Kamakazie Sith wrote:It's a tough question. I don't disagree with the complaints about the TSA here. In fact, I do think they are out of control and need to be properly trained and monitored. However, the questions get a lot tougher if after a disaster someone is able to go through your security with a fine tooth comb and point out perceived weaknesses and attribute those weaknesses as partially responsible for their loved one being dead. I do disagree with those that find these methods intentionally malicious and that the people executing them are also malicious. The way some of you are talking it is like you think most TSA agent are sexual offenders.
Based on the law I've quoted and the normal yardstick that whether or not sexual abuse/harrassment having occurred be the perception of the victim, then yeah, they are.
Saying that it has to be this way to make the government look like it's done all it's can doesn't worry. Aside from the fact that other countries manage to do very well in worse conditions without this (read: Israel), such a complaint reminds me of a quote in Futurama:
"And then all 8000 hulls were breached."
"Those fools! If only they had built 8001 hulls! When will people learn?!"
If a terrorist attack actually manages to work, which is statistically unlikely and was even before 9/11, people will ALWAYS say more could have been done. The TSAs very creation was a result of this. Yet that isn't a rational basis for its creation and certainly not a rational basis for sexually abusing people trying to fly. You object to this, saying that you don't believe the process is malicious, but you never really answered how you tell the difference. You say TSA guards should be monitored, but if a TSA guard legitimately
does act maliciously during one of these "enhanced pat downs", how does the MONITOR tell "sexual abuse" from the TSA guard "doing his job despite an overly sensitive traveller"? You don't seem to put much stock in the preception of the victim here, but it looks like the courts may, as lawsuits against the government over these things are starting to pile up.
You don't want the government to look like it's being soft on terrorism, but how do you feel about the government looking like it has been propping up an organization of thieves and sex offenders?
Ahh that's sarcasm there! Well played, sir.
The last part is, but the first part is deadly serious. I
am legitimately worried about the safety of my fiance when I drop her off at the airport in January, but not as worried as she is. It really does bother me that she could be selected for one of these "enhanced pat downs" and she could be sexually abused by a security guard, at which point we'd have absolutely no recourse whatsoever, since even if it was witnessed by a crowd of people, the TSA guard can claim that he was merely doing his jod and not a single person could tell the difference. It bugs me that chances are I'm not going to be able to walk her to security to make sure she's unharmed by the people who are
tasked with the job of keeping her safe.
How fucked up is that, KS? It's pretty damn messed up that the TSA are a MUCH bigger threat to my future wife's well being than ANY terrorist. I know that no terrorist is going to attack a plane from Tucson to Pittsburgh, but I DON'T know that some asshole TSA guard isn't going to add her to the (almost certainly under-reported) list of 1 out of 4 women in the US who have been sexually assaulted in some way.