get skin cancer from these X-rays?.
??we have a situation at the airports where people are so eager to fly that they will risk their lives in this manner,? he added.
So, unless you count skin cancer as safe, Napolitano is lying to you.
According to other numerous real ?independent? scientists who continue to speak out over the health hazards associated with the x-ray technology, the body scanners are far from safe.
John Sedat, a University of California at San Francisco professor of biochemistry and biophysics and member of the National Academy of Sciences tells CNet that the machines have ?mutagenic effects? and will increase the risk of cancer. Sedat previously sent a letter to the White House science Czar John P. Holdren, identifying the specific risk the machines pose to children and the elderly.
The letter stated:
?it appears that real independent safety data do not exist? There has not been sufficient review of the intermediate and long-term effects of radiation exposure associated with airport scanners. There is good reason to believe that these scanners will increase the risk of cancer to children and other vulnerable populations.?
The TSA has repeatedly stated that going through the machines is equal to the radiation encountered during just two minutes of a flight. However, this does not take into account that the scanning machines specifically target only the skin and the muscle tissue immediately beneath.
The scanners are similar to C-Scans and fire ionizing radiation at those inside which penetrates a few centimeters into the flesh and reflects off the skin to form a naked body image.
The firing of ionizing radiation at the body effectively ?unzips? DNA, according to scientific research by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
The research shows that even very low doses of X-ray can delay or prevent cellular repair of damaged DNA, yet pregnant women and children will be subjected to the process as new guidelines including scanners are adopted.
The Inter-Agency Committee on Radiation Safety concluded in their report on the matter that governments must justify the use of the scanners and that a more accurate assessment of the health risks is needed.
Pregnant women and children should not be subject to scanning, according to the report, adding that governments should consider ?other techniques to achieve the same end without the use of ionizing radiation.?
?The Committee cited the IAEA?s 1996 Basic Safety Standards agreement, drafted over three decades, that protects people from radiation. Frequent exposure to low doses of radiation can lead to cancer and birth defects, according to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,? reported Bloomberg.
Scientists at Columbia University also entered the debate recently, warning that the dose emitted by the naked x-ray devices could be up to 20 times higher than originally estimated, likely contributing to an increase in a common type of skin cancer called basal cell carcinoma which affects the head and neck.
?If all 800 million people who use airports every year were screened with X-rays then the very small individual risk multiplied by the large number of screened people might imply a potential public health or societal risk. The population risk has the potential to be significant,? said Dr David Brenner, head of Columbia University?s centre for radiological research.
Lie: The scanners are effective
??the weapons and other dangerous and prohibited items we?ve found during AIT screenings have illustrated their security value time and again.? Napolitano claims in her propaganda piece.
In reality, the machines would not have prevented the Christmas Day bomber from boarding Flight 253, according to their designers, and other security experts who have dismissed the devices as ?useless?.
The imaging machines cannot even detect explosive material, so claiming, as Napolitano does, that they are ?our best defense against such threats? is misleading at best and at worst a complete lie.
If the machines had detected ?dangerous items? ?time and again?, rest assured that the DHS and the TSA would make sure it was all over the news ? such success stories have been decidedly absent from the media, unless you count ?dangerous items? as baby milk, tubes of toothpaste or contact lens fluid.
The idea that the machines are effective flies in the face of the viewpoint of surveillance experts who note that the scanners will do nothing to make air travel safer.
Lie: The scanners cannot store/print/transmit images
At first we were asked to believe that the imaging machines did not produce crisp images of naked bodies.
In an effort to downplay the intrusion of privacy they really represent, the TSA routinely claimed that the images produced by the scanners are ?ghostly? or ?skeletal?.
The passenger?s face is blurred and the image as a whole ?resembles a fuzzy negative,? the TSA spokeswoman Kristin Lee told the media last year, prior to the underwear bombing attempt.
After months of researchers, reporters and everyday travelers outing this as a complete lie, the DHS/TSA abandoned that approach and instead claimed that, although they were detailed naked images, it?s fine and dandy because they cannot be saved or transmitted.
?The imaging technology that we use cannot store, export, print or transmit images.? Napolitano claims in her latest propaganda piece.
Again not true. As we have previously detailed, the images that show in detail the naked genitals of men, women and children that have passed through the scanners can be transmitted and printed.

As reported by Declan McCullagh of CNET earlier this year, ?The U.S. Marshals Service admitted this week that it had surreptitiously saved tens of thousands of images recorded with a millimeter wave system at the security checkpoint of a single Florida courthouse.?
The proof comes in the form of a letter (PDF), obtained by The Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC), in which William Bordley, an associate general counsel with the Marshals Service, admits that ?approximately 35,314 images?have been stored on the Brijot Gen2 machine? used in the Orlando, Fla. federal courthouse.
EPIC says it has also obtained more than 100 images of electronically stripped individuals from the scanning devices used at federal courthouses. The disclosures come as part of a settlement of an EPIC Freedom of Information Act lawsuit against the U.S. Marshals Service.
Brijot, the manufacturer of the body scanning equipment in question, also admits that its machine can store up to 40,000 images and records.
EPIC, has filed two further lawsuits against the Department of Homeland Security over the scanners, claiming that the DHS has refused to release at least 2,000 images it has stored from scanners currently in use in U.S. airports.
EPIC?s lawsuit argues that the body scanners violate the Fourth Amendment, which prohibits ?unreasonable? searches, as well as the Privacy Act, the Administrative Procedure Act, and the Religious Freedom Restoration Act, referencing religious laws about modesty.
The group points to a further document (PDF) it has obtained from DHS showing that the machines used by the department?s TSA are not only able to record and store naked body images, but that they are mandated to do so.
The TSA has admitted that this is the case, but claims that it is for training and testing purposes only, maintaining that the body scanners used at airports cannot ?store, print or transmit images?.
?In complying with our Freedom of Information Act request, the Marshals Service has helped the public more fully understand the capabilities of these devices,? EPIC President Marc Rotenberg said in a statement. ?But the DHS continues to conceal the truth from American air travelers who could be subject to similar intrusive recorded searches in U.S. airports.?
As if it was needed, further evidence also points to the fact that the images are actively being transmitted and printed in airports.
Lie: Pat-downs are ?discreet?
In her headline, Napolitano calls the pat-down procedure offered as an alternative to the naked body scanners, or used in addition to them, as ?discreet?.
?Pat-downs have long been one of the many security measures used by the U.S. and countries across the world to make air travel as secure as possible.? she writes.
What she does not explain is that the new pat down procedure, which now allows TSA agents to forcefully feel around breasts and genitalia, is currently conducted in full view of queuing passengers and has been described by many, including New York Times reporter Joe Sharkey, as a deliberate form of humiliation to discourage others from refusing the full body scans.
The TSA also claims that the pat-downs are discreet, yet multiple accounts and reports prove otherwise.
Flight attendants and pilots unions in particular have taken up issue with the pat-downs, with one union declaring ?We don?t want them in uniform going through this enhanced screening where their private areas are being touched in public? They actually make contact with the genital area.?
As reported by Reuters, parents are now demanding that the procedures be changed for children, after witnesses have described their children?s genitals being touched by men and women working for the TSA.
?I didn?t think it was going to be as horrible as he was describing,? one father noted after an agent told him what he was going to do to the child before conducting the full body search.
?At some point the terrorists have won.? the father added. The TSA says it is currently ?reviewing? the procedure for children. Perhaps it should first review it?s policy on background checking its own employees, which by all accounts is woefully inadequate.
Lie: ?Risk based? security procedure
Napolitano calls the TSA?s system ?risk-based,? another total fallacy given the fact that the primary targets of airport oppression have been women, children, the elderly, and the physically disabled, all the categories of people who characteristically would pose the least risk in terms of terrorism.
The procedure is completely random, emphasizing the fact that everyone is categorized as a potential terrorist.
Lie: The scanners are popular with the public
?These machines are now in use at airports nationwide, and the vast majority of travelers say they prefer this technology to alternative screening measures.? Napolitano writes.
Another unsubstantiated claim, particularly given that a new Reuters poll shows that over 95% of Americans are now less likely to fly due to the crackdown in the wake of the dubious toner cartridge and underpants bombing scares.
Furthermore, documents released under the Freedom of Information Act before the issue recently hit headlines again, and before the majority of airports even had the machines installed, have revealed that there were more than 600 formal complaints about the devices last year.
Hardly a shining example of how popular the machines are.
Lies Lies Lies
Napolitano and the TSA have consistently lied to the American people about the open implementation of tyranny in our airports. They will continue to do so in an effort to make it appear that those who are revolting against their procedures are just a small minority, when in reality the the vast majority of sick and tired of being treated like slaves and having their fundamental freedoms trashed.
On November 24th, ?national opt-out day?, the world will see thousands and thousands standing up against measures that are not only set to become commonplace in airports everywhere, but are also scheduled to be implemented on our streets if we do not resist.
OptOutDay.com declares:
It?s the day ordinary citizens stand up for their rights, stand up for liberty, and protest the federal government?s desire to virtually strip us naked or submit to an ?enhanced pat down? that touches people?s breasts and genitals. You should never have to explain to your children, ?Remember that no stranger can touch or see your private area, unless it?s a government employee, then it?s OK.?
The goal of National Opt Out Day is to send a message to our lawmakers that we demand change. No naked body scanners, no government-approved groping. We have a right to privacy and buying a plane ticket should not mean that we?re guilty until proven innocent.
We urge our readers to join forces with these groups and organise peaceful protests at the nearest airport to you that has implemented body scanners and enhanced TSA pat downs.
The issue has garnered such massive attention, largely due to coverage via The Drudge Report, that the federal government has been forced to declare it is considering scrapping the enhanced security procedures for pilots and flight attendants. The unified statements from pilots and flight attendants unions highlights the fact that coming together and declaring a mass refusal to submit to this can be effective, it is vital that it not be overlooked.
 

Lumi

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TSA Encounter at SAN DIEGO

TSA Encounter at SAN DIEGO

[FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif][FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]TSA Encounter at SAN[/FONT][/FONT]

[FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif][FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]by John Tyner
[/FONT][FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]Johnnyedge[/FONT]
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[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]These events took place roughly between 5:30 and 6:30 AM, November 13th in Terminal 2 of the San Diego International Airport. I'm writing this approximately 2 1/2 hours after the events transpired, and they are correct to the best of my recollection. I will admit to being particularly fuzzy on the exact order of events when dealing with the agents after getting my ticket refunded; however, all of the events described did occur.[/FONT]

[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]I had my phone recording audio and video of much of these events. The quality is pretty good, and I'm in the process of getting it online.[/FONT]

[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]Please spread this story as far and wide as possible. I will make no claims to copyright or otherwise.[/FONT]

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[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]This morning, I tried to fly out of San Diego International Airport but was refused by the TSA. I had been somewhat prepared for this eventuality. I have been reading about the millimeter wave and backscatter x-ray machines and the possible harm to health as well as the vivid pictures they create of people's naked bodies. Not wanting to go through them, I had done my research on the TSA's website prior to traveling to see if SAN had them. From all indications, they did not. When I arrived at the security line, I found that the TSA's website was out of date. SAN does in fact utilize backscatter x-ray machines.[/FONT]

[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]I made my way through the line toward the first line of "defense": the TSA ID checker. This agent looked over my boarding pass, looked over my ID, looked at me and then back at my ID. After that, he waved me through. SAN is still operating metal detectors, so I walked over to one of the lines for them. After removing my shoes and making my way toward the metal detector, the person in front of me in line was pulled out to go through the backscatter machine. After asking what it was and being told, he opted out. This left the machine free, and before I could go through the metal detector, I was pulled out of line to go through the backscatter machine. When asked, I half-chuckled and said, "I don't think so." At this point, I was informed that I would be subject to a pat down, and I waited for another agent.[/FONT]
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[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]A male agent (it was a female who had directed me to the backscatter machine in the first place), came and waited for me to get my bags and then directed me over to the far corner of the area for screening. After setting my things on a table, he turned to me and began to explain that he was going to do a "standard" pat down. (I thought to myself, "great, not one of those gropings like I've been reading about".) After he described, the pat down, I realized that he intended to touch my groin. After he finished his description but before he started the pat down, I looked him straight in the eye and said, "if you touch my junk, I'll have you arrested." He, a bit taken aback, informed me that he would have to involve his supervisor because of my comment[/FONT]

[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]We both stood[/FONT][FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif] there for no more than probably two minutes before a female TSA agent (apparently, the supervisor) arrived. She described to me that because I had opted out of the backscatter screening, I would now be patted down, and that involved running hands up the inside of my legs until they felt my groin. I stated that I would not allow myself to be subject to a molestation as a condition of getting on my flight. The supervisor informed me that it was a standard administrative security check and that they were authorized to do it. I repeated that I felt what they were doing was a sexual assault, and that if they were anyone but the government, the act would be illegal. I believe that I was then informed that if I did not submit to the inspection, I would not be getting on my flight.[/FONT]
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[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif] I again stated that I thought the search was illegal. I told her that I would be willing to submit to a walk through the metal detector as over 80% of the rest of the people were doing, but I would not be groped. The supervisor, then offered to go get her supervisor.[/FONT]

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[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]I took a seat in a tiny metal chair next to the table with my belongings and waited. While waiting, I asked the original agent (who was supposed to do the pat down) if he had many people opt out to which he replied, none (or almost none, I don't remember exactly). He said that I gave up a lot of rights when I bought my ticket. I replied that the government took them away after September 11th. There was silence until the next supervisor arrived. A few minutes later, the female agent/supervisor arrived with a man in a suit (not a uniform). He gave me a business card identifying him as David Silva, Transportation Security Manager, San Diego International Airport. At this point, more TSA agents as well as what I assume was a local police officer arrived on the scene and surrounded the area where I was being detained. The female supervisor explained the situation to Mr. Silva. After some quick back and forth (that I didn't understand/hear), I could overhear Mr. Silva say something to the effect of, "then escort him from the airport." I again offered to submit to the metal detector, and my father-in-law, who was near by also tried to plead for some reasonableness on the TSA's part.[/FONT]

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[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]The female supervisor took my ID at this point and began taking some kind of report with which I cooperated. Once she had finished, I asked if I could put my shoes back on. I was allowed to put my shoes back on and gather my belongs. I asked, "are we done here" (it was clear at this point that I was going to be escorted out), and the local police officer said, "follow me". I followed him around the side of the screening area and back out to the ticketing area. I said apologized to him for the hassle, to which he replied that it was not a problem.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]I made my way over to the American Airlines counter, explained the situation, and asked if my ticket could be refunded. The woman behind the counter furiously typed away for about 30 seconds before letting me know that she would need a supervisor. She went to the other end of the counter. When she returned, she informed me that the ticket was non-refundable, but that she was still trying to find a supervisor. After a few more minutes, she was able to refund my ticket. I told her that I had previously had a bad experience with American Airlines and had sworn never to fly with them again (I rationalized this trip since my father-in-law had paid for the ticket), but that after her helpfulness, I would once again be willing to use their carrier again.[/FONT]

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[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]At this point, I thought it was all over. I began to make my way to the stairs to exit the airport, when I was approached by another man in slacks and a sport coat. He was accompanied by the officer that had escorted me to the ticketing area and Mr. Silva. He informed me that I could not leave the airport. He said that once I start the screening in the secure area, I could not leave until it was completed. Having left the area, he stated, I would be subject to a civil suit and a $10,000 fine. I asked him if he was also going to fine the 6 TSA agents and the local police officer who escorted me from the secure area. After all, I did exactly what I was told. He said that they didn't know the rules, and that he would deal with them later. They would not be subject to civil penalties. I then pointed to Mr. Silva and asked if he would be subject to any penalties. He is the agents' supervisor, and he directed them to escort me out. The man informed me that Mr. Silva was new and he would not be subject to penalties, either. He again asserted the necessity that I return to the screening area. When I asked why, he explained that I may have an incendiary device and whether or not that was true needed to be determined. I told him that I would submit to a walk through the metal detector, but that was it; I would not be groped. He told me that their procedures are on their website, and therefore, I was fully informed before I entered the airport; I had implicitly agreed to whatever screening they deemed appropriate. I told him that San Diego was not listed on the TSA's website as an airport using Advanced Imaging Technology, and I believed that I would only be subject to the metal detector. He replied that he was not a webmaster, and I asked then why he was referring me to the TSA's website if he didn't know anything about it. I again refused to re-enter the screening area.[/FONT]

[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]The man asked me to stay put while he walked off to confer with the officer and Mr. Silva. They went about 20 feet away and began talking amongst themselves while I waited. I couldn't over hear anything, but I got the impression that the police officer was recounting his version of the events that had transpired in the screening area (my initial refusal to be patted down). After a few minutes, I asked loudly across the distance if I was free to leave. The man dismissively held up a finger and said, "hold on". I waited. After another minute or so, he returned and asked for my name. I asked why he needed it, and reminded him that the female supervisor/agent had already taken a report. He said that he was trying to be friendly and help me out. I asked to what end. He reminded me that I could be sued civilly and face a $10,000 fine and that my cooperation could help mitigate the penalties I was facing. I replied that he already had my information in the report that was taken and I asked if I was free to leave. I reminded him that he was now illegally detaining me and that I would not be subject to screening as a condition of leaving the airport. He told me that he was only trying to help (I should note that his demeanor never suggested that he was trying to help. I was clearly being interrogated.), and that no one was forcing me to stay. I asked if tried to leave if he would have the officer arrest me. He again said that no one was forcing me to stay. I looked him in the eye, and said, "then I'm leaving". He replied, "then we'll bring a civil suit against you", to which I said, "you bring that suit" and walked out of the airport.This video starts with my bag and belongings going through the x-ray machine.They're kind of long, and they don't show much, but the audio is really good.[/FONT]


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I was in the middle of telling someone that if I was going to be felt up, I wanted it done in public so that everyone could see what it is that the TSA does. Here is the rest of that video.


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After I was escorted out to the ticketing area, I went to have my ticket refunded. I didn't have the opportunity or the presence of mind to turn the camera back on until everyone walked away from me.


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Lumi

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Flashback: TSA Goon Molests 3 Year Old

Flashback: TSA Goon Molests 3 Year Old

Flashback: TSA Goon Molests 3 Year Old

recent post on the FlyerTalk forum, an interactive community that provides up-to-date information on travel-related loyalty reward programs, underscores the fact that the TSA is out of control and the entire operation is an excuse for goons to abuse and humiliate the public.

The post explains what happened to the 18 year old daughter of a pilot as she attempted to go through security in Denver. ?As his daughter approached the detector, the TSO working the NoS said on his headset, ?heads up, got a cutie for you.? He then confronted the TSA clerk with what he said and that neither of us are going through the NoS. The TSA clerk said you must have misunderstood me.? Both were then subjected to molestation, otherwise known as an intrusive patdown.

The video below was posted in 2009. It shows a TSA goon molesting a three year old girl. The disgusting part is the cavalier attitude on the part of the television news anchors who essentially make excuses for such behavior.

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Duff Miver

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Right behind you
This screening is far too complicated. It could and should be done quickly with everyone treated the same.

Just have everyone strip down butt-naked, do a quick body cavity search (preferably with nice warm K-Y), hand them a towel to wipe off, and be done with it. No radiation, no harm done. Some passengers might even enjoy it.

Ooooooh!, Search a little deeper honey.

TSA could also make some easy money by providing for public observation where people could watch for a small charge.


Jeeeze, Mabel, look at the whang on THAT guy!


:142smilie
 
Last edited:

Lumi

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This screening is far too complicated. It could and should be done quickly with everyone treated the same.

Just have everyone strip down butt-naked, do a quick body cavity search (preferably with nice warm K-Y), hand them a towel to wipe off, and be done with it. No radiation, no harm done. Some passengers might even enjoy it.

Ooooooh!, Search a little deeper honey.

TSA could also make some easy money by providing for public observation where people could watch for a small charge.


Jeeeze, Mabel, look at the whang on THAT guy!


:142smilie

I don't recall asking about your weekend Duff :shrug:
 

Lumi

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[FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif][FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]Invasion of the Body Scanners: More Tales of Terror From the Unfriendly Skies[/FONT][/FONT]

[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]The outrageous invasion of our privacy rights that is the whole-body scanner (and its equally outrageous counterpart, the full-body pat down) was hurriedly put in place by the government, before Americans could really comprehend what it would mean and whether they were willing to tolerate it. Yet where did the impetus for installing these scanners in our nation?s airports come from? And who?s responsible for this unfolding nightmare being unleashed on the American people?[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]As Reuters reported on Dec. 30, 2009, ?The path toward rolling out wider use of whole-body security scanners in U.S. airports runs through the White House.... U.S. President Barack Obama could expedite such a deployment because the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and Transportation Security Administration (TSA) don?t need legislation from Congress to start using the devices at any of the 560 U.S. airports with scheduled airline service.?[/FONT]

[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]In fact, legislation has been proposed to mandate full-body scanners and make them the primary screening method in all U.S. airports by 2013, but Congress has yet to act on it. So we can thank President Obama for this frontal assault on our Fourth Amendment rights. Mind you, this is the same man who insisted that ?we will not succumb to a siege mentality that sacrifices the open society and liberties and values that we cherish as Americans.? Yet in the wake of the bumbling underwear bomber?s botched Christmas Day attempt to blow up a Detroit-bound plane, Obama directed the Homeland Security Department ?to acquire $1 billion in advanced-technology equipment, including body scanners, for screening passengers at airports.? In fact, Obama?s Stimulus Bill, which committed more than $3 billion for homeland security projects, is funding the installation of the devices in airports across the country.[/FONT]

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[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]The Department of Homeland Security and Transportation Security Administration have been quick to do the president?s bidding, aided and abetted by corporate lobbyists eager to make a profit at taxpayer expense. The TSA plans to roll out a total of 450 full-body scanners by year?s end, with an additional $88 million included in the 2011 national fiscal budget for 500 more machines. And Congress, which has the power to halt this thing (or at least provide oversight), has done nothing.[/FONT]

[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]All the while, the American people are being subjected to all manner of egregious searches by government agents. Since my commentary about the airline pilot who refused to go through the scanner or be subjected to a pat down (?Michael Roberts: One Man Against the Surveillance State?), I have been bombarded by emails from individuals ? particularly women ? who have shared their own horrific encounters with TSA agents. The following are some of the most egregious.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]This first account is from a woman who suffers from chronic fatigue syndrome:[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]I was subjected to a TSA rub down in Pittsburgh in September. There is no patting happening. The officer ran her hands over every square inch of my body, firmly pressing into my flesh in every area when I declined to have myself irradiated. Being a recovery from chronic fatigue syndrome, I am extremely aware that my body needs protection from anything that is unnatural or unnecessary, and excess radiation is on my list of things to avoid. Unfortunately, the rub down elicited some trauma issues, and when I got upset and started crying, they started the ?pat down? all over again. After I received my belongings, I attempted a photo of the TSA station and officers, at which point I was apprehended, my ID was taken, I had to delete my photos at their demand and eventually when they realized I had no record, they told me to go get on the plane before I got into trouble. Why am I, a 49-year-old woman, employed for 28 years by IBM, mother of two teenagers, married for 27 years, being viewed as a terrorist? The trauma of the ?pat down? has reactivated an autoimmune condition and I have spent the last 4 weeks working to bring my immune system back into balance. I can?t imagine getting on an airplane with the possibility of this happening again. I would like to protest this invasion of privacy, but how?[/FONT]
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[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]The second is from a ticketing agent who was suspended after objecting to TSA?s search of her wallet:[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]I just had my second run-in with TSA while attempting to go to work. I was refused the right to go to work because after I willingly handed TSA my lunch bag (which only contained my pocketbook, 2 restaurant paper napkins, and a piece of a news page crossword puzzle), they proceeded to empty my pocketbook, piece by piece, and go through my wallet, credit card by credit card, checking every nook and cranny in both my purse and my wallet. When they began going thru my wallet, I objected. I may have lost my job because of these arrogant and ignorant individuals. [/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]The last is from a flight attendant who commutes to work each week:[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]This Sunday, I unknowingly went through the full body scanner. I had heard a little about the full body scanners but just never paid attention because I just thought that it wouldn?t really happen. The TSA people said that the other machine was ?broken? so me and one other female flight attendant would have to go through the new one.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]They didn?t tell me it was a Full Body Scanner. I was not made aware that I even had an option to be patted down instead. After the scan, I was still patted down on my breast area because I was wearing my flight attendant wings. I truly felt molested. As a female traveler, I already have to deal with personal safety issues. In the past, when I have gone through the security line, I have experienced two of the TSA men standing staring at me, and I could overhear them deciding whether they thought I was attractive.[/FONT]

[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]I realize the fact that the security people are not really highly trained professionals is a separate issue from the fact that I am literally being stripped of my Liberties and Rights. That just makes it all the more unjust. It is humiliating to be strip searched. I haven?t committed a crime, so I have not given up my rights! I have not broken any laws. I am a Citizen of the United States, and I thought that I lived in a free country where people fought to protect our Liberties. Why couldn?t they have spent the money to implement security measures that involve using high levels of training that are proven to protect? The Israelis have a 40-year proven track record and they do not use full body scanners.[/FONT]
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</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]What are my rights? Do I even have any? I don?t choose to fly. I do it because I need the money to survive. It?s my job. I don?t want to be strip scanned because it is an invasion of my privacy rights as a human being. If I give in to this and act like I'm fine with it, just to fit in at work and not be singled out, then what next? Will I be subjected to cavity checks? I feel sickened by this, literally. It?s like the frog that gets boiled slowly or how Germany became Nazi Germany. It all is very subtle. People just go along and when we realize that we have no Rights left it is too late. I am not ashamed of my body but the reality is I am having to basically be naked in front of a group of my ?peers? who I don?t trust and who have no right to search my being.[/FONT]

[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]I fly for a living every week. No one is more concerned about airport/airline safety than I am. One truly infuriating aspect of this whole body scan debacle is that it has been shown to fail. Far more insidiously, it eases some people?s minds into a false sense of security.[/FONT]

[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]I literally got ill from stress after educating myself on Full Body Scanners and that I was clueless enough to walk through one giving my rights away. In the future, I may be forced to do it several times a week just to keep my job. My rights are just being taken away, and I am now at the mercy of being stripped and it isn?t making me any safer! I could deal with a few TSA agents being abusive when I had the protection and dignity of my clothing layer protecting my private areas. Now that those same people have the power to virtual strip search me and pat down my crotch and breasts, I just feel abused.[/FONT]

[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]This whole procedure is as arbitrary as making me pull down my pants before I can receive my coffee from the girl at Starbucks in the airport. I am going to choose to be patted down from this point forward, but this could put me at risk of delaying a flight and mistreated by the TSA to prove a point to me. I am a very compliant, shy person by nature. Full body scanners just made my personal world all the more dangerous and unsafe for me to live in.[/FONT]
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[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif] There are other proven [/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]?Effective means? to do this without taking my personal dignity and my feelings of personal well being away from me. [/FONT]
 

hedgehog

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This screening is far too complicated. It could and should be done quickly with everyone treated the same.

Just have everyone strip down butt-naked, do a quick body cavity search (preferably with nice warm K-Y), hand them a towel to wipe off, and be done with it. No radiation, no harm done. Some passengers might even enjoy it.

Ooooooh!, Search a little deeper honey.

TSA could also make some easy money by providing for public observation where people could watch for a small charge.


Jeeeze, Mabel, look at the whang on THAT guy!


:142smilie

:142smilie :142smilie

with and without :SIB
 
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