kinntj
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Dec 20, 2005
- Messages
- 4,365
Then again, you can always choose to walk.![]()
Then again, you can enjoy your flight after being checked by a rent a cop or a cop wanna be after they have failed numerous times.

Then again, you can always choose to walk.![]()

snip
At any rate, I'm not in favor of the changed screening procedures; I'm just not against them. But then, I've been patted down before. No, nobody's put a hand on my crotch yet, but other than that I'm familiar with the procedure. MOST of the people screaming so loudly haven't even been to an airport lately; they're just yelling because others are. The three year old boy 'strip-searched' recently? Let's not forget, his father removed his shirt, no TSA Agent did or requested that.
Then again, you can enjoy your flight after being checked by a rent a cop or a cop wanna be after they have failed numerous times.![]()
It's alarming to me that I see this story completely differently. I'm hoping that TSA agents treat everyone the same and follow the same procedure making it fair for all. Then there's less chance of the rogue agent treating you badly. That was one of the OP's major concerns.
I read this story and feel for the TSA agents that are just trying to do their job. They are confronted by someone trying to test their reaction by stripping in the middle of the airport. This passenger was fine stripping down to his underwear in a crowd of people but not OK with the private screening with minor radiation. (BTW, I believe the scientific reports that the radiation is equal to 2 minutes in the airplane). So what was he protesting? The negligible radiation or the nekked picture? IRONIC? Absolutely. Or maybe he was just looking for his 15 minutes of fame.
Then we find out that he refused to put his clothes back on and was arrested for being disruptive. Sounds like he was disrupting the process to me. Although I don't know the laws in sunny San Diego, according to the story, there is a law against this. And a law against filming agents. He allegedly broke the law 2x but this is somehow the TSA's fault? Isn't it funny that everyone is up in arms about TSA agents going rogue but when they try to follow procedure, they have "gone wild". Again, IRONIC?
And of course we go directly to scare tactics again. Everyone's cell phone will now be confiscated to protect the public. Sarcasm, right? Would that have been funny on September 12, 2001? It's sooooooo funny that the terrorists filmed the airports and the airplanes to prepare for their attack.
"Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it." George Santayana
I also found this quote from Santayana when I was googling. "Fanaticism consists in redoubling your efforts when you have forgotten your aim."
The hysterical sound bytes by the conservative media really saddens me. Many try to scare the general public with outrageous stories clearly trying to sway the public to their side. I like to make my own decisions based on fact, not on what someone writes with clear bias on the internet.
So who was the "gone wild" TSA agent? Or was it the police that arrested someone for breaking the law. Was it the TSA agent for trying to follow procedures? Or was it the lawmakers that made this an arrestable offense?
You can have your freedom. I want to be on the other plane that has security.
I do feel for passengers with special needs but I also see that looking at an insulin pump on a screen may look suspect. Remember that the TSA agents are putting their lives in jeopardy the same as police officers to some extent. If someone is crazy enough to strap a bomb to their stomach, they are likely to detonate it in a security line if questioned. Don't brush off their concerns either. How do want them to react? Professionally but with care. I'm glad to hear that they are working on procedures for these medical issues. Maybe they could have come up with something before implementing the new security procedures.
There was public outcry after 9/11 that something needed to be done about security. There was more public outcry after the shoe bomber and the underwear bomber. How soon we forget. It only matters if it inconveniences us.
I said it before - they could strip search me in front of the rest of the queue if they want. I am not a prude, nor am I modest. Just get me on my plane.
This whole drama, to me, is pure bunk.
...Unfortunately, me driving puts more risk on others by putting another car on the road when I need to travel. So my driving to WDW puts the public in general more in danger of dying than a bomber on a plane. Not really an argument, but just food for thought.

I wrote out a lengthy reply only to lose it because the site logged me out.
Simply stated, the Constitution has a single purpose - the limit the powers of the Federal government. It does not grant rights to anyone. It does, in a few places, clarify them.
Your right to travel freely can be extrapolated from general freedom, but conveyances are not granted to anyone. To do so would infringe upon the rights of others. Also, there are many situations in which the government is allowed to regulate travel, especially where said travel industry is involved in interstate commerce.
The TSA is such a regulatory body. Its powers were granted by Congress. You are free to travel, but you do not have a right to any conveyance - perhaps not even one owned by you. Consider state driver's laws. Ignore them and see how quickly you lose your driving privileges. You will still be free to travel, but you will need to get someone else to drive you. Then again, you can always choose to walk.![]()
I said it before - they could strip search me in front of the rest of the queue if they want. I am not a prude, nor am I modest. Just get me on my plane.
This whole drama, to me, is pure bunk.
So, you would rather risk your life and the lives of your family than go through the new security checks.![]()
You can have your freedom. I want to be on the other plane that has security.
Remember that the TSA agents are putting their lives in jeopardy the same as police officers to some extent. If someone is crazy enough to strap a bomb to their stomach, they are likely to detonate it in a security line if questioned.

They backed off the enhanced pat-down for children under 12 apparently.

What the blazes is a "child abuse clearance"??? Or are you asking if they've had a background check that includes their criminal/sex offender status?
The three year old boy 'strip-searched' recently? Let's not forget, his father removed his shirt, no TSA Agent did or requested that.
3 of them watching too! What a dangerous job, and it takes *so* many of them to do it. 
So, you would rather risk your life and the lives of your family than go through the new security checks.![]()
I'm a little late to the party here, but wanted to throw in my experience. I recently had to take 2 business trips, one to Orlando and one to Vegas. On the way back from Orlando I went through the scanner and it went off, I had no belt on, no change, jewelry or anything else that I can think of that would set it off. Then I realized that it could be the underwire in my bra. I asked if I could go take it off and then go back through, they told me no I had to get the pat down. Fine whatever, never had one before didn't think it would be a big deal. Well needless to say I really think the TSA agent should have bought me dinner first. It was a little overboard. I think what was most embarassing was the fact that they do it right out in the open in front of everyone. I know I still have my clothes and everything on, but I think it would be a little more appropriate for them to take you behind a screen or something.
I understand the need for safety when flying and I don't really have a problem with the scanners, but there has got to be a better way than these pat downs.

This again shows ignorance of the judicial branch of the federal government...
Yes. I'm don't need a 4 year old to be patted down, to feel safe.
Absolutely...
Thank you for sharing.
And why can't she just take the bra off and give it another whirl?![]()
I'm a little late to the party here, but wanted to throw in my experience Well needless to say I really think the TSA agent should have bought me dinner first. It was a little overboard. I think what was most embarassing was the fact that they do it right out in the open in front of everyone. I know I still have my clothes and everything on, but I think it would be a little more appropriate for them to take you behind a screen or something.
I understand the need for safety when flying and I don't really have a problem with the scanners, but there has got to be a better way than these pat downs.
I hadn't thought about it before, but I wonder if the reasoning for doing it out in front of witnesses, considering all the hoohah about the pat downs as it is, is to protect the agents from further and worse accusations. Same as a male Dr must have a female in the room when examining a female patient. I don't think, under the present circumstances, that people would believe a TSA witness if a passenger lied--a whole roomful of people on the other hand...
This would explain cameras in private screening rooms too, since someone said that they are filmed.