Passenger Risk Database to be Implemented in U.S. 510
bluephile writes "CNN is running an article on the The Transport Security Administration's (TSA) renewed efforts to implement the CAPPS II color-coded passenger risk-assessment program, despite outcries by numerous privacy activism groups at the program's collection and redistribution of personal information. The TSA has made several claims that the system respects passengers' privacy, but their track record isn't impressive. Congress suspended the program last year in order to investigate its privacy implications. One MIT paper suggests that CAPPS II could make flying MORE dangerous, rather than less."
What's the point? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:What's the point? (Score:5, Insightful)
Initially after 11 September, people were afraid to fly, so the government did everything possible to save the airline industry by providing the appearance of security. Now we're reaching the point where the added security is discouraging people from flying, so the government is looking for new ways of handling security. Unfortunately, they don't understand that it's not just a matter of how much time the checkpoints take, but the overall feeling of being treated as a suspect. Also, the people in the new DoHS want to feel important, so they want to have new security measures to show that they're doing something.
Re:What's the point? (Score:3)
The point isn't to improve security. The point is to get re-elected.
Re:What's the point? (Score:4, Informative)
As soon as the passengers of Flight 93 found out what was going on (thank god for cell phones), they jumped the terrorists and undoubtedly prevented more death and destruction.
As soon passangers on Flight 63 noticed Richard Reid trying to light his shoe on fire, he was jumped, pinned, and prevented an explosion which most likely would have killed everyone on board.
The terrorists got their free shot. It's not going to be so easy next time.
Re:What's the point? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:What's the point? (Score:2)
As the Daily Show recommended (Score:5, Funny)
Re:As the Daily Show recommended (Score:3, Funny)
2. Airline publishes this fact
3. Airline raises prices for people who want to see naked celebrity
4. Idiots buy tickets
5. Profit!
Re:As the Daily Show recommended (Score:3, Funny)
Two words: Terrorist Robots.
Re:As the Daily Show recommended (Score:2)
I can see this increasing gym memberships. Everyone would be hitting the gym 2 months before their flight.
Oooh, Color-Coded!!! (Score:5, Funny)
Color Coded, eh? Now I can sleep easier at night, knowing I am protectected by a color coded system. I wonder if this will be about as useless as our fabled Homeland Security "Orange Alerts"?
Re:Oooh, Color-Coded!!! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Oooh, Color-Coded!!! (Score:2)
Re:Oooh, Color-Coded!!! (Score:2)
Re:Oooh, Color-Coded!!! (Score:2, Insightful)
It also allows Bush and Fox News to label anyone criticizing the system "weak on national security issues" and therefore "not presidential" for the next election.
Thanks Mr Ridge, may I have another?
Re:Oooh, Color-Coded!!! (Score:4, Interesting)
In order for this to be as useless as the Homeland Security system, they'd need to ground all airplanes every time someone gets red-flagged. The Homeland Security system is so broad in its effects, every time the security level is raised, police throughout the country, even in places terrorists couldn't care less about, need to put in overtime guarding pointless "targets". For example, a village with a population of 50 in the middle of Wyoming would be required to have a full-time guard on the water tower!
Re:Oooh, Color-Coded!!! (Score:5, Interesting)
Great example. That reminds me of something I found interesting. Earlier this year, I got in a conversation with someone that worked for the Oklahoma Department of Transportation whose job became miserable because of these terror alerts. Every time one came down the wire, they had to send crews out to every major overpass in Oklahoma every hour as well as performing mass inspections over all the major roads in the state every single day. Everyone there had to work overtime all the time to keep all that going for every alert. The alerts became so frequent and proved to be so pointless that the entire department actually started deliberately ignoring the warnings because it cost them SO much time, effort money to respond to them while other, more important things weren't getting done.
Prediction: journalists critical of Bush will (Score:2, Insightful)
If they didn't hate America they wouldn't be on the list.
Foreign journalists are already being harrased. (Score:2)
D'oh! (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Prediction: journalists critical of Bush will (Score:3, Informative)
Well then they can join the peace activists already stuck in the airport waiting lounge. TSA's No-Fly Blacklist [commondreams.org]
Only for one flight... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Only for one flight... (Score:2)
I'm not going to fly. I've got too much stuff that the luggage screeners would object to -- if they were paying attention.
errr ? another paper? (Score:2)
Silly admins! (Score:2)
Last two links both lead to the same page!
Proofreading is optional in internet journalism, apparently.
That's it! No more planes for me (Score:3, Funny)
--
This sig has a bad credit report
This is just ONE of the reasons I don't fly. (Score:3, Interesting)
I've had it with the airline industry and their rather poor attempt at feel-good security (which isn't security at all). I have no intention of becoming part of the grand experiment of how an agency or company can screw up and compromise my financial records and my privacy even more. I simply will not be their guinea pig.
The more complex they make these systems, the more points of failure they add.
I'm lucky in that I'm at a job that doesn't require me to fly, and anywhere I need to reach in North America, I can do so with my car. Properly planned without a panic-timeframe schedule, such trips can actually be enjoyable, in and of themselves.
Re:This is just ONE of the reasons I don't fly. (Score:3, Funny)
You obviously have no need to drive to L.A. then, eh?
Re:This is just ONE of the reasons I don't fly. (Score:5, Insightful)
So what will you when every toll road you travel on by car passes your travel details automatically to law enforcement based on your license plate? Or when one day every intersection has a camera collecting this kind of information? Or when there's a camera doing face recognition on every street corner, evaluating whether you are a terrorist or not? Will you just stay at home all day? I think a more proactive stance is needed here. Just boycotting the airline industry is not going to do much at all.
Getting the general public to understand the privacy implications of these systems so they stop voting for people that put them in place is probably a lot more effective.
Re:This is just ONE of the reasons I don't fly. (Score:3)
Shhhhh!!! The "terrorists" might read this!!!
Fax your legislators! (Score:4, Informative)
Click here [aclu.org] to do something about this.
CHECK YOUR CREDIT SCORE BEFORE YOU FLY (Score:5, Funny)
Idiocy (Score:4, Insightful)
I don't know how you'd even begin to come up with such data. But if you can't figure out how much of a risk each passenger actually was, how can you see whether this correlates with the risk score CAPPS spits out? As far as I can see, this massive breach of passenger confidentiality will do nothing to test the efficacy of CAPPS.
(As far as I know, no terrorist acts have been committed on JetBlue, so all passengers who have flown on JetBlue should have been given the "Green" CAPPS rating. Hence once they feed this passenger data through CAPPS, it better spit out low risk for everybody. Otherwise, this profiling obviously isn't working.)
Credit reports? (Score:3, Insightful)
Credit reports? Yes, I'll admit it, I got my car payment in the mail late last February. Is that really a sign that I'm part of an Al-Qaeda hijacking conspiracy?
Re:Credit reports? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Credit reports? (Score:2)
So you mean if I choose to live my life 'offline', I'm now a security risk? You mean if I'm a teenager or in my early 20s and haven't bought anything of significant value (in terms of that which would require credit application), then I'm a terrorist? Personally, I don't have much credit at all. I'm in my 20s, haven't bought a home, have paid cash for all three cars I've owned, and don't use credit cards. Please explain why stopping me and the tens of tho
Re:Credit reports? (Score:3, Interesting)
Like if you are 40 years old, and you have a credit report that shows you never taking a loan or having an account balance, that would be unusual.
If you have had a house mortgage for the last 20 years, that would lower your score.
Re:Credit reports? (Score:2, Interesting)
If they pull a credit report for each ticket, then personally I prefer a luggage search over a higher interest rate. Otherwise it makes those airplane tickets rather expensive...
But I haven't seen a confirmation yet that they are actually pulling a credit report from one of 'the three'. Maybe they're using an intermediate company that collects copies o
Re:Credit reports? (Score:2)
So what if I'm a student? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:So what if I'm a student? (Score:2)
Re:So what if I'm a student? (Score:2)
Now, try imagining you meet those three criteria and also have semetic features and an Arab or muslim name.
Re:So what if I'm a student? (Score:4, Insightful)
> 2.I pay cash because I can get a discount
> 3.I buy a one way ticket because I wont be returning until I have earned enough money to afford a return journey
>
> Will I be barred from travel? I think I might. At the very least I'm likely to be detained for further questioning.
If it were up to me, "no". Your profile (low income, student, poor credit history) is consistent with each other and with the profile of law-abiding people who purchase one-way tickets with cash. Shit happens to good folks, and if you're buying a last-minute one-way ticket with cash, it's probably because that's the only way you're going to be able to afford your trip.
I'm on the opposite end of that scale. Middle-class income, well-documented employment history, great credit rating. If I showed up at an airline counter asking for a one-way ticket and paying with cash, I'd fully expect the royal treatment, up to and including the body cavity search. Because the act of paying cash for a one-way ticket is inconsistent with everything else in my profile. So if I buy a last-minute one-way ticket with cash, I'm probably trying to hide something.
The right thing to do in all cases (credit card, round-trip, cash, or one-way) is to ask questions like "When will you be returning?" "Where are you going?" "What are you doing there?" "Who are you meeting there?" "How will you be returning?" Maybe a few "control" questions there like "what's the weather like in $CITY" or "What's going on in $CITY?" - the interrogator doesn't have to know the answer to any of the questions, he/she is merely looking for evasive behavior in the face of the target.
Odds are that you'll have a much better set of answers ("Dude! I need a discount to see my aunt in Peoria and I'll get the money to get back from her! Haven't you ever had to do that before? And the Hot Rawk Dawgz are teh UBER Peoria bar band! Whaddya mean you've never heard of HRD? Go to hotrawkdawgz.com, they've got MP3z there an' everything!") than I will.
("Umm, I... I'm seeing... uh, my... friend... yeah, friend, we're gonna see the... Eiffel Tower! What? The Eiffel Tower's not in Peoria?! But my girlfriend has a dildo shaped just li-oh, shit, that slipped, look, my wife's gonna kill me, she thinks I'm traveling on company business, just get me on the goddamn plane, willya?")
End result: We both get to go to Peoria. But any astute observer would have realized that I was lying long before I even slipped up and mentioned the Eiffel Tower.
The problem with the system as envisioned is that it still requires an astute observer. The drone at the ticket counter certainly doesn't qualify. And I'm afraid that most of the TSA folks don't qualify either.
I hope that the interrogators for folks who do match the enemy's profile, are trained to detect evasiveness.
Re:So what if I'm a student? (Score:5, Insightful)
Why? The right to travel is a fundamental liberty. To be subject to interrogation and invasive searchs is contrary to every principle upon which this nation was founded.
"So if I buy a last-minute one-way ticket with cash, I'm probably trying to hide something."
Where is it written that you must purchase a ticket at a certain time in a certain way? By the way, did it ever occurr to you that Al Qaeda or other similar groups could easily defeat this by using a high-interest credit card to purchase the ticket in advance? The fact that some have done it one way doesn't mean that all have or will. What will you do if terrorists change their buying patterns? Let the cash-paying people on fast so you have plenty of time to strip-search the people who bought tickets in advance with credit cards? Brilliant idea.
"ask questions like"
[TSA Lackey]: "When will you be returning?"
[Me]: "Whenever I feel like it."
[TSA Lacket]: "Where are you going?"
[Me]: "If it were any of your business, I'd tell you to look at the ticket. But it's not, so I won't."
[TSA Lackey]: "What are you doing there?"
[Me]: "Figured I'd rent some porn, jack off, maybe get a hooker or two. What the hell business is it of your's what I do in my personal life, on my personal time?"
[TSA Lackey]: "Who are you meeting there?"
[Me]: "Tony Blair and Pope John Paul the second. Again, your question is irrelevant, invasive, and pointless."
[TSA Lackey]: "How will you be returning?"
[Me]: (Getting pissed off)"By row boat."
[TSA Lackey]: "what's the weather like in $CITY"
[Me]: "Don't know, I can't see that far. Why don't you try checking the Weather Channel instead of bugging me."
"I hope that the interrogators for folks who do match the enemy's profile, are trained to detect evasiveness."
Enemy's profile? And just what would that be? John Walker Lindh was a young, suburban, American white male. Osama bin Ladin is an older male Arab. The guys who tried to bring bombs into the US to blow things up during the Y2K celebrations were middle-aged Algerians. So let's see, the enemy is either black, white, or brown - is either American, African, or Middle Eastern - is either young, middle-aged, or older - are we getting the picture yet? What's the profile? What does my enemy look like? What language does my enemy speak? English? German? Arabic? All of the above? What's the profile?
You want a better solution to the problems? Let's see, how about we search ALL baggage that's going on to an airplane with good, sound bomb, chemical, and weapons detection devices. Ones with possible problem materials or ones that cannot be properly scanned can be pulled aside for further analysis, including hand searches where required. All baggage is tied to a particular individual, with a thumbprint stamped on the tags for the bag at the counter, like what many banks are now doing with checks. (Basically, you put your thumb on an ink pad, then roll your print onto a spot on the tag). The print would not be taken digitally, and would be used only to verify a bag's owner should there be a problem with the baggage. All passengers must go through a metal detector. Qualified, well-trained security personnel man every terminal. All entrances to the tarmac are monitored 24/7. All airport personnel must undergo background screenings. Those that fail to meet certain minimum requirements are removed immediately. All cockpits are equiped with thick, steel doors that cannot be opened during flight. A simple pressure sensor located somewhere on the plane, in an unreachable(during flight) location could determine the plane's status. Well-trained air marshals travel with every flight, with one visible and one or more in plain clothes.
Does this guarantee safety? No, but neither does any
3 Cheers for Senseless Panic! (Score:2, Insightful)
And what will the mantra be this time? "Be suspicious of the red-banded cohorts... but don't change your plans." Just like the "Terrorism Alert Level"; be nice
Re:3 Cheers for Senseless Panic! (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:3 Cheers for Senseless Panic! (Score:2)
Flying to the US this week... (Score:3, Funny)
And yet again I will stand there while the person behind the counter asks questions repeatedly and sees 14 things on his screen that he has to check.
"Have you been involved in an armed robbery in Des Moines?"
And all of this after the green form that asks you if you are a terrorist or drug smuggler.
I know this is a moan, but really what the hell information will they ACTUALLY use to colour code people ? I have a common name, there are people with that name who have done bad things, does this mean yet more delays for me?
Color coding sounds a lot like flare (Score:2, Interesting)
Total Information Awareness (Score:3, Insightful)
What?! You said NO??
Well, give me liberty or give me death then!
This would not have stopped 9-11. Making me wait in security lines an extra hour at the airport would not have stopped 9-11. Making old ladies take their shoes off before boarding planes would not have stopped 9-11.
I know that my personal files are interesting, but I'd rather keep them private, thankyouverymuch.
Al Queda retires (Score:5, Funny)
Representatives of the Bush Administration called the mass retirement a possible ruse, and urged people to remember all the rumored attacks that might have been thwarted had Al Queda attempted any attack on U.S. soil since domestic security initiatives were put in place.
Re:Al Queda retires (Score:3, Interesting)
Al Quada by spending a few hundred thousand dollars has caused the US economy hundreds of billions of dollars. As a direct result of smashing three airplanes into three buildings then have wiped out the US surplus.
More troubling they have added untold amount of friction into the economy. The govt and commercial sector now spend enourmous amounts of money on security and background checks. Business is more risk averse. The real long term effects are no
lighten up and fly right (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:lighten up and fly right (Score:3, Insightful)
Are we going to start packing passengers into the cargo hold now? And where are these extra passengers going to come from, now that your plan has made flying even more of a hassle?
-Isaac
Problem solved: don't fly to America (Score:3, Interesting)
And hey, before you go nuts, I lived there and have very good friends there, but with the current government scenario, I no longer wish to participate in the smoke and mirror parade which is the American dream, in any respect, and thus I'm not going to the States again until it changes.
You'll see. The American flight industry will suffer from this, grandly...
Incoming possible match! (Score:5, Funny)
TIA v1.2 up and running; using SCO UnixWare.
Trace log: Started.
Trace log: Complete
As if the airlines weren't already hurting (Score:2)
Hopefully, on the positive side, now that everyone with half a brain has decided to stop flying in protest, I'll be able to get those cheap seats to Cancun! Viva La Dumbass!
Your tax dollars at work (Score:2)
For it to be feasible, the number of false positives has to be very, very low. If more than say a tenth of one percent of travellers come up "red," then it's broken.
Let's say that at any given time there are 60,000 people flying in the USA. On Sep. 11, 2001, 19 of those people, or
Here's a test that I bet will never be performed: Feed
Making changes to your color (Score:5, Interesting)
Bad, bad, BAD idea.
Since everyone here is so smart (yeah right) (Score:2)
As I read the articles about CAPPS II, or whatever this thing is called, I sense that this project is trying to rectify the excessive false red flags of the current system. Isn't that something that should be welcomed? How many of you are really so important that you need anonymity when you travel, and would be inconv
Conspiracy theory of the day! (Score:3)
We've been discussing the latest airport security measures on one of my technology mailing lists. The posts tend to be either about technical issues that need to be considered when constructing such a system or the program's implications on privacy. I think it's overly intrusive and I don't like the idea of our government aggregating all of that data on us, but one of the people on the list has taken it to the next level. She has developed a theory that the airport security measures are just one piece in a bigger scheme. According to her, the airport security system is actually a precurser to reinstating the draft. It's real purpose isn't to keep out terrorists but to prevent people of draft age from leaving the country once the legislation is passed. As soon as the draft goes into effect, all eligible citizens will be banned from international travel.
It's the queers. They're in it with the aliens. They're building landing strips for gay martians....
If You're Trying To Convince People... (Score:2)
Everyone Knows Already (Score:4, Insightful)
Except for the flight itinerary, this kind of information isn't really private. Everything is already a matter of public record. Once something is public, why worry about privacy?
reinforced doors (Score:2)
Why do we need more than this? To protect them from the guns that we have placed on the planes on purpose in the form of marshalls? Can a box cutter get through them? If not, then why do they check for them on check in? It seems that if "they" can't get to the controls, and they know it, then why would someone attempt a hijack? Even if the dumbasses did attempt a hijack, the aircraft couldn't be "commandeered" ala not getting to the cockpit,
In Soviet Russia... (Score:3, Insightful)
and determined whether you were able to travel freely within your own country.
Not funny? No, it isn't.
New Jersey uses this (Score:3, Funny)
Nothing new here, the police Already use a color coded system! [about.com]
pattern searching is really dangerous (i.e. stupid (Score:3, Insightful)
I became very familiar with the search procedure. I knew exactly when and how the search went. Being searched twice a day for 2 weeks will do that for you.
An _effective_ search strategy would have been, oh, give the guards new instructions daily like 'today, search all green cars' or 'today, check all plates beginning with '1'".
Those ('true randoms', i.e. avoiding selection bias by guards and avoiding profiling holes), a no-goodnik wouldn't be able to predict, and yet it also wouldn't hit any one person frequently that they'd be intimately familiar with (and thus able to easily circumvent) the security protocols.
So yeah, CAPS II is worse than being 'a hassle', it's a hassle that provides _worse_ security than you get without it.
Re:Orwellian, don't you think? (Score:2)
Re:Orwellian, don't you think? (Score:5, Funny)
There is no appeal. Why should there be? The system is flawless, so anyone it flags must be a terrorist! Why let terrorists waste the time of honest, upstanding American citizens with an appeal that is certain to be denied? Are you suggesting the system might be flawed? That the Government might be wrong? Are you trying to undermine the all-important War on Terrorism? Is it possible that you are in league with the terrorists? Is it possible that you are a terrorist?
Fellow Americans, we must be endlessly vigilant! Terrorist could lurk anywhere! Your next-door neighbor might be one! How well do you really know them? Is it possible they might be hiding something? That they have some dark secret?
Don't hesitate! It is better to be safe than sorry! If you see someone acting suspicious, report them to the nearest federal agent as soon as possible!
---------
Seriously, I expect the lawyers at the ACLU are already preparing their case.
Re:Orwellian, don't you think? (Score:5, Insightful)
It's not far-fetched at all.
Re:Orwellian, don't you think? (Score:3, Insightful)
In the 1950s, many people (non-communists) lived in fear of being "fingered" as communists or communist sympathizers and having their lives utterly destroyed as a result. Sometimes those fears were quite justified.
We're very fortunate that things never progressed as far as actually killing them preemptively.
I'm also not sure I understand how preemptively killing communists would constitute anything but murder and suffering.
Even if it could be justified, what abou
Re:Orwellian, don't you think? (Score:4, Funny)
You were moded as "Funny", I would've modded you as "Scary"... that is, if I had the points and there were a "Scary" mod.
Re:Orwellian, don't you think? (Score:5, Insightful)
I'd start by not making the assumption that the terrorists would be Islamic.
Re:Orwellian, don't you think? (Score:3, Insightful)
Other than McVeigh, how many terrorists who've given us trouble lately have not been Islamist headcases? Does it not make more sense for airport-security types, etc. to pay a bit more attention to Mohammed al-Bumfsckistan than to some random grandma from Des Moines?
Re:Orwellian, don't you think? (Score:3, Insightful)
I certainly wouldn't launch into an entire program of ridiculous new inspections and intrusive measures. The people that came up with this bunch of rules had something in mind far beyond protecting airline passengers and restoring confidence in the air transport system.
On September 11th, a group of determined men gained control of several American airliners and launched an unpreciden
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Orwellian, don't you think? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Orwellian, don't you think? (Score:5, Informative)
For instance, these guys [latimes.com] (use pointless as the user name and password) could have been a problem:
"Investigators found nearly 500,000 rounds of ammunition, 65 pipe bombs and briefcases that could be detonated by remote control.
Most distressing, they said, was the discovery of 800 grams of almost pure sodium cyanide -- material that can only be acquired legally for specific agricultural or military projects.
The sodium cyanide was found inside an ammunition canister, next to hydrochloric, nitric and acetic acids and formulas for making bombs. If acid were mixed with the sodium cyanide, an analysis showed, it would create a bomb powerful enough to kill everyone inside a 30,000-square-foot facility, investigators said."
And they were found almost entirely by accident.
Look, I'm not suggesting that Islamic terrorists aren't probably the biggest current threat. But don't be stupid.
Re:Orwellian, don't you think? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Orwellian, don't you think? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Orwellian, don't you think? (Score:5, Insightful)
Reinforce the cockpit doors and move on. This discussion is ridiculous. The only reason "terrorists" would even attempt the Herculean feat of getting weapons on an airliner would be to hijack it. Take that ability away by not letting them through the cockpit door. End of fucking story.
This TSA tactic is not to provide safety, but rather a new avenue for gaining information on people, because it can. "You must fear them, we will protect you." Fear breeds consent. The power gained with a fear wracked populace is enormous, and many in power realize this, or are learning. This is just the latest "avenue" for gaining information on more people, nothing more.
Re:Orwellian, don't you think? (Score:5, Interesting)
You cannot appeal it. It is only a gauge of how likely it is that you are a terrorist. You can't prove that you arn't one, and even if you arn't, the colour only represents the CHANCE that you are, not whether or not you ACTUALLY are. If you get a red, that just means you probably are according to their metrics. You can't prove that wrong.
My dad, a Canadian citizin, is a high risk flyer. Whenever he tries to come back from a conference in Portland, he has a HELL of a time getting on the plane. The reason he is on their list of terrorists? My mom's sister in Toronto is married to a guy from Lebanon. So you see, to be ranked a danger, you need only be related to somebody who is related to somebody who is related to an Arab. (And belive me, they know) To make matters worse, the LAST time he tried to get on, his luggage set off the bomb detector. Apparently, the chemical sniffer said his external CD-RW was some form of platic explosives. I knew they could be fooled by cologne, aftershave, mouthwash, deoderant, and shampoo, but apparently they can also be fooled by "new electronics smell."
Re:Orwellian, don't you think? (Score:2)
Re:closer and closer (Score:2)
What's that? Not that kind of boned? Damnit...
Re:You people are overreacting. (Score:5, Insightful)
Or as I prefer to see it, what good is life without civil liberties?
Re:You people are overreacting. (Score:3, Interesting)
It's better to die on your feet, than to live on your knees.
Re:You people are overreacting. (Score:4, Insightful)
Yeah, right.
First They Came for the Jews
First they came for the Jews
and I did not speak out
because I was not a Jew.
Then they came for the Communists
and I did not speak out
because I was not a Communist.
Then they came for the trade unionists
and I did not speak out
because I was not a trade unionist.
Then they came for me
and there was no one left
to speak out for me.
Pastor Martin Niemoller
Re:You people are overreacting. (Score:2)
Re:You people are overreacting. (Score:2)
And I did not speak out
Because I was afraid of being accused of ethnic profiling
Then they came for my neighbors
And three thousand of them
Can no longer speak at all
Then we went for the children
And dropped more bombs
But they never had a voice anyway.
Re:You people are overreacting. (Score:5, Insightful)
The more power you give to mindless morons the less is left for normal people
Re:You people are overreacting. (Score:5, Insightful)
Bullshit, the no fly list has been used to harrass (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Maybe I'm being cynical, but... (Score:3, Informative)
Impressingly, there seem to be no existing terrorists flying business class, because there are extremely relaxed checks, if at all.
Re:Maybe I'm being cynical, but... (Score:2)
"If Matlock isn't on the in-flight TV, we're all going to hell!"
Re:Maybe I'm being cynical, but... (Score:5, Insightful)
What a great idea. Let's see if we miss anyone by going with your new security system, shall we?
Timothy McVeigh [ohnonews.com]
Ted Kaczynski [crimelibrary.com]
Eric Harris [disastercenter.com]
Dylan Klebold [disastercenter.com]
George Metesky [crimelibrary.com]
David Berkowitz [spartechsoftware.com]
Jeffrey Dahmer [mugshots.org]
Perhaps a planeload of these fine, upstanding citizens is your cup of tea. Personally, I'd rather have better detection systems and better trained airport security personnel.
Re:Maybe I'm being cynical, but... (Score:2)
African-Americans were included because they get shafted no matter what.
Re:There is any easy solution to this ... (Score:2)
Time doesn't matter, only life matters (Score:2, Insightful)
Nowhere is it mentioned and nor is it possible that the 55 Million foreign visitors that enter the U.S. every year will be able to have a similar amount of data regarding their potential threat assesment be calculated as the U.S. Government doesn't have access to credit and criminal data about any of the 310 Million Europeans or the
Re:welcome to nazi germany 1945 (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:welcome to nazi germany 1945 (Score:5, Insightful)
We need to fight with the next election. Get rid of the problems.
I'm willing to take the same terrorism risk on every plane flight that I took before 9/11. Let's roll back these draconian, orwellian, nazi-esque laws.
Write your senators, write your representatives, both federal and state! Let them know that we are not willing to "buy safety" at this price! It is not worth what we are giving up!
Jim