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Pat–down or peepshow: A few more questions about the full body scanners

Few issues have me willing to jump into the fray as much as does our most recent, terrorist-imposed  incremental forfeiture of privacy.  I’ve heard many of the justifications, ranging from claims such as "today’s youth have no expectation of privacy," to "privacy is an illusion anyway," to "better this than to be blown out of the sky."  In my opinion, all of these arguments are nonsense.  They may reflect a certain amount of reality, or they may suggest an accurate prediction of the future, but I really believe arguments in favor of further invasions of privacy and personal liberties will only lead to a different kind of disaster.

 

As the current issue regarding the "enhanced pat-down" procedures and  the use of the "naked body scanners" catches fire, I have been cruising all of the media outlets in an effort to find solace in an even, measured argument in favor of what is sure to be the new normal.  I have yet to hear any response that does not play on our fear.  This is wrong.  When one manipulates another through fear, seeks to gain control and manipulate, humiliate and degrade another, we call that abuse.  Or, we call it slavery.  Or, we call it oppression.  In just about any other context, we think of this type of exerting our will over another person as abhorrent.  Yet, we permit it in this case, because the consequences of doing nothing seem far more extreme.  No one wants to be on the plane that is carrying 249 souls and one inhuman monster.  But we are allowing our fear to cloud our judgement.  We have ceased to think clearly.

 

For example, would someone please answer the question:  What is going to happen when the terrorists exploit yet another weakness they will surely find?  then what?  Right now, I read we are exempting children under the age of 12 from the full body screening.  Oh?  So, then what is going to happen the first time the terrorists use a child to blow up a plane?

 

So, once children are included, are we going to exclude anyone else?  No one has really addressed the issue of pregnant women and these body scanners.  I’ve read as many articles written by experts who claim there is no danger of ill effects as a result of radiation or electro-magnetic exposure as I’ve read articles written by experts who claim there is.  Someone said to me, "Any pregnant woman with good sense would opt out of the body
scanner, but what about the women who don’t know yet that they are  pregnant?"

 

So…what are we going to do the first time a "pregnant" woman blows up a plane?

Again, no one has been able to answer the question about other types of exemptions from this procedure.  Is a well-known celebrity actually going to permit a stranger to view them through a full body  scanner?  No one is guaranteeing that these videos will not eventually surface on the Internet.  I’d be willing to bet it will happen sooner rather than later.  Okay, so let’s say the celebrity opts-out.  are they really going to subject themselves to an "enhanced pat-down" by some stranger who can’t wait to tell his buddies he got a good feel of the latest "it" girl or sex symbol?

 

If you are the father of a fifteen-year-old girl, do you get to choose for your child either the pat-down or body scanner?  What if your choice is not the choice of your daughter?  What if your choice traumatizes her?  What of people who have  been victims of sexual assault in the past, or violent crime?  what if the enhanced pat-down is traumatic to the degree that the process is psychologically damaging? 

Who is accountable for the inevitable claims of sexual assault, pat-downs gone awry, misinterpretations of intent or attitude?  You will be unable to prove in a court of law that a security agent was not leering at you lasciviously, enjoying their job a little too much, feeling powerful in the face of your humiliation, or simply being rough or rude.

 

As a person who is blind, I can be easily deceived.  how do I know that I have not been walked through the body scanner, while being told I walked through the regular metal detector?  How would I know if in fact I had been taken to a  private area for the enhanced pat-down?  How would I know, unless the person actually spoke to me, if the screener was male or female?  I have no way to know what is happening around me, who is witnessing the procedure, who is an airport TSA or not.

 

What about those people who are unable to give consent?  what if they are unable to choose?  People who travel are from all walks of life.  What about people with intellectual disabilities?  What of seniors or persons who have compromised cognitive function, stroke victims, or those who are simply uninformed about the extent to which these searches may be invasive?

 

I doubt anyone at Homeland Security would appreciate an accusation that they have acted first, and without thought, to the current air travel security climate.  If they are doing their job, let’s hope they have done little else other than to think about it.  Yet again, I must raise the question of ultimate end:  If Janet Napolitano’s admonishment were taken to heart by all Americans, and we en masse decided to no longer fly, then what?  We would go through this all over again in another venue.  Trains, buses, shopping centers.  Yes, I know, there have been no other airline hijackings or attacks on American soil since September 11, 2001.  I’m not saying they are doing a terrible job of protecting us.  I’m saying that it seems that we lack a fundamental understanding of the problem.  We are applying band-aids to a levy breach.  If we take the human element out of security, we will remain at a disadvantage.  That is their will.  If they cannot accomplish their goal with overt violence, they’ll retool and use some other, more insidious means.  The terrorists have been trying to tell us that it matters not who is in office, which party, what security measures we undertake, or how much time must pass.  They intend us harm, in whatever way they are able to succeed.  Are we really hearing that message?

 

At some point, we know not when, we will have exhausted every technical means we can dream up in defense of our well-being.  Yet there will likely be an act of terror that will harm us.  Even the most hyper-vigilant, protective and caring parents can turn their back for a split second, resulting in harm to a child.  It’s horrible, but it happens.  I presume the parent loves the child far more than our government cares about any of its citizens.  However, no one wants to  make the mistake of raising a child so traumatized by smothering control, micro-management, and restriction to the point of near imprisonment that he or she becomes an utterly dysfunctional adult, incapable of independence.  Yet, that seems to be where we may be headed as a nation.  If we are really so concerned about our safety, perhaps it’s time to rely less on expedient solutions like full body scanners, and more on that uniquely human ability for critical reasoning and independent thought.   

 

LL

 

Related links: :

 

 Pat-down vs. peepshow:  Outrage over the full body scanners

    

 A few questions about the airport full body scanners

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Pat-down vs. peepshow: Outrage over airport full-body scanners

As a follow-up to a previous post on the subject (  A few questions about the airport full body scanners ,  I’d like to comment on the current dialogue now getting some air play.  Thanks to the "Touch my junk and I’ll have you arrested" guy, more air travelers are expressing their outrage over the use of the full body scanners.  Recently, some members of the pilots union as well as some  individual pilots, most notably "Sully," the hero who made an emergency landing on the Hudson river, have come out against the scanners.

 

I’ve been listening carefully to the heated discussion over the pat-down vs. peeping process, as I call it.  While I can certainly find some common ground with those who would rather endure the indignity of this sort of screening rather than to be blown from the sky, I disagree that the scanners are the solution.  I do not believe that the pat-down would have caught the "underwear bomber," presuming he would have opted out of the full body scan.  The security agent would have had to run their hands around his pants waistband, possibly even inside the  waistband, to have detected the contents he brought aboard.

The body scanners are not going to work as long as we are permitted to opt out.  The purpose of the body scanners is to detect what cannot be sensed by touch or  other methods, such as the wand.  Opting for the pat-down puts us on the privacy slippery slope where the bad guys will use the next logical hiding places…Body cavities.  how are we going to search that?

 

I’m serious.  Once we devise a pat-down thorough enough to have detected contraband in our undergarments, menstrual pads, medical devices and ostomy bags, the only other place to go is inside the body.  Can’t see it, scan it, wand it, feel it.  A perfect example of the aforementioned slippery slope is the fact that the security agents can now use the front of their hands to pat you down instead of the backs of their hands.  Well, isn’t that sneaky?  What’s next, digital manipulation?  that means fingers, people. 

Once we have all determined that body orifice scanning is all that’s left us, then what?  CT scans?  MRI’s and sonograms?  Doesn’t it stand up to logic that if terrorists are willing  to kill themselves by blowing up a plane, they would have no problem ingesting, inserting or otherwise surgically implanting explosive materials?

  

I don’t want to be on the plane with the bomber who gets through, either.  Nor do I want to be in a shopping mall, a sports stadium or a hotel.  I think we need to continue to address the fact that these evil-doers are bound and determined to do what they will, and if they fail in one way, they will seek to succeed in another.  All that talk about not allowing them to terrorize us is meaningless though, if they succeed in taking our lives, bit by bit, one flight at a time. 

 

LL

 

Related link:  A few questions about the airport full body scanners

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