salmoneous said:
Let me give you two views of how TSA works. In all honestly, which do you think is closest to the truth:
I think we're talking past each other. I'm not talking about
what's closest to what. I'm talking about respecting the institutions of government, and therefore willing to accept that some things are deliberately kept from the public in the public interest or in the interest of efficient operation of costly government operations. I don't feel folks can legitimately have their cake and eat it too: That's intellectual dishonesty. Don't get me wrong: People can
say whatever they want. They just need to acknowledge, when they're not in a position to prove that their assertions are correct, that their assertions could be wrong, even if the reason they cannot prove their assertions is because of restrictions they object to.
Decisions should be made by the appropriate government agencies. But we shouldn't just blindly accept the rules.
Folks should "blindly"
comply with the rules. To withstand being discounted out-of-hand ("you could be wrong -- experts with access to better data than you feel differently from you"), their expressions of lack of
acceptance should be based on facts, facts that they may or may not have access to. The lack of access to facts is no defense against those assertions being discounted out-of-hand.
So in many cases, people just have their own gut feel that they don't like the rule --
it doesn't make sense to them, based on the limited information available to them and based on their own limited scope of concern. They can express that to their elected officials, who, if enough constituents express the same concern, can express that to their colleagues with specific oversight, if they see fit. However, the crux of the issue is that "this is not necessary" (because you don't know -- again we're talking about the cases where you don't know because the evidence isn't available to you) but rather "we don't like this; is it really necessary?"
The rules should be continuously challenged and reexamined. The rules that make sense should be kept. Those that don't should be changed.
Understand that every operation, whether commercial, non-commercial, or governmental should continually review their operating parameters. The level of
annoyance, however, is a really bad prioritization mechanism for this continual review, when it comes to matters of safety.