TSA Lied About Protecting Passenger Data 613
wk633 writes "A report by Homeland Security Department Acting Inspector General Richard Skinner, said the agency misinformed individuals, the press and Congress in 2003 and 2004. It stopped short of saying TSA lied.
Bruce Schneier does say 'the TSA lied' on his blog." Scary stuff, and yet it's even scarier how little the general public has caught on.
Never (Score:4, Insightful)
That's what's really scary.
The general public is distracted... (Score:5, Insightful)
Morality-driven debate is such a powerful tool because you can, by fine-tuning the argument, get a balanced 50-50 split on just about any subject.
And so, we get the endless debates about gay weddings, about living wills, about abortion, about the "theory" of evolution, about the role of religion in public structures, and so on.
Meanwhile debate about subjects that in any open democracy would make the front pages, would bring millions onto the streets, and would topple presidents... almost totally absent.
The general public does not debate the role of the state, the yawning chasms in the democratic process, the boom in military spending, gerrymandering, government-sponsored TV "news", political prisoners, torture, the corruption of every agency meant to protect the public, the environment, the economy into an agency designed to exploit and abuse...
Give the plebians bread, and circuses, and you can pretty much do what you like.
Re:The general public is distracted... (Score:5, Interesting)
Meanwhile debate about subjects that in any open democracy would make the front pages, would bring millions onto the streets, and would topple presidents... almost totally absent.
The general public does not debate the role of the state, the yawning chasms in the democratic process, the boom in military spending, gerrymandering, government-sponsored TV "news", political prisoners, torture, the corruption of every agency meant to protect the public, the environment, the economy into an agency designed to exploit and abuse...
So, you are saying that the issues like gay weddings, living wills, abortion, and the teaching of evolution simply are not worthy of debate?
The reason nobody in America debates about the issues you want to get us riled up about is because our current society is very stable, and there is nearly a consensus (for better or worse) on all of them.
Other than libertarian crackpots like me (and a handful of pie-eyed college kids), nobody cares about the concept of "limited government."
Almost everybody agrees that the military is one of the few things worth throwing vast sums of money at.
Most older folks still watch TV news, but more and more people are simply turning to other sources, to get away from the endless parade of Michael Jackson trials and whatnot.
The "political prisoners" and "torture" you speak of are not nearly the hot-button issues you wish they were.
Government agency corruption has always been with us. Anybody who thinks it's an invention of either Bush or Clinton is simply too young to know any better.
Meanwhile, the issues you dismissed so quickly are critically important to the culture.
Marriage is the basic unit of family organization upon which our entire civilization is built. While I happen to think that government has no business prohibiting families made up of same-sex couples (or even multiple-partner marriages), there are those who strongly feel otherwise, and not simply for reasons of puritan bigotry. Their objections are not entirely without merit.
Living wills and abortion both get down to a very fundamental question: At what point do your rights, specifically the single most important right of survival, begin and end? When does a person become a person? When to they cease to be a person? Are we entitled to waive our own right to life under certain circumstances? These are big questions, and the minutae of how the answers are applied can impact millions of people.
Evolution is the theoretical model upon which all of our modern knowledge of biology is built. It is absolutely vital to the long-term advancement of science that it is taught in schools. At the same time, Darwin's second book, The Descent of Man, runs afowl of several major religions regarding man's relationship to other animals. Balancing the need to teach "this is what our best science has established" with the need to avoid saying "your family's religion must be incorrect superstition" is a challenge which presents no easy answers (unless you are willing to dismiss the other side's concerns out of hand.)
The role of religion in public structures is also a problem. Our first Ammendment states that our government must neither endorse nor hinder any specific religion. Some people feel that public displays of religious dogma constitute an endorsement. Others feel that banning such dogma from all public places constitutes a hinderance. The problem with the debate is that both sides are completely correct. You can't really ban religion from all public places without restricting the free practice, and you can't really have public space and/or resources promoting religion without forcing those who oppose it to be in the position of contributing to it with their tax dollars.
The religion clau
Re:The general public is distracted... (Score:5, Insightful)
So I'm inclined to reject your entire point. The debate of these other issues does not stifle discussion of the things you happen to wish people were fretting about more.
Although the GP does imply that these other issues are irrelevant, which you are right, they are not, the point I think was that they do deflect attention away from issues such as political corruption, erosion of rights and economic sleight-of-hand.
When you can whip the people up into a frenzy over deeply personal issues and make these the issues on which the electorate make decisions, then you can get away with anything else you like. There is no reason why for example, the abortion debate has to follow party lines. It's a matter of personal belief and the politicians should vote accordingly.
Instead what you have is a situation in which two parties have very similar policies for anything that affects the health of the nation, but draw up their divisions on more "moral" issues that are picked to be very divisive. There are forces between both parties that are very happy with this - choice on the issues that they couldn't care less about, none on the things that matter to them.
It is naive to think that this isn't deliberate.
Re:The general public is distracted... (Score:5, Insightful)
The President is very much a figurehead - he wields no real power whatsoever. He is apparently chosen by the government, but the qualities he is required to display are not those of leadership but those of finely judged outrage. For this reason the President is always a controversial choice, always an infuriating but fascinating character. His job is not to wield power but to draw attention away from it.
Extend to all politicians' public personas and the words 'sad but true' come to mind.
Re:The general public is distracted... (Score:5, Insightful)
There may be a well-reasoned, logical argment supporting the view that the state has a compelling interest to grant special legal benefits to people who are in one class of binding long-term relationships while denying those benefits to all other classes of long-term binding relationships, but I have yet to hear one.
Re:The general public is distracted... (Score:5, Insightful)
You can make any two things sound quite the same if you just get vague enough.
Opposition to gay marriage is not entirely without merit because nothing would be entirely without merit. But if you don't think of that you just nod and smile and think he's uttered a wise truth. It isn't entirely without merit.
Look at it quantitatively.
Merit(gay marriage debate) = 0.000001
Merit(corruption of national security) = 0.4
But, you see, the gay marriage debate is not entirely without merit. Also, 2 is a number, and 3 is a number, so therefore 2 is 3.
Re:The general public is distracted... (Score:5, Insightful)
You can make a flawed argument in support of anything. It doesn't mean that every argument is flawed. The parent was pointing out that he has never heard a nonflawed argument against gay marriage.
Re:The general public is distracted... (Score:3, Insightful)
Telling someone not to kill because a book they hold in disregard tells them not to will fail, as it should. Its appealing to Faith, or Hatred, or Tradition.
If you say its wrong to kill and back it up with a LOGICAL reason, then you have a case (and you can derive basic human rights based soley on logic).
And that was the whole point of the PG poster.
Re:The general public is distracted... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:The general public is distracted... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:The general public is distracted... (Score:3, Insightful)
Polygamy (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:The general public is distracted... (Score:3, Insightful)
You know gay includes lesbians..
As for male homosexuals, they could adopt childs, AFAIK every study have shown that children raised by gay people are 'as happy' as children raised by straight people..
And currently while marriage is clearly done to encourage 'child production', it is not restricted to couples raising childs, so why should-it be different for gay couple?
[ And no, I'm not gay ]
Re:The general public is distracted... (Score:3, Interesting)
excellent idea.
we should thus prevent infertile heterosexual couples from being able to marry.
Additionally, when a married woman reaches menopause, divorce is mandatory.
Re:The general public is distracted... (Score:3, Insightful)
I admit to not being very familiar with the specific arguments of George Will, but it would seem to me that we could allow two men or two women to marry each other without having that greatly affect a male-female marriage. We'd still get the social benefits of traditional male-female marriage, while allowing all
Re:The general public is distracted... (Score:4, Insightful)
At the federal level? Damned right. Which of those subjects you've listed is not capable of being discussed by states, towns, churches, and individual people? The federal government is there to organise wars, diplomatics, and anything else too big for any one state to handle. So why are they now handing-down diktats saying who can be allowed to go to certain churches, or how a particular doctor should behave?
Re:The general public is distracted... (Score:4, Insightful)
The problem we are faced with is that we have a government in place that is using "moral issues" as a smokescreen while it actively works at dismantling free speech, freedom of association, any and all social safety net programs and the constitutionally mandated system of checks and balances and separation of powers. All in the name of more tax breaks for the wealthiest 0.8% of income earners and at the expense of the other 99.2%.
Poverty, the presumption of innocence, freedom from cruel and unusual punishments, torture, freedom of conscience and social justice are also "moral issues," but I don't see that government breaking its arm patting itself on the back over their stands on these issues. The "moral issues" debate in this country is purely a matter of an excessive neo-conservative President and his cronies in Congress pandering to a group of wealthy fundametalists (and worse!) and their flocks of obedient followers in order to cement their grip on political power. There is no serious interest in the "morality" of the President's stand on the issues he is promoting, it's ALL about keeping the Radical Religious (dare I say "theocratic") Right-wing "core-of-the-power-base" group happy.
Peace,
ninewands
Re:The general public is distracted... (Score:5, Interesting)
The "Ruling political class" is some amalgam of the democrats and the republicans, and both groups prevent debate about significant topics--espeically morality.
My basic morality is that people are not your property. This is a moral position that both democrats and republicans violate at will.
Both parties want people enslaved by taxes and absurd laws, and so they create this charade wher you are (like most americans) deluded into thinking its the other parties fault. And your republican counterparts are deluded into thinking its the democrats fault.
The reality is, the "Ruling Political Class" is both of these parties-- the socialist republic we have become (do you really think our elections are fair? Even if it were so, this is a republic.)
But your right-- the general public, including slashdot readers-- won't engage in debate. Who would consider the argument that taxes are immoral? (And yet, who can come up with a counter argument?)
We've all been trained to stop thinking about politics-- to reduce politics to a football game of hatred, whereby we blame everything on the "other party" and make them out to be evil.
I hate republicans as much as the next guy, but its amazing to me how my friends who are liberal will ascribe all evil to them, but never notice when democrats do the same exact things.
The reality is, the mafia is in control. Not the italian mafia, the political mafia. Our government is nothing more than a parasite and mechanism by which cowards use fools to enforce control over the populace-- and not for the populaces benefit.
If you actually think about politics for awhile, and look into economics, you quickly become an anarchist.
If government was worth paying for, taxes would be voluntary. But they aren't, and they aren't for a reason.
Government's role and purpose is to exercise exactly the kind of control you're wondering how they are exercising.
People don't debate politics? Could it be they were taught in *government* schools not to think about politics?
Re:The general public is distracted... (Score:3, Insightful)
It's just that people confuse marching in protests or doing other politically meaningless stuff with the process of working *within* the system needed to worm one's way into the inner circles of politics.
It may be a small e
Re:The general public is distracted... (Score:3, Insightful)
Ending welfare for the poor would be so easy if we ended it for the rich first. Poor people pay more for everything. The lazy folks are on the top not the bottom.
You think if we ended welfare everyone would run out and get a job? Or you think that after they started starving and freezing to death the rest of us would take notice and demand reform from our government?
Re:The general public is distracted... (Score:3, Interesting)
Under a system of political anarchy, services once provided by the government are instead provided by private companies. There is no single "service" that the government provides that cannot be provided better and/or cheaper by a private entity. Take, to use your example, roads. Most people will contend that we would have no road system without the government. Who, they ask, would have built the interstate highway system? And, t
Re:The general public is distracted... (Score:4, Interesting)
One of the major instruments of the ruling political class is to divide and distract public opinion with intense moral-laden debate
The first part is correct, the second is wrong. Politicians divide not based on intense moral issues, they polarize their base when needed. Bush claimed we MUST fight the war in Iraq because WE were THREATENED. It turned out later, when the threat was shown to be non-exsistant, his reasons changed. Morality had very little to do with it. Morals have little to do with Social Security or Taxes or where government should build schools or highways. Governments function has very little to do with religion, unless you count the prayer the Senate says each morning.
They shrug it off... (Score:5, Insightful)
So, because it was a government contractor and not the government itself I should be fine with the one slip up because the contractor just didn't have the proper amount of care necessary to carry out the task with the proper amount of security necessary?
Let me guess, the person who's information was divulged has little or no option of recourse against the contractor. Of course this report doesn't say anything about that. Will the contractor be used again? Why wasn't the contractor listed in the report so that everyone knows who they are. After all, they leaked someone's private info, I think the public should at least know that they shouldn't be dealt with at any time.
TSA's policy environment with respect to privacy has changed substantially since its inception. From its inception, TSA recognized personal privacy and confidentiality as important concerns. Especially in the immediate aftermath of the September 11, 2001, attacks, finding a balance between these concerns and transportation and aviation security was a difficult challenge.
There is no need for a balance. Regardless of the emergency state of the nation people's privacy should not take a back seat. We all know Ben Franklin's comment and it rings true here.
Regardless of passenger data sharing, lists of known problem individuals, etc, people are going to get on that plane and cause problems (whether directly or indirectly). We are always a step behind and trying to close holes that were used in the past. The terrorists will always find some hole we haven't closed because they haven't used it before.
Our weak attempts at ending terrorism do nothing but erode our freedoms and that's exactly what they want to have happen. Way to go!
Scary stuff, and yet it's evem scarier how little the general public has caught on.
They have caught on to what they were told to. They seriously believe that they are now safer that their privacy has been eroded. They are dazzled with big numbers and small reported incident numbers (i.e. how many people were affected by the Patriot Act).
People want to be told what to think. They want to be told they are safe and they will seriously believe they are. People who think otherwise are labeled "paranoid" and not worthy of belief. Only those that continually fill the heads of their citizens with spin are worthy of listening to. Who are we kidding? How is the public supposed to "catch on" when they are bombarded by government sponsored propaganda centered around the positive influence the TSA has had on airline safety? If we watched network-sponsored TV news we might have had a different view on the whole situation right? The government propaganda pieces looked and sounded quite legit as they were meant to. So the people that don't rely on personal research and news from multiple outlets really did believe the TSA was doing things in their best interests.
What I believe is scary is that people just shrug it off and say, "all administrations do these things." Perhaps, but this one was caught and you still don't care.
Re:They shrug it off... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:They shrug it off... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:They shrug it off... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:They shrug it off... (Score:5, Informative)
Apathy - it's what's for dinner.
Some people might call me un-American, but... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Some people might call me un-American, but... (Score:5, Insightful)
If the US was a totalitarian dictatorship that strongly supported Israel and put troops in Saudi Arabia to protect our oil interests there and in Kuwait, Osama would hate us just as much as he does now. Freedom is orthagonal to the issue.
Re:Some people might call me un-American, but... (Score:5, Insightful)
True, but that is going off on a tangent ;).
Seriously though, it seems to me that the other big problem is that all that government is doing with all the excessive airline regulations is trying to fight the war we just lost. Instead of figuring out what is the best way to deal with the overall threat, the governement simply tries to handle what has already been screwed up and tries to apply makeshift patches to the holes.
One of the biggest blunders generals tend to make is to try to fight the last war instead of the war they are actually in, such as some of the generals in World War One who were still using tactics from musket-and-cannon wars like the Crimean War. This is basically what is happening now with the TSA regulations.
Re:Some people might call me un-American, but... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Some people might call me un-American, but... (Score:3, Insightful)
We are in wars we don't even know about, and probably won't know about for 20 to 30 years. Not only did we assasinate duly elected heads of state in democratic countries, and replace them with dictators, but we did it and nobody knew. Check out what the CIA did in South America the past couple decades to get a clue.
Don't misunderstand me (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Some people might call me un-American, but... (Score:4, Insightful)
Check, check and check.
None of the Al Qaeda goals give a damn about freedom, one way or the other.
Only domestic terrorists would really care about forcing the government to take our freedoms, the aim being to make the government the enemy of the people or in their eyes to force the government to show its true face.
More likely... (Score:3, Funny)
Can't you just picture it? He's there shovelling chips into the fryers in Burger King, or sitting behind the refunds desk in PC World, with his beard and his "Hello My Name Is Osama" badge, and everyone says "Hahaha, you look *just like* Osama bin Laden, too" and he laughs and pretends like he's never heard that joke before, and gobs in their coffee or charges them a double restocking fee.
Re:Some people might call me un-American, but... (Score:3, Insightful)
Have you read the Quran? Care to cite what makes you say the following statement?
This is a very dangerous generalisation. Reminds me of the fascist party in our country, that recently claimed islam and democraty don't mix.
That wouldn't shock alot of people in Turkey. It's as much a muslim country as Italy is a catholic country. Yet it actually has seperation of church and state.
Re:They shrug it off... (Score:3, Insightful)
Transportation Security Administration (TSA) (Score:5, Informative)
Transportation Security Administration (TSA) Lied about Protecting Passenger Data. Then you can talk about the TSA until you blue in the face. Is the BSA the Business Software Alliance or the Boy Scouts of America?
Sure we work with computer all the time and take Acronyms all the time and many are very complex.. CPU, RAM, ROM, GNU, etc... It is fine when you are talking about computer stuff. But when you start moving to government Acronyms or Business Acronyms, we should get a better description. Is PSC Play Station Console, Public Service Commission, or Pubic Safety Control? Please think before you start using acronyms especially in less geeky topics such as business, law, politics, governments, and non astronomy sciences. Even if it is geeky related if there is a change that a lot of people wont know what you mean please spell it out.
Re:Transportation Security Administration (TSA) (Score:5, Informative)
Oh, wait...there already is one! [w3.org]
Re:Transportation Security Administration (TSA) (Score:4, Informative)
1. The
On the very first page in the title, it says: "Review of the Transportation Security Administration's Role in the Use and Dissemination of Airline Passenger Data".
2. Schnieider's blog [schneier.com]
The very first paragraph: "The Transportaion Security Administration misled the public about its role in..."
Re:Transportation Security Administration (TSA) (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Transportation Security Administration (TSA) (Score:5, Funny)
I am even more annoyed at this comment in which the author suggests we should be following the links to find out what the acronyms are ... In fact, I didn't find out what it meant until I scrolled down to your comment - which was much quicker than loading another page, especially a PDF.
You didn't explain what a PDF was.
Re:Transportation Security Administration (TSA) (Score:3, Informative)
I am slightly older than you and live in Europe, yet I knew what the TSA was, and I knew it before this story, just from the regular news. This suggests one of two things:
spelling bee? (Score:3, Funny)
Does this suprise anyone? (Score:5, Insightful)
Wait... (Score:4, Insightful)
I don't get it.
The government lied? (Score:4, Funny)
Page 40 (Score:5, Informative)
"Although we found no evidence of harm to individual privacy, TSA could have taken more steps to protect privacy. TSA did not consistently apply privacy protections in the course of its involvement in airline passenger data transfers. This inconsistency pertained to TSA's efforts in acquisitions, contract enforcement, and internal practice."
So no evidence was leaked but they could've done a better job.
even scarier (Score:4, Insightful)
Even scarier is how the original poster thinks the general public can catch on to anything. This is the country where we need to put car seat instructions in 5th grade english so parents can understand them.
Re:even scarier (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:even scarier (Score:3, Insightful)
Life-saving devices require idiot-proof instructions.
However, the people in charge of your physical security should not themselves be idiots who dismiss concerns over information security.
Scary, huh? (Score:4, Informative)
Alternative Coverage (Score:5, Informative)
Part 1 [aero-news.net]
Part 2 [aero-news.net]
Part 3 [aero-news.net]
~Lake
Privacy, as if... (Score:5, Insightful)
I've said it before, and I'll say it again: as far as the US Government is concerned, especially since 9/11 and The Patriot Act, citizens have no expectation of privacy. If you think otherwise, you are deluding yourself. People keep saying, "Oh, the government will never lie to me. They are required to protect privacy." As if. The government will tell you what you want to hear to passify you, and when found out will either flush things down the Memory Hole or give you a nice 'mea culpa' and continue doing the same thing.
As far back as 1995 Ellen Alderman and Caroline Kennedy wrote in The Right To Privacy that our rights, especially those under the Fourth Ammendment, were slowly being eroded.
But as another poster said, the bulk of the American population don't know, and more importantly, don't care.
Re:Privacy, as if... (Score:3, Insightful)
Furthermore, the "Right to Privacy" is not actually present anywhere in the Constitution. Quite to the contrary, my free speech rights trump your "privacy" rights every time. If I know your name, e-mail address, and phone number, I can give them out to whoever I like. Don't like it? Then be careful of who you share your info with.
Re:Privacy, as if... (Score:5, Insightful)
That's a good point, as far as non-governmental entities are concerned.
However, considering that the government requires that they have information about it's citizens, they've taken the choice out of our hands. Do you understand that?
Re:Privacy, as if... (Score:5, Informative)
The US Constitution does not function as a list of ALLOWED things, and then we assume everything else is disallowed. Instead, the Constitution outlines the DISALLOWED functions of government (as well as the actual functions), and basically everything else is a right retained by states and people.
Therefore, we DO have the right to privacy. The Constitution says nothing about; hence, we have it
You need to read up on the philosophy of Constitutional law. You just don't understand the US Constitution.
Re:Privacy, as if... (Score:3, Interesting)
This world is getting weirder by the day now.
"But if you havent done enything wrong, you don't need to be affraid." Right. So implant me a chip and give me a barcode. That shouldn't matter either.
The only difference is that governments in the us and the eu are doing everything to tell me I'm living in constant danger of getting killed.
And a ctually that is true. I believe
Homeland Insecurity (Score:5, Interesting)
I personally spoke with a large software firm about this very issue -- how can such a system keep the false positives low to nill while catching the ocassional needle or two in a very large haystack, and they waffled on the question. Considering the number of terrorists are extremely small with regards the rest of the population, how can you possible have enough data to be statistically significant? Again, they waffled on the question, giving a half-baked "executive response" rather than anything concrete.
The real truth is we are far more likely to die in a car crash than to die at the hands of a would-be terrorist. Yet, billions are being poured into Homeland Insecurity and the TSA efforts, and what do we have? High false positive rates, millions of needlessly harrased travelers, and it's hard to get a fix on the false negative rates since terrorists are so rare to begin with.
In short, the entire approach makes no sense.
But try explaining this to the general public, who tend to be dumb as boards when it comes to basic statistics and probabality.
90% of the public is simply unable to think, but merely jumps from one belief pattern to another. That my friends is the problem.
Highway Insecurity (Score:4, Informative)
>The real truth is we are far more likely to die in a car crash than to die at the hands of a would-be terrorist. Yet, billions are being poured into Homeland Insecurity and the TSA efforts, and what do we have? High false positive rates, millions of needlessly harrased travelers, and it's hard to get a fix on the false negative rates since terrorists are so rare to begin with.
More people in the United States were killed in traffic accidents in September 2001 than were killed in terrorist attacks in the same month. That is also true of August 2001, October 2001, and all subsequent months. The difference is that the figures for terrorism deaths in all of thase other months is zero. (2001 deaths =42,900) [nsc.org]The thing stopping airliner takeovers is the passengers willingness to take on the terrorists as in the Pennsylvania hijacking. TSA is there to comfort the rubes who fly once every five years. It also provides jobs for those who can't hack it at McDonald's.
Re:Homeland Insecurity (Score:3, Informative)
You are presuming that the sense to be found in it has something to do with catching terrorists.
Silly boy.
KFG
How can this data mining improve air security? (Score:5, Insightful)
My big question: how can it do any good to train an expert system to recognize terrorists, when all the sample data is by definition from non-terrorists? I mean, there were no terrorist actions on any Jet Blue flights in that time frame. This data is useful as "known negatives" in the test for terrorists, but where do they get the data for "known positives" to train the system?
Re:How can this data mining improve air security? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:How can this data mining improve air security? (Score:3, Interesting)
Easy, he's a decoy.
This is actually shocking (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:This is actually shocking (Score:3, Insightful)
What does this honestly sound like to you? To me, it sounds like:
The American people bought this farce hook, line and sinker. Today, we are literally no safer onboard an aircra
The public (Score:3, Insightful)
OK Slashdot. Time to wake up. (Score:5, Insightful)
What the fuck is all this rhetoric about "the general public" not realizing their rights are being trampled and billions of their dollars are being wasted on the TSA?
Who the fuck are you, and what are you doing about it? YOU are the general public, assholes. All you are doing is whining on Slashdot about how goddamned smart you are compared to everyone else because _you_ really know how inept the TSA is, and no one else is clever enough to figure this out.
WTF?? Put up or shut up. Do something about the problem, or simply shut the fuck up.
This is just bullshit from people who aren't doing a damn thing except following the herd to slaughter while marching meekly to their deaths, self-righteously proclaiming their outrage louder than the next.
Re:OK Slashdot. Time to wake up. (Score:4, Insightful)
But someone somewhere does and we got to make them listen.
It's the Roman Empire all over again (Score:5, Insightful)
Well, folks, when the guys with funny helmets turn up at the gates on their little horses and the government turns out to have done a runner, don't say you weren't warned.
Oh, actually it just turns out that a government agency was doing what government agencies do all the time. I apologise for the wild exaggeration. So now please put down the Taser and let me get on the goddam airplane.
Re:It's the Roman Empire all over again (Score:3, Funny)
Re:It's the Roman Empire all over again (Score:3, Funny)
Isn't this whole TSA thing based on a lie anyway? (Score:3, Interesting)
Treason (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm old enough to remember when Bill Clinton was impeached for lying about a blowjob. Bush has lied about a war that has killed thousands of Americans, hundreds of thousands of Iraqis, hundreds of our allies, and gets worse every day - counter to all their lies about brevity and local support. If ever there were a "high crime and misdemeanor", it's sending us to a disastrous war on a series of lies. Where are the Republican cries for presidential "dignity" and "integrity"? Let's impeach this monster immediately, for treason. Before he does any more irreparable damage.
Re:Treason (Score:3, Insightful)
make for Dubya's treason: it doesn't go nearly
far enough.
The two biggest state sponsers of terrorism, and
the spread of WMD, are Pakistan AND Saudi Arabia.
Pakistan could not have bankrolled their nuclear
program by themselves: the Saudis have been behind
the Pakistani's "Islamic" bomb for decades.
If you study the evolution of the USA's wartime
OSS into the CIA, you will appreciate the Saudi
Arabian duplicity regarding al-Queda. Everywhere
that you find Saudi oil mo
Re:Treason (Score:3, Interesting)
Just the evidence that Cheney cleared the top-secret (NOFOR) Iraq invasion plan with Bandar, prior to informing Powell, should be enough to indict.
Re:Treason (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Treason (Score:3, Insightful)
The real role of Pakistan these days is defined by Enron (!). Enron built a ginormous gas-fired power plant in India, designed to supply 70% (!) of India's power demand. But th
Joe Public is too dumb to understand. (Score:5, Interesting)
When the common man doesn't have an absolute enemy to fear, he'll tend not to depend on the government as much. Of course this isn't in the lawmakers best interest.
Keep your dependents living in fear and they'll always remain your dependents.
Not only did the TSA Lie, but ... (Score:4, Interesting)
Sigh, don't you hate it when the conspiracy theorists are right
Re:Not only did the TSA Lie, but ... (Score:3, Insightful)
And this is the government... (Score:5, Insightful)
Bill Clinton lied (about sex w/ Monica), Bush Jr. lied (about WMDs in Iraq), the FBI lied in a secret court [nytimes.com] (to get wiretaps), the TSA lied (about protecting passenger privacy)... where does it end? (especially given the record of older agencies like the FBI and CIA lying to the public)
At least when Ken Lay and Bernie Ebbers lie, their companies go bankrupt and they (at least in Ebbers case, most likely, though probably Ken Lay too eventually) go to prison.
But when government fails, what happens? Generally, nothing.
Mod me as troll/flamebait/overrated now for not promoting heavy doses of socialism (a necessary precondition for a large government to exist, so it can accomplish such abuses as this one)...
like the collection of fingernail clippers (Score:3, Interesting)
Even with all the holes in the original CAPPS system, WHAT were they actually looking for? After all, it flagged most of the hijackers. Then NOTHING resulted from that with regard to actually securing the aircraft. The easily opened cockpit doors also begged to question of how intelligent our security "experts" really are. I've only flown first class a few times but I remember my first time. When they closed the cockpit door and blocked my view of the instruments, I thought how silly it was since that door was so flimsy. This was the early 90's... People already knew about crashing airplanes to impart more damage beyond that of the aircraft and it's occupants.
All and all, when you look at they foibles of our security systems before Sept 11, 2001, you actually see a system which surprisingly flagged most of the hijackers AND exposed their plan. What else you see is how badly that information was handled. Somehow, this was taken to mean that massive changes in the management of all the existing security departments was required.... It's like a bad wheel bearing is causing vibrations in the car and the owner of the service station tells you to replace the car.
Bin Laden may have started the ball rolling, but WE are doing a great job at really messing up this country. What next, putting the 10 Commandments in front of every government building to help improve security?
LoB
Offtopic: Please Include PDF Warning In Links (Score:4, Insightful)
Yeah, I'm sure some of you have magical instant-loading PDF viewers of some sort, but for those of us stuck on sluggish Windows machines using the incredibly-slow-to-load, lock-up-my-computer-while-it's-loading, Adobe Acrobat Reader...
could we please add a [PDF] warning to links to PDFs?
It may not be *quite* as bad as goatse, but it still merits a warning...
Re:public... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:public... (Score:5, Insightful)
The government is not a deity. Do not worship it.
Re:public... (Score:4, Insightful)
It's also scary that people seem to have "faith" in the current administration like they have faith for their religion. They think GW can do no wrong because they think he's a "good christian man". But saying he's christian doesn't make him good, especially when his actions show him to be a selfish, greedy man with no concern for the people of his country or the world.
And the government is a mirror image (Score:5, Interesting)
The government doesn't want a democracy. It wants a group of people to let them decide everything. To take their protection from percieved threats. To give them tax money because they don't want to work. To keep comunities safe from drugs so people will work and pay taxes.
The truth is usually quite simple. Real governments exists to serve themselves as much as the people.
Kjella
Re:And the government is a mirror image (Score:3, Insightful)
That would mean they serve the people as much as themselves. Nice fantasy. Closest to that would probably be a benevolent dictatorship.
Democratic governments exist to convince the people to vote for them next time. They may give the appearance of serving the people some of the time if there are votes in it. Actually serving the people is probably the hardest way to get votes, so if it happens it is pr
Re:public... (Score:5, Insightful)
Do not be pulled into the polarizing arguments. Things are of many shades of gray, there is no black or white. There are more than two answers to every question. Republicans suck, Democrats suck. A true American is what you want to be at the end of the day, not what the TV (The voice of propaganda) tells you to be and how to think.
Re:public... (Score:3, Informative)
Slight amendment (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:public... (Score:5, Insightful)
Rather than the general public's apathy, the government's apathy is more shocking.
Also, the TSA may be trying to do a good thing, but it is failing. The "responses were not accurate", according to the spokesman.
Re:public... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:public... (Score:3, Interesting)
You are in a Government, of the People, by the Corrupt, for the Corporations.
Anyone that tells you their motive isn't profit, is lying.
I've got things stolen by TSA, that's why I care. (Score:4, Interesting)
Now, I tried to contact TSA and it wasn't helpful. The phone number they provided, (866) 289-9673, always responded with a busy tone. I e-mailed the airline, United Airlines, and they never got back to me. Maybe I was too cynical. I told them I don't think an innocuous little device like my minidisc player is a threat to airline safety.
But it is funny if you think about it. TSA steals my stuff and put a slip saying "we did it." Then the fact that there is no where to complain is like them saying to me, "nanner nanner nanner
Re:One More Reason Not To Believe Slashdot (Score:5, Insightful)
The investigation said that the TSA claimed to have privacy precautions in place when, in fact, it didn't.
Even if the investigation didn't use the word -- how is that not lying?
Re:Sign of the times (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Sign of the times (Score:3, Interesting)
not be allowed to continue - thanks for pointing
that out to the TSA.
In the past, the TSA has allowed passengers to
carry butane lighters on-board planes, as well
as books of matches. Someone pointed out that
if the British "shoe-bomber" had had the number
of butane lighters allowed, that plane would
never have made it across the Atlantic Ocean.
That policy has been changed.
The Dubya regime has been far too busy trying to
convince the public that they are more secure