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United States Privacy Security Your Rights Online

U.S. Begins Digital Fingerprinting In Airports 1174

lemist writes "Cross Match has rolled out digital fingerprinting at major airports in the United States according to MSNBC. It's designed to increase border security. They appear to be using Cross Match's Verifier 300 LC. Note that the actual capture of the fingerprint requires no interaction with the device. It determines when the image quality is excellent and grabs it."
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U.S. Begins Digital Fingerprinting In Airports

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  • by Brahmastra ( 685988 ) on Tuesday January 06, 2004 @10:07PM (#7898779)
    28 countries are exempt from this testing including a lot of western european countries where the Sept 11th terrorists moved around with impunity. This fingerprinting scheme aint going to fix anything.
  • I think it's good. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by ActionPlant ( 721843 ) on Tuesday January 06, 2004 @10:08PM (#7898790) Homepage
    I don't think this is a problem. I see how some people think this might be an invasion of privacy, and hey, if they put this thing in random public places, especially without letting us know, yes I'd be upset. But this is in AIRPORTS. You're required to check in before you ever get on the plane anyway. I think it's just another means of making sure that people who are on these planes really are who they say they are. That can't be a bad thing.

    Damon,
  • ....And? (Score:3, Insightful)

    by OtakuHawk ( 682073 ) on Tuesday January 06, 2004 @10:08PM (#7898792)
    So they have my fingerprint... Are they taking names and other info, or are they just going to have a database full of 5 billion fingerprint entries, but no names?
  • Easy to bypass. (Score:4, Insightful)

    by DAldredge ( 2353 ) <SlashdotEmail@GMail.Com> on Tuesday January 06, 2004 @10:13PM (#7898834) Journal
    All they have to do is walk across the damn borders (north or south).

  • by segment ( 695309 ) <sil&politrix,org> on Tuesday January 06, 2004 @10:14PM (#7898854) Homepage Journal

    Wired magazine
    02:00 AM Oct. 23, 2002 PDT

    A surprise decision by the Food and Drug Administration permits the use of implantable ID chips in humans, despite an FDA investigator's recent public reservations about the devices.

    The FDA sent chip manufacturer Applied Digital Solutions a letter stating that the agency would not regulate the VeriChip if it was used for "security, financial and personal identification or safety applications," ADS said Tuesday.

    But the FDA has not determined whether the controversial chip can be used for medical purposes, including linking to medical databases, the company added...

    Supposedly, (supposedly) DoD was looking into this as a replacement for military dogtags, and the BOP (Bureau of Prisons) was supposedly looking into it. Now sounds far fetched but according to the companies press releases: September 29, 2003 - Applied Digital Solutions, Inc. (Nasdaq: ADSX), an advanced technology development company, today announced that its wholly owned subsidiary, VeriChip Corporation, has retained the services of Stanley "Stan" L. Reid, a longtime technology industry executive and former congressional aide with extensive experience and wide contacts in Washington, D.C., to market VeriChip(TM) secure identification solutions to federal agencies.

    ...

    Since 1996, Mr. Reid has served as president of Strategic Sciences, a Washington, D.C.-area consulting firm that specializes in marketing advanced technologies to the federal government. Mr. Reid has particular expertise in selling new, introductory technologies to government agencies, including the Departments of Defense (DoD), Energy (DoE) and State, as well as the agencies that have been incorporated into the Department of Homeland Security. (source [adsx.com])

    Just think if they decided to do away with Social Security, or made this a standard for newer borns a-la vaccinations... Oh well that's why I'm glad I support the war on terror [politrix.org]

  • Orwellian... (Score:4, Insightful)

    by highwaytohell ( 621667 ) on Tuesday January 06, 2004 @10:16PM (#7898876)
    Well the US Govt has a stance of trust nobody, my question is whats going to stop a guy with three suitcases full of plastic explosives walking into an Airport and making a crater out of it. Fingerprints arent gonna help much then. All these security measures are just put in place to make the people feel safe, however a plane could come from a foreign country which doesnt have or cant afford to implement this technology. Osama is still to be caught, intelligence has done nothing, and you dont hear of any new breaks in locating him. All we see is his head on Al Jazeera threatening to eradicate the infidels. When Sept 11 occured, no one knew who these guys were, they could have been on the plane just as easily with the fingerprint technology implemented then. The real threat is knowing who your enemy is. All we have is one face, we dont have his many followers. This could just lead to a witch hunt of massive proportions
  • by Goldberg's Pants ( 139800 ) on Tuesday January 06, 2004 @10:16PM (#7898881) Journal
    If all this nonsense actually DID increase security, then fair play. But it doesn't. From your statement you appear to believe that yet another privacy rape at the airport, in a climate where women have been forced to empty baby bottles because they might contain weapons, is worth it, do you? Would that be correct? It's all in the interests of national security...

    Okay, then, over Christmas, the Bush regime (Heil Dubya!) raised the terror alert etc... saying an attack was likely.

    Now let's see here, they claim this, which, to me, means ALL these new security measures have been a waste of time, effort and money, and done nothing other than strip American's of more and more of their rights. If there's a "clear and present danger" of an attack, the administration is admitting that all this nonsense at airports is rubbish because it has not stopped the potential for attacks.

    In short: All this security at the airport is like the old adage.

    "This rock in my hand keeps away all the lions."
    "But there are no lions here."
    "Exactly."

    Let's look at it this way and assume the "threat" is real. The fingerprint system is ONLY as good as the intelligence it's received. If Joe Terrorist goes through and has never been fingerprinted before... Well woop de doo, when he flies a plane into a building, at least we'll know what his fingers looked like before they burnt up in the wreckage.

    It's a useless security measure.
  • by AndroidCat ( 229562 ) on Tuesday January 06, 2004 @10:19PM (#7898909) Homepage
    Brazil treads on US fingers [telegraphindia.com] (I out-sourced it to an Indian site. :^)
    Washington has been upset by Brazil's tit-for-tat reaction to the US-VISIT system that went into force yesterday with digital technology after a year of preparation. US travellers have complained of up to nine-hour delays at Rio de Janeiro airport where Brazilian immigration authorities, only told of the order last week, are using inkpads and paper.
    Well gee, travellers upset by security measures, imagine that! (Inkpads and paper sound like non-security.) Looks like the Brazilian governement as a whole is undecided about this, "not foreign policy".
  • by LX.onesizebigger ( 323649 ) on Tuesday January 06, 2004 @10:22PM (#7898936) Homepage

    For a government to verify identity by means of passport examination is one thing. To keep personal, biometric data on file, however, is entirely different and something that most governments should not consider doing to their own citizens. Should other countries really accept that the U.S. government has more data on their citizens than those other countries themselves?

    No invasion of privacy? Bull! If you really think so, please go down to your local precinct and volunteer to have your fingerprint taken so that you may be examined as a potential suspect in criminal investigations.

    Making sure people who are on the planes are who they say they are -- bull! Against what database will this be verified? It's trying to please the public by making sure they can see the government keeps tabs on "those damn foreigners".

  • Re:Clever device (Score:5, Insightful)

    by JanneM ( 7445 ) on Tuesday January 06, 2004 @10:22PM (#7898939) Homepage
    Problem is, faking a fingerprint - even when checking for pulse and body heat - is not all that difficult. Bad Guys(tm) will do so if needed. And they will of course preferentially use someone else's print (which again is quite doable to obtain). Then what do you do? Passwords, PIN codes and social security numbers can be changed if you've lost them or is a victim of identity theft. But how do you change your fingerprint?

  • by GuyMannDude ( 574364 ) on Tuesday January 06, 2004 @10:22PM (#7898941) Journal

    But you should be a citizen of one of those 28 to get excluded, if I've understood correctly. AFAIK, the Sept 11th terrorists weren't, although they'd lived in Europe.

    You're missing the point. All the terrorists have to do is get a forged passport from one of those countries and they'll slip through. A security net with tons of holes doesn't do any good.

    On a related topic, does anyone know what the Pfa (probability of false alarm) for fingerprint matches is? It would be interesting to take this number, multiply it by the number of people coming into the country every day (subtracing out those from the magic 28 countries) and figure out how many jet-lag weary travelers are going to be in for one hell of a rude shock when they get to America.

    GMD

  • by jaxdahl ( 227487 ) on Tuesday January 06, 2004 @10:24PM (#7898955)
    Actually, those countries already have compatible passports which contain most/all of the information that this system captures anyway, so it isn't that big of a deal.
  • by wrmrxxx ( 696969 ) on Tuesday January 06, 2004 @10:24PM (#7898961)

    Were the September 11 hijackers travelling under false passports? I was under the impression that they were not. If this system had already been in place in 2001, would the outcome have been any different?

    Is accurate knowledge about who is entering the USA through airports really a significant problem for those trying to predict and prevent future terrorism incidents? I would have expected that a greater problem was knowing the intentions and tracking the actual actions of individuals.

    If this system works perfectly, surely people with terrorist intentions will know it, and simply not enter the USA legally? It's not as if the USA's borders are impregnable - there are large numbers of people managing to enter without passports or visas. It's like carefully putting a lid on the bucket to make sure you don't spill any water, but ignoring the leak-hole at the bottom of the bucket.

  • by gorbachev ( 512743 ) on Tuesday January 06, 2004 @10:26PM (#7898982) Homepage
    So...what are you going to say when they extend this program to include US citizens/residents?

    It's going to come...

    What are you going to say when foreign countries are all going to start doing this to all foreigners entering their countries?

    Proletariat of the world, unite to kill hypocricy
  • by binarybum ( 468664 ) on Tuesday January 06, 2004 @10:29PM (#7899014) Homepage
    This sounds like a place to rub a little anthrax.. well except for the fact that it would be targeting non-US citizens.
    Seriously though, how many people will touch this same couple of cm of space within the same day, one right after another. I hope they have considered a way to keep this surface sterile - perhaps a UV backlight or something. Otherwise this sounds like an international virus hub.
  • by nuggz ( 69912 ) on Tuesday January 06, 2004 @10:33PM (#7899040) Homepage
    IIRC They were travelling under valid documentation.

    Knowing who is on the plane or in the country would not have prevented September 11. They didn't know who was going to hijack a plane.

    The scary part is focusing on foreigners isn't going to solve the problems. They end up harassing innocent people, and causing lots of bad will, but doesn't make it safer for anyone.

    I can think of a few recent issues that really shocked & upset the US.
    9/11
    Columbine
    Unabomber
    Oklahoma city
    The Sniper

    Hmm, looks like picking on foreigners might not be the most effective way to decrease terrorism.
  • by Homology ( 639438 ) on Tuesday January 06, 2004 @10:34PM (#7899052)
    what? we shouldent even try to do anything to protect ourselves?

    Is this REALLY about protection of US citizens? Then why does the current administration act the way it does, if this is the goal? I sure don't feel more secure, rather the opposite.

    From Sorrows of Empire: An Interview [zmag.org] we see that the administration is undermining security :

    We are without question in greater danger of terrorist attacks today than we were on September 11 two years ago. Afghanistan has descended into an anarchy comparable to that which prevailed before the rise of the ruthless but religiously motivated Taliban.

    And the effects are not one might like :

    The United States will feel the blowback from this ill-advised and poorly prepared military adventure for decades. The war in Iraq has already had the unintended consequences of seriously fracturing the Western democratic alliance; eliminating any potentiality for British leadership of the European Union; grievously weakening international law, including the Charter of the United Nations; and destroying the credibility of the president, vice president, secretary of state, and other officials as a result of their lying to the international community and the American people.

    yes it's invasive, yes it tacks on an additional 15 seconds, no we don't care if you don't like it

    Oh yeah, the administration sendt that message too:

    Most important, the unsanctioned military assault on Iraq communicated to the world that the United States was unwilling to seek a modus vivendi with Islamic nations and was therefore an appropriate, even necessary, target for further terrorist attacks.
  • I am Brazilian, and all I can say is that I feel embarrassed by this. The fingerprinting on American airports is an overreaction and a sign of paranoia, but at least there is some justification - less than 3 years ago hundreds of lives were lost in an act of terrorism. The Brazilian fingerprinting of American citizens is simply a payback, and completely childish.

    To make mater worse, it was decided by a judge from a small state. The government, and not the courts, should decide on matters of international relations, and so I think this absurd will not go on for a long time. Even so, the Brazilian authorities are working very hard to look stupid, surpassing the American government.

  • by Chuck Chunder ( 21021 ) on Tuesday January 06, 2004 @10:36PM (#7899070) Journal
    A fingerprint is just a fingerprint. It is, essentialy, just a fact with no meaning. The fingerprint itself holds no information about who the fingerprint belongs to, it's just a token.

    DNA on the other hand holds a load of information in and of itself.
  • by davester666 ( 731373 ) on Tuesday January 06, 2004 @10:37PM (#7899087) Journal
    What's to prevent the bad guys from putting a bit of rubber with a bogus fingerprint embedded in it to get around this?

    If it's thin enough, a temperature test [and possibly pulse detection] could be fooled.

    Maybe they should also scrub your fingertips with steel wool to make sure it's the real print... :-)
  • by corbettw ( 214229 ) on Tuesday January 06, 2004 @10:43PM (#7899136) Journal
    You're missing the point. All the terrorists have to do is get a forged passport from one of those countries and they'll slip through. A security net with tons of holes doesn't do any good.

    OMG, you're right! Well, we might as well do nothing then, rather than take incremental steps to make things that much harder for people to slip through. After all, you wouldn't design a computer network with more than one level of security, why try to protect your borders that way?

    Afterall, all the terrorists have to do is get a kayak made of radar absorbing material, paddle it across the Atlantic ocean, then scuba the last 100 miles under 10 fathoms of water, before swimming up the Chesapeake and exploding a nuclear suitcase bomb a few miles from the Capitol. So there's no sense wasting our time with security. Hell, let's just put box cutters in every airline meal and call it a day.
  • by donnz ( 135658 ) on Tuesday January 06, 2004 @10:43PM (#7899137) Homepage Journal
    including a lot of western european countries where the Sept 11th terrorists moved around with impunity

    Well, they also moved around the USA with "impunity". In fact, they used USA based training facilities to learn how to fly planes. They also used internal *not* international flights.

    So, finger print and photograph all internal passengers first, please. Put your gun totting marshals on all intenal flights, then if you find all that acceptable extend it to international flights (most European countries already have had way better airport security than the US has for a long time).
  • by Migraineman ( 632203 ) on Tuesday January 06, 2004 @10:47PM (#7899162)
    This is just another step. There are any number of other situations where you're required to present fingerprints and other information for background checks as a condition of employment. Need a security clearance? Want to be an elementary school teacher? A daycare provider? A warehouse employee where explosive materials are stored?

    They take your fingerprints, and do what with them after the background investigation is complete? File 13? I think not. It goes into your "permanent record", and I ain't talking about the one that the high school administrators threatened you with.

    Once you release the information to the gub'ment, you can't take it back. There are many seemingly innocent "checks" that will funnel the information into places you really don't need it to go. My fingerprints are on file with the gub'ment because of a job application that required a clearance. Ultimately I didn't take the job, but that doesn't change the fact that I'm "accounted for" to the same degree as someone who's been arrested. I didn't realize how disturbing it would be until after the fact.
  • by Scrameustache ( 459504 ) on Tuesday January 06, 2004 @10:49PM (#7899183) Homepage Journal
    do I mind? Not really, after all, I'm not a terrorist!

    Neither am I, but you know what else I'm not? A convict.
    So long as the states are figerprinting and taking mugshots, I'm not setting foot there. Plenty other countries to visit.
  • by GuyMannDude ( 574364 ) on Tuesday January 06, 2004 @10:52PM (#7899212) Journal

    OMG, you're right! Well, we might as well do nothing then, rather than take incremental steps to make things that much harder for people to slip through. After all, you wouldn't design a computer network with more than one level of security, why try to protect your borders that way?

    If you re-read my post you'll see there are TWO parts to what I was saying. The first is that the system will not catch 100% of terrorists. In fact if some nerd like myself can see a flaw within 5 minutes, I'm sure that the actual effectiveness with be considerably less than 100%.

    The second part of my post is prefaced with the words "On a related note" meaning that you are supposed to consider this in conjunction with the first point. The second point is that there WILL be false positives. Some innocents are going to get labeled as terrorists. And that's not too much fun for whoever gets the unlucky draw.

    This pervasive "well, it's better than nothing!" mindset that I see so much of these days regarding our counter-terror efforts really spooks me. It sounds as though you're perfectly happy to disregard all those false positives as no big deal or, perhaps, an acceptable cost for some feeling of safety. In designing a system, an engineer will look carefully at the trade off of Pcc (probability of correct classification) versus Pfa (false alarms). Then it comes down to a judgement call, of course. What tradeoff are you willing to live with. The purpose of my original post was to ask if anyone has any feeling for what those numbers are! If we don't, then we're just doing a bunch of bullshit to make ourselves feel good.

    And, personally, I won't be feeling too good about sending innocent people to Gitmo.

    GMD

  • Re:Blame Canada! (Score:2, Insightful)

    by ergo98 ( 9391 ) on Tuesday January 06, 2004 @10:54PM (#7899225) Homepage Journal
    I wonder why Canada doesn't have an illegal alien problem

    The point, that you so clearly missed, was that it's humorous that the poster made a weak little comment about Canada failing to protect it when there is half the population of Canada in illegal aliens living in the grand old US of A as we speak, and the Southern border is so pourous that it's a complete joke. Hell, for anyone with any resources and a couple of boats, the entire East and West coast are impossible to defend against (well unless you ban all maritime traffic -- strangely I wouldn't be surprized...).

    However the general attempt at subtle disparaging humors me -- Canada has the highest legal migration of any Western nation per capita, and a massive backlog of applicants.
  • by UberGeeb ( 574309 ) on Tuesday January 06, 2004 @10:55PM (#7899237)

    Or, you could RTFA and see "Officials have said false hits on the system have been less than 0.1 percent in trial runs." Or, about a 50% chance for a false positive on each 747 coming in.

  • by iserlohn ( 49556 ) on Tuesday January 06, 2004 @11:07PM (#7899346) Homepage
    I'm not brazilian and I don't agree with your characterization. Tit for Tat is a viable long term strategy to enforce cooperation. There is nothing childish about it. You can't keep cooperating when your oppenent defects. Appeasement is a bad straegy (well, actually depends on the payoff matrix).

    Sorry 'bout the random blurb, readying too much Axelrod lately.
  • by The Only Druid ( 587299 ) on Tuesday January 06, 2004 @11:09PM (#7899359)
    Um, you're missing the point: ALL of the exempt countries, by rule, will be required to be machine readable, including identification information required to access the criminal/terrorist databases in the US and in the parent country. This means a forgery would not only have to be visually accurate, but also have to include a false reference including a photo who looks like the person, as well as a clean criminal record.
  • by bfg9000 ( 726447 ) on Tuesday January 06, 2004 @11:11PM (#7899370) Homepage Journal
    none of the people I saw going through it seemed to have any problem with it, pretty much everyone seems to accept it...

    There's a simple explanation for that. If you make a joke, or say anything against the new fascism, you are detained for HOURS, and everybody knows that. Although I think this is a complete load of sh*t, when I go through it next week (as a Canadian, "the newest enemy of George W"), I'm sure as hell keeping my mouth shut and smiling. DoublePlusGood security ma'am!

    Last year, the "nice lady" demanded my father (white, 55 years old, expensively dressed, no criminal record) *remove* his pants -- IN FRONT OF EVERYBODY. He refused, things started to get ugly, and they finally gave in and let him pass. He's now gotten a new attitude, one which is hurting the US economy in a small way, but which, I'm sure, is going to be duplicated by many, until it hurts the economy in a big way. He's stopped buying American. He doesn't travel there. And he speaks his mind without fear (which my American friend Tom tells me he can no longer do in "the freest country on Earth")... I just pray you guys vote the Democrats in next time. I never thought I'd say this, but for Christ's sake, Bush is killing your economy as well as your prospects. Who does he work for, China? I'd rather have the US as a superpower than China or India, but it looks like you guys are ushering yourselves out. Sad.
  • by Lochin Rabbar ( 577821 ) on Tuesday January 06, 2004 @11:14PM (#7899396)

    Since there hasn't been a repeat of 9/11, it seems like the security precautions are working.

    There are no elephants on my lawn, I guess it must be because the pepper I put down every night keeps them away.

  • by ZPO ( 465615 ) on Tuesday January 06, 2004 @11:17PM (#7899414)
    Like another respondent my fingerprints have already been volutarily given the the USMC, NCIS, SAPD, DIS, and about 5-6 other agencies I have no clear recollection of at the present time.

    If you want to get in your personal vehicle, drive across several state lines, pay cash all the way, never stay in a hotel, and not have the capability to endanger anyone else as a part of that travel (other than lousy driving) then please feel free to do so.

    If, on the other hand, you want to get on an airplane for a domestic flight be prepared for some screening. Why? Because you are not getting on a public air carrier with a bunch of other people.

    By the same token if you're flying internationally then be prepared to furnish your identity on entrance/exit from all countries along the route. Its just the way it is in the real world.

  • by Ironix ( 165274 ) <steffen@norMONETgren.ca minus painter> on Tuesday January 06, 2004 @11:19PM (#7899435) Homepage
    I live in Canada, which is one of the "exempt" countries, but this exemption hasn't stopped the U.S. from fingerprinting and photographing Canadians of Persian descent.

    Basically this exemption is for white people of European descent in the end...

    I won't bother mentioning the frightening parallels this brings to mind...
  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday January 06, 2004 @11:21PM (#7899449)
    "This rock in my hand keeps away all the lions."
    "But there are no lions here."
    "Exactly." ....

    I want to buy this rock.
  • by Gorimek ( 61128 ) on Tuesday January 06, 2004 @11:23PM (#7899468) Homepage
    You know how you only get one chance to make a first impression?

    The US government has already exploited that chance by forcing all foreign visitors to fill out an insane form on the plane, asking among many, many other mostly bizarre things
    • Have you ever engaged in genocide, or otherwise ordered, incited, assisted or otherwise participated in the killing of any person because of race, religion, nationality, ethnic origin, or political opinion?
    • Do you plan to practice polygamy in the U.S.?
    • Do you intend to engage in the U.S. in espionage?
    ...on top of this, they will now be fingerprinted and mug shot at arrival. I'm sure I don't need to spell out what first impression this will give the average traveller.
  • Here's why. (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Saeed al-Sahaf ( 665390 ) on Tuesday January 06, 2004 @11:24PM (#7899471) Homepage
    Does anyone recall the little fact that none of the September 11 hijackers traveled under a false identity?

    The point is not to pick out people who are traveling under false papers, the point is to build a database of foreign nationals. 28 countries are exempt only because the United States could not diplomatically get away with insulting these exempt countries this way. The truth is that if GWB could get away with doing this for US citizens as well, he would. It's all about control.

  • by TerryAtWork ( 598364 ) <research@aceretail.com> on Tuesday January 06, 2004 @11:24PM (#7899474)
    In spite of their propensity for guns and the fact that they make bitchin' tanks, the Americans know jack about security.

    Before it was 'This is a picture of Mohammed Atta, one of the 9/11 hijackers' now it will be 'This is a picture of Mohammed Atta, one of the 9/11 hijackers. These are the fingerprints of Mohammed Atta, one of the 9/11 hijackers. This is the retinal print of Mohammed Atta, one of the 9/11 hijackers. This is how many hairs he had on his left butt cheek. This is how many hairs he his on his RIGHT butt cheek....'

    The point is all you REALLY needed to know was that he was an Al-Quida sleeper agent, and they didn't know that.

  • by Nexus Seven ( 112882 ) on Tuesday January 06, 2004 @11:25PM (#7899491)
    How would fingerprinting on arrival have helped?

    His intention was to destroy the plane before it arrived at its destination.
  • by Strudelkugel ( 594414 ) on Tuesday January 06, 2004 @11:33PM (#7899565)

    We are without question in greater danger of terrorist attacks today than we were on September 11 two years ago. Afghanistan has descended into an anarchy comparable to that which prevailed before the rise of the ruthless but religiously motivated Taliban.

    Are they describing the country that just had constitutional convention? The one that just agreed upon a constitution?

    The United States will feel the blowback from this ill-advised and poorly prepared military adventure for decades. The war in Iraq has already had the unintended consequences of seriously fracturing the Western democratic alliance; eliminating any potentiality for British leadership of the European Union; grievously weakening international law, including the Charter of the United Nations; and destroying the credibility of the president, vice president, secretary of state, and other officials as a result of their lying to the international community and the American people.

    Blowback? Are they considering the fact that Libya has invited in inspectors to verify the end of their WMD programs blowback? Notice that N. Korea has invited some "independent" inspectors to have a look at Yong-byon. What about the Saudi crack-down on Al Qaeda in that country? All of this is bad? As for the EU, they can't even keep to the terms of their own agreements. As for the UN, note that it is the organization that passed 1441, as well as many other sanctions against the regime of Saddam. France and Russia were quite happy with Oil-for-Food program though, given that they got to skim off so much in "Administrative" fees, so one might question who was risking credibility.

    Don't get me wrong, war is a terrible thing, and one can only regret the loss of innocent life and destruction. The U.S., however, didn't start this conflict. It would be insanity to wait for the totally compromised UN to solve the problem for us, after the enemy announced his intention to attack us, and did so, several times.

  • by NaCl ( 414038 ) on Tuesday January 06, 2004 @11:33PM (#7899570)
    The Brazilian fingerprinting of American citizens is simply a payback, and completely childish

    The main problem around this fingerprint thing is: respect. So, the US want to fingerprint all people from ALL countries? Fine! Instead of that the US make, like, uhm, 28 exceptions!

    I'm brazilian and I'm not ashamed at all. Show us brazilians some respect, damn it!

    To make mater worse, it was decided by a judge from a small state

    I'm from a an even smaller state than that, how is this making me worse than someone from a big state?

  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday January 06, 2004 @11:43PM (#7899647)
    This is the story of the Department of Homeland Security. It seems like they're doing everything possible to destroy rights and freedoms for americans and visitors to the US while making sure they improve actual safety as little as possible.

    They constantly parade around the threat of terrorists even though there doesn't seem to be a threat. The US is at an Orange alert now. Why? They offer no information on why they elevate the level. It seems to just be to scare people and make themselves seem important.

    After 9/11 the US introduced a comprehensive sky marshall program. Last year, Homeland Security introduced airport screening programs that are much more invasive, really screwed over people from visa waiver countries, and to pay for it cut the sky marshall program way back. They even admitted at the time the sky marshall program would have prevented 9/11 while the new program would not have.

    The US is rapidly becoming the sort of police state their propaganda claimed russia was like during the coldwar. Unfortunately, they have the technology to do it for real now.

    The greatest threat facing the US now isn't the terrorists, it's their own homeland security. 3,000 people is not a hugh death toll. Hitler killed double that on average every single day for 5 years. It's also a small drop in the bucket compared to the number of americans killed in car accidents. But holding 300,000,000 hostage is a major crime against humanity. Hopefully you'll be smart enough to vote out dubya this year and the new president will have the brains to save the country.
  • by UberGeeb ( 574309 ) on Tuesday January 06, 2004 @11:44PM (#7899655)
    Umm, perhaps you should go study statistics. 0.1% chance for a false positive means 99.9% chance that a test _won't_ be a false positive. 440 passengers on a 747-200. 0.999^440 is about a 64% chance that no one on a fully loaded 747-200 will get a false positive, meaning a 46% chance that someone will. Rounding that to 50% is probably as accurate as the original 0.1% number is, given it's in a news article.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday January 06, 2004 @11:48PM (#7899686)
    Having had the pleasure of being treated as as criminal by USA immigration and being scanned in I have to say good luck to the Yanks. You now live in the least free country of the world.

    Land of the free, land of the sick and corrupt more like.

    On arrival you have pictures of Il Duce Bush on the wall, you are processed like a criminal and then let out into a society where everyone is shooting each other. Its like the film Escape from New York without the benefit of being fiction
  • by Homology ( 639438 ) on Tuesday January 06, 2004 @11:49PM (#7899690)
    To the sorrow of many, US is not know for supporting democracy and human rights in the Middle East. So to give a quote from the historian Gabriel Kolko in the aptly named Hoping for Amnesia [zmag.org] :

    "The United Stares supplied Iraq with intelligence throughout the war [with Iran] and provided it with more than $US5 billion in food credits, technology, and industrial products, most coming after it began to use mustard, cyanide, and nerve gases against both Iranians and dissident Iraqi Kurds."

    And for the prospect of a public and fair trial (yes, even horrendous criminals has that right in a state ruled by Law) :

    It is hard to believe that either Washington or London would relish the prospect of an open trial. They would not want Saddam to adumbrate their support for him - credit-by-credit, pathogen-by-pathogen, weapon-by-weapon - during the 12 years before he became an official enemy by invading Kuwait in August 1990.

    So you see, some of the very members of the current administration was supporting Saddam at the height of his crimes. Do you know understand why so many are quite cynical about Bush'es declaration of democracy and human rights for all?

  • Am I the only one? (Score:3, Insightful)

    by utlemming ( 654269 ) on Tuesday January 06, 2004 @11:58PM (#7899773) Homepage
    Am I the only one that really does not care or see the controvery hear? I guess my point is if you have such a problem being finger-printed on the way in then don't come. The only thing that I am annoyed with is how come everyone doesn't get finger printed and photographed. If you get a Texas DL you get finger printed and photograhped. The US should be allowed to track people as they come and leave the US. It is the right of the country to deny and admit people into the United States and knowing who is in the country is not a big deal. For the most part the United States Government knows about 99.9% of the polulace from tax records and drivers licenses. It is not so much of a leap nor an extreme injustice to know about the aliens visiting. Just because the US is going to start to track those visiting, and thereby knowing who they are, is no more intrusive than your local DMV, the IRS, Social Security Admin, et al, knowing about you.

    Then the other thing that is blowing my mind is how come Brazil is having such a problem with this. I can understand that they feel a little singled out, but this reciprosity seems a little extreme. It is not like the US is singling out Brazilians only -- just those countries were we have the Visa-waiver program in effect.

    This is seriously a non-issue.

  • Re:How about.... (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday January 07, 2004 @12:04AM (#7899816)
    Seriously, you are a stupid fuck.

    Oh wait! I forgot how innocent America is and how they're the only victim of terrorism in the entire history of the world, ever.

    Oh wait...
  • by Pave Low ( 566880 ) on Wednesday January 07, 2004 @12:14AM (#7899881) Journal
    Does anyone recall the little fact that none of the September 11 hijackers carried handguns or bombs?

    Oh well, let's tear down the metal detectors and luggage scanners then.

  • by Scrameustache ( 459504 ) on Wednesday January 07, 2004 @12:19AM (#7899907) Homepage Journal
    Afghanistan has descended into an anarchy comparable to that which prevailed before the rise of the ruthless but religiously motivated Taliban.

    Are they describing the country that just had constitutional convention? The one that just agreed upon a constitution?


    The Taliban are gaining territory again, there are large parts of the country that are still under their controll.

    The USSR fought the talibans for years before giving up and leaving them the country (back when the US called them freedom fighters...go rent Rambo III and that Timothy Dalton James Bond...Liscense to Kill I think), and the US bombed the shit out of them and then moved on to bomb the shit out of Irak...

    The U.S., however, didn't start this conflict.

    List of countries the USA has bombed since the end of World War II:

    China 1945-46
    Korea 1950-53
    China 1950-53
    Guatemala 1954
    Indonesia 1958
    Cuba 1959-60
    Guatemala 1960
    Belgian Congo 1964
    Guatemala 1964
    Dominican Republic 1965-66
    Peru 1965
    Laos 1964-73
    Vietnam 1961-73
    Cambodia 1969-70
    Guatemala 1967-69
    Lebanon 1982-84
    Grenada 1983-84
    Libya 1986
    El Salvador 1981-92
    Nicaragua 1981-90
    Libya 1986
    Iran 1987-88
    Libya 1989
    Panama 1989-90
    Iraq 1991-2002
    Kuwait 1991
    Somalia 1992-94
    Croatia 1994 (of Serbs at Krajina)
    Bosnia 1995
    Iran 1998 (airliner)
    Sudan 1998
    Afghanistan 1998
    Yugoslavia 1999
    Afghanistan 2001-02
  • by BSDevil ( 301159 ) on Wednesday January 07, 2004 @12:20AM (#7899917) Journal
    You forgot about the one asking if you were a Nazi.

    Anyways, the first time I saw that form I too was curious, so I asked a lawyer-friend about the rationale of asking questions that everyone will say no to. Apparently, that's the idea. You say no, and then sign the dotted line saying that everything is true, under penalty of arrest and perjury. So if you happen to be a terrorist or spy, they can pick you up on lying on your immigration form, and then get more time to get a real case. It also makes it much easier to deport you.

    Remember Al Capone: he may have been famous for the Mob, but he got nailed for tax evasion.
  • Re:Here's why. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by __aatgod8309 ( 598427 ) on Wednesday January 07, 2004 @12:29AM (#7899977)
    If you want security, you first come up with a secure system.

    It looks like many (if not all) of the systems now in place in the US are designed to make it easy for any 'security' to be bypassed, due to poorly designed systems, lack-lustre and uneven implementations, underperforming hardware, and a generally false sense of safety due to the flaws i've just mentioned.

    I'd go so far as to say that the US govt is doing more to promote fear in the population than the terrorists do, after which they erode the civil rights of the (undereducated) general population whilst claiming 'We're protecting you'.
  • by scherrey ( 13000 ) on Wednesday January 07, 2004 @12:48AM (#7900100) Homepage
    re: Illegal immigrants? What does that have to do with terrorism, because that's the excuse used to justify all this shit.

    Uh gee - remember Sept 11th? Illegals flying into the twin towers and the Pentagon and a field in PA? Murdered thousands? Ring a bell? Definitely have a need to watch out for who is coming into the country. Unfortunately while we happily go along violating our own human rights, we don't have the will to concentrate our efforts and resources on those most likely to be terrorists.

    Now, of course, fingerprinting isn't going to catch terrorists and I believe that no one should have to give up biometric info without being formally charged with a crime by a grand jury. 4th and 5th ammendments should apply to everyone on American territory.

    Even if we waste every muslim terrorist on Earth, if we keep treating our Constitution this way we will have done to ourselves what the terrorists could never accomplish on their own.
  • by twofidyKidd ( 615722 ) on Wednesday January 07, 2004 @12:55AM (#7900128)
    The big issue is not whether its a good idea to protect our borders, its whether or not they are being effectively protected at the possible expense of our civil liberties. Seems to me that if you have a machine which utilizes a database often used by law enforcement, then it's possible that it's only a matter of time before they start using it to stop people that aren't terrorists. You don't even have to be in trouble with the law at the time, you just have to show up on the radar, and suddenly you're being harrased about your Disney World vacation.

    Then there's the secondary issue of the machine's level of inaccuracy. If you do any travelling at all via airline, there's a possibility that you might get flagged as a terrorist, and if you're a frequent traveller, then you have an even better chance of flagged. Small price to pay for the security you might say. Well how exactly would you feel if they stopped someone in your family, told them, "We think you're a terrorist, you're coming with us, and we're going to keep you in this room until we think otherwise, your rights, and your lawyer be damned."

    You're right, we must do something, because it's better than nothing, but if the terror level is at Orange even with all this security, then it's probably not very good security. Why as a taxpayer am I paying for all this expensive, ineffective security?

    Lastly, it still doesn't change the fact that a terrorist could land in Saskatchewan, rent a car to the border, take a stroll into the states, hop on a bus to some metropolitan area, and set off the dirty bomb in the briefcase he was carrying all that time. And when that happens (God forbid that it does), I'm going to be pissed as hell that I'm sitting in a cell at an airport because some $20 million plus in tax money decided that I was the real threat.
  • joke's on us (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Doc Ruby ( 173196 ) on Wednesday January 07, 2004 @01:08AM (#7900196) Homepage Journal
    These "homeland security" measures that Bush and Ridge are saddling us with are a giant conjob. I travel around NYC, and they've reduced the NYPD to a bunch of overtime crossing guards. If I were sick enough to want to sabotage something big enough to get on TV, it would be really easy. The airports are just as porous. Meanwhile, the Sunday before New Year's Eve, somebody buzzed their small plane around the Statue of Liberty ( under a mile from the hole where the World Trade Center stood) for several minutes before the FAA even warned them away from that closed airspace. During a Christmas/New Year week of steady Orange Alert. Any heads roll? Any tightening of the security? Found any "evil doers"? No. This is a scam to keep us scared, obedient, and ignorant of the very real changes the Feds are pulling on us.

    If you want to know why, just think about all those military contractors that Bush was going to hook up with "missile defense shield" contracts ($100s of billions - trillions). After the WTC planebombings, they couldn't convince anyone the #1 threat was missiles. So they turned their proposals and whitepapers into "TerrorWar" marketing and "Iraqmire" lobbying. Do you think all that Pentagon biz development just went away? They need that money! And they're getting it. But they don't have actual TerrorWar products, so they're just keeping up the smokescreens and scapegoats while they retool. By the time we catch on and get tired of just rounding up foreign looking people, their systematic abuse of every possible fringe group will probably have produced actual nuts who will follow Osama bin Laden's career highlight. Then the contractors will be able to say "I warned you", and keep business rolling. Unless we start calling them on it, and stop playing along by watching their TerrorTV and taking them seriously.
  • Re:Blame Canada! (Score:2, Insightful)

    by ergo98 ( 9391 ) on Wednesday January 07, 2004 @01:12AM (#7900218) Homepage Journal
    You're angry because the US is taking a fingerprint they already have, or could easily get digitally, and comparing it to the one in the passport.

    Here's the funny thing - my passport doesn't have a fingerprint in it. Many world passports don't have finger prints in them. I've watched this particular claim in defense of the finger printing be regurgitated on here several times (that the finger prints are being compared to the passport, which is a ridiculous notion anyways as matching fingerprints isn't a trivial exercise and would slow any port crossings to a crawl) to great humor. Maybe repetition will make it true.

    It's amazing how Europe has taken a dozen plus countries with wildly different histories and values, merged them into the European Union, and you can travel uninhibited throughout the entire entity. People like you would go nuts over this.

    However I'm most certainly not angry about the US fingerprinting or taking pictures : It truly is their prerogative (personally I think it's a good measure from an immigration control perspective, though it has absolutely zilch to do with avoiding terrorism). Also the parent poster indicated no displeasure with the US fingerprinting. This all started with a classic jab at Canada, which is so common in these parts. The only reason countries like Brazil got angry is that they weren't in the "exclusion" list.

    Thanks for the Mad Cow disease too. Notice how we're being big about it?

    Oh how I knew that this would pop up. Absolutely classic (just like how Ontario was to blame for the blackout...It's always those damn foreigners! Oops, it was actually Ohio.) Here's the funny thing: The beef industry in North America is totally integrated, and has been for decades, yet when `Canada' got a case of mad cow (which we got via some cows imported from Britain [with shipments shared with the US], yet strangely I've never seen a righteous Canadian railing against those damn Brits -- biological entities are the world's children) the US slammed the door shut as fast as it could because it was some great posturing to get around WTO rules while patting US cattlemen (such as Texans) on the back. When the US got mad cow, we banned a couple of basic products but didn't shut our border, and actually petitioned other world traders to be more reasonable this time. What does the US do? Attempt to pretend that the cow is actually Canada's problem (all while recalling meat because of a horrendously risky lack of basic food safety). How absurd. It is entirely conceivable (and debatable) that the whole source of this issue came from a US cow at the outset, and there is a festering latent mad cow issue in the US (given the total lack of effective guards against against it).

    Blaming mad cow on Canada is like the asswipe who tries to assign a chain of blame everytime he gets a cold: The guy that everyone wants to punch in the face.
  • Re:Here's why. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by radish ( 98371 ) on Wednesday January 07, 2004 @01:13AM (#7900223) Homepage
    As for the 28 countries, I suspect these countries share fingerprint data with the US already

    I'm british, therefore a citizen of one of the magic 28 countries. The UK government doesn't feel a need to fingerprint me. They have no biometric records on me to share with anyone. However, the US government has decided that they need a fingerprint from me, regardless of the fact that I hold a valid visa, have passed a number of vetting procedures and have no criminal record. So I got zapped at immigration. Yes I could have refused and been sent back on the next plane (after what I'm sure would have been a really nice interview) but seeing as I live here in NYC that's not a very realistic option. As a resident of the US I don't feel one bit safer knowing these checks are in place - they're utterly meaningless unless you are preparing for a complete 1984 style total awarness police state. Which leads me to believe that is exactly what is being planned. Which in turn leads me to feel a lot less comfortable about being here. So maybe I should have refused...
  • by mr100percent ( 57156 ) * on Wednesday January 07, 2004 @01:13AM (#7900224) Homepage Journal
    If the INS had done its job, and deported them in the proper fashion, 9/11 wouldn't have happened. If the FBI had properly done its job (as Bush alleges, shifting the blame from him), 9/11 wouldn't have happened. If Israel had handed over Mossad data to the US, 9/11 wouldn't have happened.

    All these new laws wouldn't change 9/11. Stronger cockpit doors can.

  • Re:How about.... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Charlotte ( 16886 ) on Wednesday January 07, 2004 @01:15AM (#7900240)
    "Security"? How's that going to help? You just may be able to prevent a single person from being murdered by erecting walls around them (read: the president) but how are you going to protect an entire country?

    Don't you see that something else is wrong here? For one, maybe the US shouldn't be training terrorists like Osama Bin laden, the world would already be safer then.

    So stop nagging about security, get your head out of your ass, and start thinking about why this trrorism is taking place.. It's just a symptom of a bigger issue and digging trenches or shutting your eyes to reality (and calling it 'security') is not going to help.

    What we need is open minds to face the world of tomorrow. Not a reactionary, "we are better than the rest so it's okay for us to kill other people" and then expect that everyone will like you for it.

    I won't call you a moron because I don't want to offend real morons.
  • What's this? (Score:2, Insightful)

    by webtre ( 717698 ) <webtre@nOspaM.hotmail.com> on Wednesday January 07, 2004 @01:15AM (#7900242) Homepage Journal
    If the plans by the US Office of Homeland Security come through, I won't be able to fly over to the USA with my brand new EU passport without submitting my fingerprints and/or retinal scan with the visa. The new passports will, at the request of the beforementioned office, have to feature digital biometric information that will be fed to a federal database.

    I will not submit to this.
  • by radish ( 98371 ) on Wednesday January 07, 2004 @01:20AM (#7900266) Homepage
    What? (a) Why do I care what Howard Dean thinks? (who is he anyway?). I think what I think (I agree it is pointless and a waste of time and money). (b) better safe than sorry? why not just close all the borders? Why not shoot non-us citizens on sight? They'd both help the war on terror. You might actually stop a terrorist that way.

    The fingerprinting hardly takes any time whatsoever, and early reports are even showing that it speeds up the process because the guys who check you out don't have to worry that some of you are unidentified, since your already all verified... er' somethin' like that.


    I don't think anyone cares about the delay. It was very quick. As all good privacy removing procedures should be. How would you feel if they decided that all citizens must be fingerprinted? If you're ok with that then fair enough, otherwise you're just being xenophobic. And as for using it as ID, that's pretty pointless. When I was fingerprinted at immigration the other day it was the first time in my life i'd been printed. So what exactly were they comparing it with? Nothing. They were taking it to build up a database of potentially useful data on foreign citizens. I'm sure they'll find something nefarious to do with it soon.
  • DNA Registry (Score:3, Insightful)

    by silentbozo ( 542534 ) on Wednesday January 07, 2004 @01:30AM (#7900313) Journal
    Just wait until all incoming visitors to the US must submit DNA as part of the recordkeeping. After all, we wouldn't want any visitors committing crimes, and then leaving the country wihout someway of tying physical evidence to the ingress/egress record, right? Next step after that is to have all US citizens leaving the country submit DNA as well... just in case you're leaving because you're on the run. We'll just have to screen it against all current open crimes...

    Once this registry with very current info is established, expect everyone from the left to the right to start mining it - late on your car payments? Exit visa DENIED. Forget to turn in your library books on time? DENIED.

    At a certain point in the future, you'd better have your papers in order when travelling from Chicago to LA...

    An unjust peace is preferable to the most righteous of wars. - Cicero.

    Even peace may be purchased at too high a price - Benjamin Franklin .

    (I just read those two quotes together in a book VERY recently, and they stuck in my head. Does anyone remember what book it is??? Arrgh!)
  • by Animats ( 122034 ) on Wednesday January 07, 2004 @01:35AM (#7900343) Homepage
    Not much has happened for several years now, after all. Terrorism deaths never came close to equalling deaths from drunk driving, industrial accidents related to safety violations, medical errors, AIDS. Not even in 2001. Economically, corporate fraud is a far bigger problem than terrorism.

    The US has dealt with the problem. bin Laden was at one point Minister of Defense of Afghanistan. Right before the US crushed that government flat. No country is going to tolerate "terrorist training camps" aimed at the US for years to come.

    So lighten up already. Yes, there will be incidents in future. But they'll probably come from some completely different direction, like the Oklahoma City bombing, which was done by 100% Americans. We'll have to deal with that when it comes.

    With all these Orange Alerts recently ("They're going to attack on Xmas - no, New Years - in Rapahannock County - no, LA - no, Vegas") it's beginning to look like al Queda is down to a couple of guys mouthing off to get attention.

  • Re: Orwellian... (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Black Parrot ( 19622 ) on Wednesday January 07, 2004 @01:37AM (#7900351)


    > Just put them by the doors, and away from crowds, idealy they could set up security checkpoints outside of the terminals

    The biggest crowds are at the security checkpoints. Your suggestion merely moves the target.

  • by cehardin ( 163989 ) on Wednesday January 07, 2004 @01:48AM (#7900405)
    I googled and found no references to the *administration* being aware that two of the hijackers were al Qaeda. I did find lot's of reports about the *CIA* knowing this, but apparently did not pass the information on to the FBI or anyone else who could have done something to perhaps prevent 9/11. (These news reports came out at around July, 2002).

    When we read about the things we have to remember that hindsight is 20/20. Sure, we can link these two possible alQaeda members to 9/11 now, *after the fact*, but it probably was not clear at all what these suspected al Qaeda members where doing at the time.

    Don't forget the key word here: "Suspected". Back then the FBI was pretty limited on what it could do about a "suspected al Qaeda member". Those words did not have the same impact then as they do today.

  • by mr100percent ( 57156 ) * on Wednesday January 07, 2004 @01:56AM (#7900473) Homepage Journal
    OUR ENEMIES AT HOME
    Daniel Levistas, New York Times, 12/13/03
    http://www.nytimes.com/2003/12/13/opinio n/13LEVI.h tml

    In April, as Baghdad fell and American soldiers began searching for weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, federal officials uncovered a cache of deadly chemicals much closer to home - in the eastern Texas town of Noonday. The stockpile included a fully functional sodium cyanide bomb capable of killing hundreds, as well as neo-Nazi and antigovernment literature, illegal weapons, half a million rounds of ammunition, and more than 100 explosives, including bombs disguised as suitcases.

    William Krar, a 62-year-old manufacturer of gun parts and a right-wing extremist who had rented the storage locker in which the cache was found, has pleaded guilty in federal court to possessing a chemical weapon and faces a possible life sentence. Two others - Judith L. Bruey, Mr. Krar's companion, and Edward Feltus, a member of a parmilitary group called the New Jersey Militia - are awaiting sentencing.

    An isolated incident involving a few Americans on the far-right fringe? Most people probably assume so, but federal authorities served more than 150 subpoenas in the case, and are still searching for others who may have been involved.

    The Noonday case shows just how serious a threat we face from domestic terrorists. Consider this year's other high-profile incident involving rightist causes: the arrest of Eric Rudolph, accused of bombing abortion clinics and the 1996 Olympics. During his five years in the wilderness, he was often viewed by the public and press as a lone fugitive. But law enforcement officials have linked him to two national movements: the Army of God, a biblically inspired underground network of anti-abortion extremists; and the Christian Identity movement, whose members believe that Jews are the literal children of Satan, nonwhites are sub-human, and that Anglo-Saxon Christians are the true descendants of the lost tribes of Israel...
  • by Kaboom13 ( 235759 ) <kaboom108@bellsou[ ]net ['th.' in gap]> on Wednesday January 07, 2004 @02:34AM (#7900686)
    Yeah cause Bush was so responsible, considering he was sworn into office on January 20th of that year. That early into the administration all the previous administration's methods were still in place. The job of preventing the World Trade Center attacks fell on the CLinton administration. They knew there were terrorists out there gunning for the U.S., and issued some travel advisiories etc. They did nothing to beef up security. And in the end, it's neither Clinton nor Bush's fault. It's the terrorist's fault. In hindsight it's easy to say we could have stopped them. But the reality of the issue is that the people responsible were the men who woke up that morning with the intention of hijacking planes and killing as many people as they could.
  • by Malcontent ( 40834 ) on Wednesday January 07, 2004 @02:45AM (#7900758)
    "Uhm, the security alert being Orange is the system in action, not a failure of a system. When's the last time you saw a terrorist attack on American soil? 9/11/01? Well, then, the system's working as far as anyone can measure."

    Yes but you are attributing this effect to the wrong cause. You see on 9/11 I found a weird shaped coin on the street. I then said to myself "as long as I have this coin in my pocket no further terrorist attacks will occur on US soil". As you well know since that time there have been no attacks on US soil so it's working as far as anyone can measure.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday January 07, 2004 @03:22AM (#7900923)
    Clever but unrelated to anything.

    If you once had an elephant on your lawn and pepper made it go away and there were rogue elephants roaming your neighborhood and you were told by an elephant expert to pepper your lawn to ward off elephants, then you might have a point.

    But you don't.

    Nice try.
  • by Sean Clifford ( 322444 ) on Wednesday January 07, 2004 @03:25AM (#7900936) Journal
    I grew up during the Cold War and my family was deployed in Europe (pre-NATO Spain con mucho anti-NATO, anti-American, pro-Communist sentiment) during Reagan's first administration. On the way to the base schools, we passed through two checkpoints with identity checks by machinegun toting jackoffs (Spanish at the 1st, American at the 2nd) and mirrors run under the bus (1st, sometimes both), often dogs through it for good measure (only 2nd). They said they were looking for 'drugs' but we knew they were looking out for bombs.

    There were several terrorist incidents when we were stationed overseas - I witnessed one, my family avoided one thanks to our chronically late mother (Thanks, Mom!), and some escaped Basque nationalists stole our car (that was not fun). Three in three years if you discount the occassional ass-beating by local teens who hated Americans (well, us anyway), a riot (my bad), and the consequences of unwise activities by myself and fellow American teens (often misguided patriotism or plain mischief).

    Nevertheless, the other 99.5% of the time we were as safe and sound as bugs in a rug, living in a great country with kind and friendly people, immersed in a rich culture, surrounded by millennia of history, and had a fantastic time. Those are the times that I remember and cherish - going to the Prado, walking through El Escorial, marveling at the Valley of the Fallen, visiting the tombs of Saints, roaming through ancient castles, seeing the Hanging Gardens, touching Queen Isabella's jewelry box (it was about the size of my Shuttle XPC), meeting Queen Sofia...and tons more great experiences.

    Even at the height of tensions between American military folks and Spanish civilians (during the biological warfare accident/linseed oil poisoning of olive oil) we - the Americans - were never subject to the invasive 'security checks' foreign visitors experience coming to the United States.

    Fast forward exactly 20 years from January of 1984 (when we settled into our new stateside duty station)...

    The Patriot Act I and II, fingerprint scanning, CAP fighter and Apache patrols over American cities, "orange" terrorist alerts, "war on terrorism" with ever-shifting definitions of "terrorist", jailing of American citizens without charge for years, propoganda in American media ---

    After one terrorist incident in three years (albeit a terrible one) wrecking the peaceful tranquility of the nation's daily domestic tragedies, America is moving toward a police state. Even as hopping Spain was with machinegun toting Spanish military dudes and several terrorist incidents (bombings, shootings, mass poisonings), 99.5% of the time everything was cool and there wasn't nearly the level of hysterical anti-democratic overreaction we've seen here in the United States. Nobody got on TV to talk about how terribly vulnerable to terrorism we were; everyone knew it. Nobody went out to fingerprint, track, and data-mine everyone in the world - you just needed proper ID; match face to picture and signature to signature.

    All the security in the world isn't going to stop terrorism; just ask Israel - it probably has the best-trained and equipped security forces on the face of the planet. By their own figures they stop 90% of suicide bombers, but nobody can stop them all. The Palestinian resistance has demonstrated its capability to carry out a 'successful' bombing on a daily basis - killing a dozen or more civilians and wounding scores - terrorizing millions.

    Even if we could wall up everything, put cops on every street corner, monitor and surveille whoever we wished - we cannot stop terrorism, not without addressing the root cause that motivates people to kill themselves and a bunch of people. And I'm not talking religion here.

    I'm talking a sane foreign policy that doesn't make enemies out of everyone we walk over or steal from to 'protect our national interests' - or enemies of the 'friends and allies' with whom we used to divvy up the spoils.

    Instead, we need a policy that simultaneously roots out genuine terrorists while helping those who have a legitimate beef with us for having trampled all over them. We need to focus on reducing the environment that breeds terrorists and terrorism, not fueling it.

  • by Monkelectric ( 546685 ) <[moc.cirtceleknom] [ta] [todhsals]> on Wednesday January 07, 2004 @03:44AM (#7901005)
    Programs like this are corporate welfare handed out to large Bush campaign contributors. There's no other possible explination. Almost 30 exempt countries? What sense does that make! None! Unless the real point never was to catch terrorists. And how would fingerprints catch terrorists anyways? No one can answer that question ... hmmmm ....
  • by kmichels ( 161476 ) <konrad AT michels DOT co DOT uk> on Wednesday January 07, 2004 @04:42AM (#7901216)
    Looking at all this ruckus about fingerprinter etc from a European (UK) perspective, and having spent 30 years of my life before that in South Africa, I think that all these measures are nothing more than a Dog & Pony show: smoke and mirrors . ..

    In the bad old days of South African Apartheid, the white government legislated all kinds of things, pumped millions into the security forces, and spent huge chunks of the budget on trying to prevent attacks by "terrorists" from the banned liberation organisations such as the ANC and PAC. What good did that do? Sweet blue blow-all. All it did was challenge those organisations to be more creative about infiltrating their cadre's and hitmen & women into society, and the bombings continued, as did the agitation. Leaders of these organisations were identified and incarcerated, to no avail. It just didn't work, despite the fact that it turned the country into a police state.

    Likewise, there is SBFA that the American administration can do to prevent determined terrorists from getting into the country and committing acts of terrorism - nothing at all. Personally, if I were an American citizen, I'd be protesting about the pointless waste of my tax dollars.

    The only way the USA can make itself less of a target, is to change its arrogant attitude toward the rest of the world: realise that not everyone wants to live like an average American, and not everyone defines freedom and democracy in the same way as the USA does. In the same way that the freedom movements in South Africa were rebelling against the arrogant tyrany of the white government, who considered its world-view to be normative, there are nations out there who see the USA's attitude in much the same light.

    I don't in any way condone the use of violence as a means of protest, and what happenned on 911 was just not on, not for any reason, but once again drawing a parallel with what happened in apartheid South Africa: put yourself in the shoes of the average oppressed black man for just a moment. Your back is to the wall: there's no more room for manuever. What option do you have but to resort to violence? Especially if that is all the government understands?

    In this respect the USA (and Tony Blah) is supremely guilty: the WMD ruse was just an excuse to use an option that should have been an absolute last resort. What options do those nations have where the USA and other western nations have interfered but to resort to violence?
  • Oh dear. (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Khamura ( 664892 ) on Wednesday January 07, 2004 @04:50AM (#7901246)
    Didn't they know about how easy it is to fool fingerprint systems [theregister.co.uk]?
  • by fuzzybunny ( 112938 ) on Wednesday January 07, 2004 @05:12AM (#7901325) Homepage Journal

    "If you don't like having anal probes inserted at police checkpoints to make sure you're not a butt-bomb carrying terrorist, then don't stay".

    Do you realize how absurd this is?

    "If you don't like it, don't come" is as silly a statement as "if you don't like the U.S. of A., go somewhere else, ya freakin' commie."

    I'm an American, living overseas. I have family in the US. They're about the only thing right now keeping me from sending back my US passport, whether I'm "allowed" to forfeit my citizenship (I have another) or not.

    And as for Brazilians picking on Americans, I say go for it. Pick on anybody pale-faced, carrying a fanny pack and speaking in a nasal whiney voice. Maybe that'll make people realize how pointless, intrusive and stupid this sort of thing is.

    Bad troll, no donut.
  • Oaklahoma (Score:3, Insightful)

    by boogy nightmare ( 207669 ) on Wednesday January 07, 2004 @06:11AM (#7901515) Homepage
    How many international Terrorists does it take to blow up the Oaklahoma Building ??

    Whats the point in being paranoid about all the strange and foreign people when your school kids blow the crap out of each other and your own people do just as much terrorism with in their own borders ???
  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday January 07, 2004 @07:20AM (#7901678)
    > This is reciprocity for reciprocity's sake and nothing more.

    Don't like it when other people treat Americans as Americans treat other people? You think that's wrong? Let me guess - you're an American, right?
  • Re:How about.... (Score:1, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday January 07, 2004 @09:35AM (#7902179)
    Yes, Bin Laden at the time was a freedom fighter. I wonder what the Soviets called him?

    There's a fine line between terrorist and freedom fighter and the line is drawn depending on who's being blown up.

    Freedom fighters don't just blow up military targets. They also blow up things that would adversely effect the military, such as power stations, which also effect civilian lives.

    It's the same skill set for a terrorist.
  • by Chris Burke ( 6130 ) on Wednesday January 07, 2004 @01:18PM (#7903824) Homepage
    Which is all I know, so I welcome more thorough and educated analysis. :)

    It's a variant on the strategy used in the "prisoner's dilemna"*. In that game, and here, you have a choice to make and so does your opponent. You can choose to try to benefit only yourself at the expense of your opponent, but if your opponent does the same you both suffer. If you cooperate, you both get some benefit, but less than if you choose to take and your opponent chooses to cooperate.

    How do you get to the cooperative state? If you volunteer to cooperate, your opponent can take advantage of you. You have to discourage them from taking the larger reward. The solution is to do whatever they did last, every time. If they cooperate, you start to do as well. If they don't, you don't next time. If your opponent is also rational (a huge assumption in game theory, which is why it's theory :P) then eventually you will settle into a mutually beneficial cooperative state.

    So yeah, if Brazil's goal is to get the USA to stop fingerprinting, then this is a decent strategy. Not that it will work (see parenthetical about the assumptions of game theory :P).

    I wonder what would happen if we did this with everything? What if we killed 3,000 of the Taliban and then stopped? What if, instead of bulldozing a village after a cafe bombing, Israel stopped after they'd killed the twenty or so militants needed to match the number dead? What message would it send? No, it would never work. There's more going on than a single binary decision. There are too many varied interests involved on both sides for them to resist the temptation to try to grab more for themselves. But once again, that's why it's theory!

    * Ironically, the strategy does no good in the actual "prisoner's dilemna" situation, since it only works on repeated instances of the same choice.
  • Re:Bush was warned (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Scratch-O-Matic ( 245992 ) on Wednesday January 07, 2004 @04:08PM (#7905615)
    The system is that if at any time a plane flies out of its designated flight path it has 10 minutes to make radio contact before F18s are scrambled and are sent to take the plane down. The orders to scramble the planes come directly from the Pentagon, and to stop them from lifting off would take a direct order from someone very high up.

    Take it from someone who flew military jets for 8 years, and who has owned and flown private aircraft: this statement is an out-and-out falsehood. It's so utterly lacking in any foundation that I will forego my usual detailed debate and state simply: IT. IS. CRAP. Any conclusion derived from this falsehood is also crap.

    As for the rest of your analysis, I can sum it up this way: intelligence, security, and law enforcement are more about trends than absolutes. Ask yourself: Do burglar alarms prevent burglaries? Do seatbelts prevent traffic fatalities? Do police officers prevent crime? The answer to each, of course, is no, but a clear-thinking observer can see that each provides a move in the direction of the desired end.

  • Re:Bush was warned (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Scratch-O-Matic ( 245992 ) on Wednesday January 07, 2004 @06:32PM (#7907379)
    Yet you seem to be implying that because you were a pilot for 8 years you know every security measure in place. Were you just a pilot, what was your rank that you presume to know know so much?

    I flew tactical jets, the EA-6B. I was one of three radar-jamming-guys, and there was one pilot. In that jet, the ECMO, me, does all the radio talking and coordination with agencies in flight. I spent most of my time in North Carolina, so I did quite a bit of flying in and around the coast, the ADIZ, and the capital area, talking all the while to approach control, military controllers, and the air traffic control centers. For the last 4 years my duties, in addition to flying, included training other aviators to plan large scale missions, including coordination with other services, intelligence agencies, and foreign nations.

    Your computer engineer and Norton analogy is a good one, and I would never claim that I know everything about any subject, but the military aviation community is not that big, and anyone who spends any serious time in it, as I did, will be exposed to most aspects of the various missions and organizations. A more apt analogy would be working as a network engineer at a large company for 8 years, then having someone who had never worked there tell you about a "standard procedure" at that company.

    But, as I said, I would never claim to know everything about anything, and my jet would never have the mission of intercepting a wayward aircraft, so I looked for some hard print to share with you. And do you know what I found? Page after page after page of claims, many of them verbatim copies of each other, that "standard procedures and regulations" hadn't been followed. But there was not one official source of those procedures or regulations. Not a single one. It has become one of those "facts" that is "self-evident" to everyone who wants to believe it, because they see it all over the place. But it's all the same unfounded crap. Mind you, there are definitely procedures for dealing with uncommunicative aircraft. But launching an armed alert aircraft within ten minutes is not one of them (or wasn't on 9-11, at least.) If you want to see about the cost of real security, look into keeping armed alert aircraft ready to go.

So you think that money is the root of all evil. Have you ever asked what is the root of money? -- Ayn Rand

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