
You're on a roll this morning CES.
I guess I thought that was funny.
The only revolt that is deserving here is the TSA having to see that naked man.

Nobody wants the mere "illusion" of security.mozg wrote:the illusion of security.
Then why is there virtually no screening of cargo which is loaded onto planes out of public view yet has the capacity to contain weapons far, far larger than any one person could carry?Coito ergo sum wrote:Nobody wants the mere "illusion" of security.mozg wrote:the illusion of security.
They've made it harder to get a beverage onto a plane. Do you consider beverages to be 'bad stuff'?But, this is a red herring argument. The security at the airport is an attempt to increase actual security. Clearly, without it it would be easier to get bad stuff onto planes, right?
They're easily defeated, which is why actual security experts caution against relying on fancy machines. The strip search machine doesn't detect metal. Not to be crude, but it would be extremely easy for me to fit a box cutter in a body orifice and walk right through it. They'd never detect it, not with the naked photo booth and not with the 'pat down'. A good old fashioned magnetometer and bomb sniffing dog are far more effective than the naked photo booth.Are you saying that the pat downs and screening devices, properly applied, don't make it harder to get contraband items on a plane? It seems as if they do, to me.
First you need to prove that 'actual security' needs improvement, and if so in what areas. The 9/11 attack was not a failure of screening. Everything the hijackers carried was an allowed item. The attack was successful because the prevailing attitude toward hijackings were that the plane would make an unscheduled landing somewhere like Cuba and everyone would go home safe. The resolution to that problem was put into action before 10 am on 9/11.If they don't, though, is there any way to improve actual security? And, if so, how?
Well, it's a pretty broad statement, and isn't meant to require no security at all.Svartalf wrote:who was it said something about liberties, security and deserving neither? My favorite $100 bill?
I am of the understanding that there is screening of checked bags: http://www.tsa.gov/what_we_do/screening ... ggage.shtm They hand search some of them too, I believe.mozg wrote:Then why is there virtually no screening of cargo which is loaded onto planes out of public view yet has the capacity to contain weapons far, far larger than any one person could carry?Coito ergo sum wrote:Nobody wants the mere "illusion" of security.mozg wrote:the illusion of security.
No, I consider what might be concealed or masqueraded as a beverage to be bad stuff.mozg wrote:They've made it harder to get a beverage onto a plane. Do you consider beverages to be 'bad stuff'?But, this is a red herring argument. The security at the airport is an attempt to increase actual security. Clearly, without it it would be easier to get bad stuff onto planes, right?
I'm open to anything -- what do you suggest? They have the magnetometer there in addition to the full body scanner. I always walk through the metal detector.mozg wrote:They're easily defeated, which is why actual security experts caution against relying on fancy machines. The strip search machine doesn't detect metal. Not to be crude, but it would be extremely easy for me to fit a box cutter in a body orifice and walk right through it. They'd never detect it, not with the naked photo booth and not with the 'pat down'. A good old fashioned magnetometer and bomb sniffing dog are far more effective than the naked photo booth.Are you saying that the pat downs and screening devices, properly applied, don't make it harder to get contraband items on a plane? It seems as if they do, to me.
That has been proved many times over the years, with respect to people getting stuff through and onto planes.mozg wrote:First you need to prove that 'actual security' needs improvement, and if so in what areas.If they don't, though, is there any way to improve actual security? And, if so, how?
They aren't now, though. That's the improvement.mozg wrote:
The 9/11 attack was not a failure of screening. Everything the hijackers carried was an allowed item.
Sure, that turned out to be a problem. So, now there is no choice but to (a) keep the bad guy off the plane in the first place, and (b) keep his tools off the plane in the second place.mozg wrote: The attack was successful because the prevailing attitude toward hijackings were that the plane would make an unscheduled landing somewhere like Cuba and everyone would go home safe. The resolution to that problem was put into action before 10 am on 9/11.
That's fine, but what does that lead you to conclude in terms of what we should have as airport security?mozg wrote:
The fact is that attacks on airplanes are incredibly rare. There has never in the history of aviation been a successful bombing of a US domestic airliner by a passenger using an item carried on board. Ever. Although 9/11 was sensational as a single event, it wasn't even significant in terms of the lives lost. The United States will lose an entire 9/11 worth of lives every single month this year in automobile accidents. I don't really think the need to 'improve' aviation security has been satisfactorily demonstrated, and I'm a frequent flyer willing to put my money where my mouth is.
This seems to me to be an overreaction to what amounts to a grayed out sort of blobby image that is vaguely humaniform, and a quick pat down before one voluntarily takes an airplane flight. There seems to be far more invasions on our fundamental liberties going on in the country than that. But, everyone is entitled to their opinion.mozg wrote: I've said before and will say again, if the price of your freedom from unreasonable strip search and genital grope is that I die in a terrorist attack, I will do it willingly and with no regrets. If my blood has to be spilled so that your children have some modicum of the liberty upon which the United States was founded, then spill it all. And if I should die at the hands of a terrorist, do not use my death to justify the erosion of liberty, because I believe that it is better to live a short, risky life as a free person than a long safe one in a cage.
I am not talking about checked bags. I am talking about cargo, which is still put on passenger planes, and is largely not screened at all, ever.Coito ergo sum wrote:I am of the understanding that there is screening of checked bags: http://www.tsa.gov/what_we_do/screening ... ggage.shtm They hand search some of them too, I believe.
I'm also not against vigorous screening of those items. I don't see them as alternatives.
There is no realistic chance of anyone using a BLE to take down a plane in flight. It is not as easy to mix those as Die Hard would have you believe.No, I consider what might be concealed or masqueraded as a beverage to be bad stuff.
There is no such thing as absolute safety. Absolute safety is not my goal. I would be perfectly fine with the exact same metal detector and bag x-ray we had on 9/11.I have no issue with adding bomb-sniffing dogs, but, of course, they can be gotten around too.
And yet the actual incidence of passenger death from terrorist contraband is infinitesimal. You have a much higher chance of being killed in a car accident on your way to the airport.That has been proved many times over the years, with respect to people getting stuff through and onto planes.
A problem that was solved less than an hour after the passengers discovered it was a problem.Sure, that turned out to be a problem. So, now there is no choice but to (a) keep the bad guy off the plane in the first place, and (b) keep his tools off the plane in the second place.
Magnetometer and bag x-ray.That's fine, but what does that lead you to conclude in terms of what we should have as airport security?
If I can tell from the image produced that the person whose image it is was not circumcised and that it's hanging to his left, that is hardly a 'blobby image that is vaguely humaniform', it's a strip search.This seems to me to be an overreaction to what amounts to a grayed out sort of blobby image that is vaguely humaniform, and a quick pat down before one voluntarily takes an airplane flight. There seems to be far more invasions on our fundamental liberties going on in the country than that. But, everyone is entitled to their opinion.
From what the TSA says, that's not correct:mozg wrote:I am not talking about checked bags. I am talking about cargo, which is still put on passenger planes, and is largely not screened at all, ever.Coito ergo sum wrote:I am of the understanding that there is screening of checked bags: http://www.tsa.gov/what_we_do/screening ... ggage.shtm They hand search some of them too, I believe.
I'm also not against vigorous screening of those items. I don't see them as alternatives.
http://www.tsa.gov/what_we_do/layers/ai ... index.shtm50 percent of air cargo on passenger carrying aircraft is screened. One hundred percent of the cargo on 96 percent of the flights originating in the United States is now screened. Eighty-five percent of the passengers flying each day from U.S. airports are on planes where all of the cargo has been fully screened.
With all due respect, the danger really isn't those things that we can all imagine as realistic. The danger is the stuff that someone comes up with that's new.mozg wrote:There is no realistic chance of anyone using a BLE to take down a plane in flight. It is not as easy to mix those as Die Hard would have you believe.No, I consider what might be concealed or masqueraded as a beverage to be bad stuff.
I'm open to anything -- what do you suggest? They have the magnetometer there in addition to the full body scanner. I always walk through the metal detector.[/quote]mozg wrote:
I'd be perfectly fine with the metal detector and the full body scanner.mozg wrote:There is no such thing as absolute safety. Absolute safety is not my goal. I would be perfectly fine with the exact same metal detector and bag x-ray we had on 9/11.I have no issue with adding bomb-sniffing dogs, but, of course, they can be gotten around too.
So what? The damage done by a terrorist attack extends far beyond the persons injured or killed in the actual event. The few thousand deaths on 9/11/01 shook the world economy and sent the world to war for the last 10 years. There is a difference between accidents and acts of war.mozg wrote:And yet the actual incidence of passenger death from terrorist contraband is infinitesimal. You have a much higher chance of being killed in a car accident on your way to the airport.That has been proved many times over the years, with respect to people getting stuff through and onto planes.
I don't see as how the problem was solved. What do you mean?mozg wrote:A problem that was solved less than an hour after the passengers discovered it was a problem.Sure, that turned out to be a problem. So, now there is no choice but to (a) keep the bad guy off the plane in the first place, and (b) keep his tools off the plane in the second place.
Well, I don't think that goes far enough. The reason for the other device is because not everything that needs to be kept off the plane shows up on metal detectors.mozg wrote:Magnetometer and bag x-ray.That's fine, but what does that lead you to conclude in terms of what we should have as airport security?
The way it is set up doesn't seem unreasonable to me.mozg wrote:If I can tell from the image produced that the person whose image it is was not circumcised and that it's hanging to his left, that is hardly a 'blobby image that is vaguely humaniform', it's a strip search.This seems to me to be an overreaction to what amounts to a grayed out sort of blobby image that is vaguely humaniform, and a quick pat down before one voluntarily takes an airplane flight. There seems to be far more invasions on our fundamental liberties going on in the country than that. But, everyone is entitled to their opinion.
So long as your position is that a strip search of a person without any probable cause is reasonable, we have no common ground from which to discuss anything.Coito ergo sum wrote:The way it is set up doesn't seem unreasonable to me.
I guess I don't view it as a strip search. If that's a strip search, then arguably a metal detector that you walk through is a strip search.mozg wrote:So long as your position is that a strip search of a person without any probable cause is reasonable, we have no common ground from which to discuss anything.Coito ergo sum wrote:The way it is set up doesn't seem unreasonable to me.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 21 guests