TheZue
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Feb 27, 2005
- Messages
- 2,300
Well, I think profiling would be a good start, rather than making a big show of patting down disabled women in wheelchairs and flight attendants and children for the sake of political correctness, but realistically I don't believe the government can stop the next 9/11. The very nature of terrorism is far more adaptable than any government endeavor, and there are ways around any precaution we take (particularly when the precautions are as well-publicized as this one). I seriously doubt the "next 9/11" if/when it comes will have anything to do with passenger air travel at all; we've focused so much of our attention on that aspect of the attacks that we're all but ignoring other vulnerabilities. Which isn't to say we should ignore airport security altogether, but we should be stepping back and taking a big-picture approach rather than the series of increasingly invasive knee-jerk responses to threats and failed plots.
I think people assume profiling means banning the middle eastern looking people from the plane or giving them all a good cavity search. Really it means observing people and looking for people who are showing signs of being nervous, or acting strangely. But that would require a lot more training than they are willing to pay for now.




That's exactly what I said. I wrote: "I'm not going to pretend any of us are typical travellers, or that our experience in any way invalidates anyone else's. After all, our agent was very nice, while the other one sounds rather intimidating and rude."
