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Nothing Human Is Alien
18th November 2010, 17:17
The widespread use of full-body scans at US airports is provoking considerable opposition and outrage among both the traveling public and airline personnel.

The Transportation Security Administration (TSA) has put 385 Advanced Imaging Technology (AIT) units into service at 68 of the largest airports across the country. Those passengers refusing to submit to the scans are subjected to “enhanced” pat-downs by TSA agents. If a passenger refuses to undergo the screening measures, he or she can be subject to civil penalties.

These measures are an expansion under the Obama administration of the increasingly invasive and anti-democratic methods initiated by Bush, employing the pretext of the “war on terror.” In fact, they have nothing to do with security, and everything to do with acclimating the public to the violation of basic civil liberties.

Airports have already become virtual police states. In order to have the privilege of traveling by airplane, passengers in the US must subject themselves to increasingly arbitrary and absurd procedures—now including what amounts to a strip search or full body pat-down.

Responding to criticism on Wednesday, TSA administrator John Pistole declared, “I’m not going to change those policies.”

The TSA began installing the full-body scan devices in 2007 and plans to expand their use. The agency started the new pat-downs on October 28. Controversy over the use of the body-scanners and pat-downs was brought to the forefront last Friday when a traveler at the San Diego, California airport refused to submit to the procedures. John Tyner, a 31-year-old software programmer, captured the incident on his cell phone, and the video spread quickly on the Internet.

After choosing not to go through the scanner, Tyner also refused the alternative enhanced pat-down. He told the TSA agent, “If you touch my junk, I’ll have you arrested.” He was quickly surrounded by security and police, and escorted from the security area. He faces a TSA investigation and a possible $11,000 federal penalty.

The 9th US Circuit Court of Appeals has ruled that passengers have no right to refuse invasive searches. “Requiring that a potential passenger be allowed to revoke consent to an ongoing airport security search makes little sense in a post-9/11 world. Such a rule would afford terrorists multiple opportunities to attempt to penetrate airport security by ‘electing not to fly’ on the cusp of detection until a vulnerable portal is found.”

If a passenger is selected to be scanned, he or she is required to step into the shower stall-sized unit and is asked to raise his or her arms. An X-ray is then taken, revealing a detailed picture of the front and back of the person’s body under their clothing, as well as any objects that might be contained beneath.

The images are viewed in a private room by security officials. The TSA claims that the faces of those being scanned are blurred out, the images are not recorded, printed or stored to a database, and they are immediately destroyed once analyzed. The identities of those scanned reportedly remain anonymous.

Those who refuse to submit to the full-body scans, or whose scans raise suspicions, are then subject to the pat-downs. These pat-downs are also performed on a random basis or if a traveler sets off traditional metal detectors, wears bulky clothing or refuses to remove head wear.

Under the new pat-down rules, the TSA official uses a sliding motion, with either the front or back of the hands, and scans the body, including the inner thighs, genitals, buttocks and breasts. If the individual is wearing baggy pants, inspectors may also check beneath the waistband. Women wearing tight skirts may also be asked to be taken to a private room where they must remove their skirt, replaced by a towel or gown, to facilitate the pat-down.

Opponents of both the full-body scanning and enhanced pat-downs note that the new procedure violates the right to privacy, particularly Constitutional protections against unreasonable search and seizure. The Fourth Amendment guards against strip searches or frisking people unless there is reasonable suspicion that they are engaged in criminal activity. Those opposing the new TSA procedures include the American Civil Liberties Union, conservative groups such as the Rutherford Institute, and unions representing airline pilots and other employees.

Homeland Security officials claim that the type of explosive brought on board a Northwest Airlines flight bound for Detroit by Farouk Abdulmutallab on Christmas Day 2009 would have been detected by either the full-body scanner or the enhanced pat-down. However, they admit that explosives or other devices hidden in body cavities would not be detected by these methods.

These and other incidents cited by the US government as justification for subjecting passengers to ever more invasive techniques, however, were not attributable to inadequate screening. In the case of Abdulmutallab and the so-called Christmas Day bombing attempt, a US State Department official acknowledged that ample information was available to identify him as a risk, revoke his visa and stop him from boarding a flight, but that US intelligence agencies intervened to ensure he was allowed to slip through, supposedly in order to further a wider investigation.

The media’s fixation on the two packages from Yemen late last month apparently containing high explosives and addressed to synagogues in Chicago has also been exploited by government security officials to argue for heightened screening procedures to be used against US airline travelers. But it is acknowledged that these new procedures would do nothing to stop such a threat. In an interview with National Public Radio, TSA chief Pistole said that a significant portion of the cargo that comes to the US from overseas is not scanned.

On Tuesday, two commercial airline pilots filed suit against the federal government over the new airport procedures. Michael S. Roberts of Memphis, a pilot with ExpressJet, and Ann Poe of Fort Lauderdale, Florida, a Continental pilot, are suing the Department of Homeland Security and the TSA in federal court in Washington saying the TSA screenings violate their constitutional rights.

Both of the pilots have been grounded since they refused to submit in separate incidents to the full-body scans or the alternative pat-downs. Their suit asks a judge to bar use of the whole-body scanning technology or enhanced pat-downs as the main method of passenger screening. Roberts and Poe are being represented by the Rutherford Institute.

Capt. Chesley “Sully” Sullenberger voiced his opposition Tuesday to the heightened security procedures for airline personnel. Sullenberger, known for landing a disabled US Airways jet on the Hudson River in New York last year, said the new screening and pat-downs are not “an efficient use of our resources.”

Sullenberger said that pilots and flight attendants should be respected as “trusted partners” who are already “thoroughly screened.” He added, “We’re among the most scrutinized professional groups in the country, even more than doctors.”

The Cleveland Plain Dealer quoted Capt. Mike Cleary, president of the Airline Pilots Association, who said one pilot “experienced a frisking that has left him unable to function as a crew member.” Cleary said, “The words this pilot used to describe the event involved ‘sexual molestation,’ and in the aftermath of trying to recover this pilot reported that he had literally vomited in his own driveway while contemplating going back to work.”

Airline personnel are also worried about radiation from the body-scans, a concern shared by the traveling public and scientists. United Airlines pilot Capt. Garry Kravit told McClatchy news service that he has cut down on dental X-rays out of concern for the levels of radiation he already faces in the cockpit at high altitudes.

In a column defending the scanners, Janet Napolitano, secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, said that the devices had been determined to be safe and had been “independently evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration [FDA], the National Institute of Standards and Technology, and the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory.”

However, Helen Worth, a spokesman for the Johns Hopkins laboratory referred to by Napolitano, told CNN that the group had not evaluated the AIT units for passenger safety. “That was not our role,” she said. “We measured the level of radiation, which was then evaluated by the TSA.”

And in an letter in April of this year, University of California at San Francisco faculty members wrote to Dr. John Holdren, assistant to President Obama for science and technology, noting that even though the scanners use a relatively low beam, “the dose to the skin may be dangerously high.”

Despite the warnings raised by scientific and medical experts about potential radiation dangers, and the objections of passengers and airline employees over invasions of privacy posed by the scans and pat-downs, the public should expect these methods to be in full operation during the upcoming busy holiday travel period.

These procedures will add to an already wearisome and oftentimes exasperating travel experience for travelers waiting in long lines at security checkpoints, crammed into shrinking seats and being charged increasingly higher prices for everything from fares to drinks, snacks, blankets and pillows.

Moves by most major carriers to now charge fees for checked baggage have also led to passengers carrying on board increasing numbers of items, which in turn must be screened at security checkpoints and then stuffed into overhead bins.

In addition to keeping liquids and gels in plastic bags for examination by security personnel, travelers have been advised to check the TSA web site to see which holiday foods are approved as carry-ons this season. Cakes and pies are OK, but gravy, cheese dips, cranberry sauce, and other dense edibles that might be detected as explosive materials are prohibited.

http://wsws.org/articles/2010/nov2010/scan-n18.shtml

graymouser
18th November 2010, 18:44
Ah, security theater. Hopefully there's some serious direct action against it. It'd be so easy: everyone opts for the pat-down until the whole security concept basically breaks down. It needs to change, and soon.

Rakhmetov
18th November 2010, 19:10
I wonder if the airport screeeners masturbate to the body scans.
:confused:

The Red Next Door
18th November 2010, 19:12
I became a victim of the TSA rules past tuesday

Comrade Marxist Bro
18th November 2010, 22:43
I wonder if the airport screeeners masturbate to the body scans.
:confused:

And why the hell not? The covert pedophiles and control-fetishists in the Fatherland Department's transportation police especially might succumb to certain temptations of one kind or other.

At least the US-funded body scanners recently installed at Nigeria's Lagos Airport are being used that way: http://www.gadling.com/2010/09/28/body-scanners-used-as-porn-by-airport-security/

TSA workers don't have an awful lot in the way of on-the-job entertainment otherwise.


I became a victim of the TSA rules past tuesday

Ouch! A creepy experience, I would assume.

I'll take an "opt out" for the trains from now. My body doesn't need the "new invasive pat downs" or the allegedly "harmless extra radiation" (http://www.latimes.com/health/fl-nbcol-body-scanner-cancer-brochu-120101117,0,3026203.column) from the see-through scans.

The Red Next Door
18th November 2010, 23:55
And why the hell not? The covert pedophiles and control-fetishists in the Fatherland Department's transportation police especially might succumb to certain temptations of one kind or other.

At least the US-funded body scanners recently installed at Nigeria's Lagos Airport are being used that way: http://www.gadling.com/2010/09/28/body-scanners-used-as-porn-by-airport-security/

TSA workers don't have an awful lot in the way of on-the-job entertainment otherwise.



Ouch! A creepy experience, I would assume.

I'll take an "opt out" for the trains from now. My body doesn't need the "new invasive pat downs" or the allegedly "harmless extra radiation" (http://www.latimes.com/health/fl-nbcol-body-scanner-cancer-brochu-120101117,0,3026203.column) from the see-through scans.





Yes; he touch me down below and all over my butt checks.

RadioRaheem84
18th November 2010, 23:58
While I agree that the TSA is overstepping their boundaries, I wish the American people would get this upset over economic issues.

KC
19th November 2010, 00:25
Ah, security theater. Hopefully there's some serious direct action against it. It'd be so easy: everyone opts for the pat-down until the whole security concept basically breaks down. It needs to change, and soon.

I believe it was recently reported that around 98% of air travelers are choosing the full body scanner as they would rather be looked at than touched.

Unclebananahead
19th November 2010, 00:29
And I'm going to be flying from San Diego up to Northern California this Christmas. Damnable TSA!

synthesis
19th November 2010, 03:43
I prefer Amtrak.

Fulanito de Tal
19th November 2010, 13:03
I think I'm going to have an intentional erection if I get patted down...maybe ask the person to check there a few times ;)

ken6346
19th November 2010, 13:41
I think I'm going to have an intentional erection if I get patted down...maybe ask the person to check there a few times ;)
Next time I go to the US, I'll have to let out a few "involuntary" gasps :blushing: We'll just see where that goes.

Psy
20th November 2010, 02:07
While I agree that the TSA is overstepping their boundaries, I wish the American people would get this upset over economic issues.
They are not getting that upset, airport workers should strike since the TSA is scanning and patting them down too. The airport workers together have the power to stop this as without their labor there would be no flights thus the TSA would have no reason to scan passengers as there would be no passengers during a strike that grounded all flights (also strikes are much more effective then law suits).

Klaatu
20th November 2010, 02:18
While I agree that the TSA is overstepping their boundaries, I wish the American people would get this upset over economic issues.

Pollution issues too.

Isn't this screening of all flyers a violation of the Fourth Amendment?

Hexen
20th November 2010, 21:05
Isn't this screening of all flyers a violation of the Fourth Amendment?

Remember, the constitution was and is actually written for the bourgeoisie not for the working classes and it still applies to today.

Evidence (http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20101119/14485711948/why-congress-isnt-so-concerned-with-tsa-nude-scans-gropes-they-get-to-skip-them.shtml)

Klaatu
21st November 2010, 03:08
Remember, the constitution was and is actually written for the bourgeoisie not for the working classes and it still applies to today.

From that article (thanks for the link)

Why Congress Isn't So Concerned With TSA Nude Scans & Gropes: They Get To Skip Them

from the so-that's-how-it-works... dept

Earlier this week, in holding a hearing with the head of the TSA, our congressional representatives didn't seem too concerned (http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20101117/01402111906/tsa-defending-its-groin-grabbing-or-naked-image-security-techniques.shtml) about the public complaints about TSA security procedures: the naked scans and the gropings. Want to know why? Perhaps it's because, on the rare occasions that they fly commercial, they get to skip security (http://thecaucus.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/11/19/no-security-pat-downs-for-boehner/?nl=us&emc=politicsemailema1). The NY Times notes that Speaker of the House John Boehner (who does regularly fly commercial) got to walk right by security and go directly to the gate. In defending this, Michael Steel, head of the Republican party pointed out that this is true of all Congressional leaders -- which doesn't make it any better.
Rep John Boehner and Sen Mitch McConnell are worse than binLaden himself. Why is this? Because they can do far more damage to America than binLaden could possibly dream of, in his wildest dreams...

These two (and a few others) are anti-American subversives who are out to destroy social safety-net programs, dismantle the EPA, give ultra powers to the uber wealthy and corporations... What is really so different from this proposed USA, and typical medieval society, where people lived in seperate economic classes, far apart from top-to-bottom.

The more things change, the more they stay the same.

Jimmie Higgins
21st November 2010, 03:37
While I agree that the TSA is overstepping their boundaries, I wish the American people would get this upset over economic issues.I wish the general american public would get this upset over the fact that this has been done to Arabs on a regular basis and profiling applauded by hawks and justified by liberals since 9/11.

Hexen
21st November 2010, 05:07
Rep John Boehner and Sen Mitch McConnell are worse than binLaden himself. Why is this? Because they can do far more damage to America than binLaden could possibly dream of, in his wildest dreams...

These two (and a few others) are anti-American subversives who are out to destroy social safety-net programs, dismantle the EPA, give ultra powers to the uber wealthy and corporations... What is really so different from this proposed USA, and typical medieval society, where people lived in seperate economic classes, far apart from top-to-bottom.

The more things change, the more they stay the same.

I don't think "anti-american" (well actually the U.S. since America is just a name of a entire continent which also describes how imperialistic the U.S. really is on the tan there) is the right word to use since it's also a subjective term (which is also known to be used against socialists, feminists, etc) and it's more "anti-worker" to put things more accurately.

Also the US never was a golden utopia that everyone claims it to be (Unless if you were a wealthy white male of course which the U.S. was originally built for). Try reading Micheal Parenti's "The Myth of the Founding Fathers" and "Democracy for the Few" for starters which this situation would make much more sense once coming back to.

Psy
21st November 2010, 05:35
I wish the general american public would get this upset over the fact that this has been done to Arabs on a regular basis and profiling applauded by hawks and justified by liberals since 9/11.

I wish they got far more upset, I would really like to see airport workers on go strike. I with air port worker showed the world they actually have a back bone and won't let pigs feel them up without a fight.

Klaatu
21st November 2010, 20:53
I don't think "anti-american" (well actually the U.S. since America is just a name of a entire continent which also describes how imperialistic the U.S. really is on the tan there) is the right word to use since it's also a subjective term (which is also known to be used against socialists, feminists, etc) and it's more "anti-worker" to put things more accurately.


"Anti-Worker" subversive is more accurate, for sure.

TwoSevensClash
21st November 2010, 21:16
I wish the general american public would get this upset over the fact that this has been done to Arabs on a regular basis and profiling applauded by hawks and justified by liberals since 9/11.
I know the governments been doing shit like this for ages and only now people care.

JerryBiscoTrey
21st November 2010, 21:36
While I agree that the TSA is overstepping their boundaries, I wish the American people would get this upset over economic issues.

lol i know right? Theyre outraged by this assault on freedom but barely care about Arizona making an immigration law that is quite parallel to making the jews wear gold stars in Nazi Germany. Theyre barely outraged about the US gov't forcing us to pay our tax dollars to fund wars to kill brown people who arent even a real threat. Theyre barely outraged that the so-called public servants known as police officers continue to racially profile innocent men and women and use violence and get away with it. But God forbid, they do patdowns at the airport (which i agree is ludicrous) and all hell breaks loose. Lol what a fucking stupid nation we live in

Klaatu
22nd November 2010, 01:11
I think I'm going to have an intentional erection if I get patted down...maybe ask the person to check there a few times ;)

Either that, or stash a big juicy keelbasa in there :lol: that "wood" get a second look on the full-body-scan screen...

JerryBiscoTrey
22nd November 2010, 01:18
Either that, or stash a big juicy keelbasa in there :lol: that "wood" get a second look on the full-body-scan screen...

lololololol GENIUS!

Comrade Marxist Bro
22nd November 2010, 01:32
lol i know right? Theyre outraged by this assault on freedom but barely care about Arizona making an immigration law that is quite parallel to making the jews wear gold stars in Nazi Germany. Theyre barely outraged about the US gov't forcing us to pay our tax dollars to fund wars to kill brown people who arent even a real threat. Theyre barely outraged that the so-called public servants known as police officers continue to racially profile innocent men and women and use violence and get away with it. But God forbid, they do patdowns at the airport (which i agree is ludicrous) and all hell breaks loose. Lol what a fucking stupid nation we live in

Yup -- the government can wage perpetual war and overthrow sovereign governments, even democratic ones, "for our freedoms," support Saddam and Islamic "freedom fighters" abroad or invade in order to topple them, justify the deaths of foreign children and women with propaganda about non-existent weapons and our exceptional mission to enlighten the savages, legally torture 15-year-olds at Guantanamo in order to charge them with war crimes, put in warrantless wiretaps, and place disssenters on the "no-fly-list," and so on. All that is justifiable exercise of power by a well-meaning government in Washington and the corporate profiteers backing it, but patting down wifey and irradiating grandpa and grandma at the airport is off limits -- seriously.

Hell hath no fury like the fury over a morally outraged American. We're are a brave, free, and proud nation -- you must remember that we have ideals and morals, and we will never acquiesce to being treated as a mass of intimidated sheep.

Psy
22nd November 2010, 20:59
Yup -- the government can wage perpetual war and overthrow sovereign governments, even democratic ones, "for our freedoms," support Saddam and Islamic "freedom fighters" abroad or invade in order to topple them, justify the deaths of foreign children and women with propaganda about non-existent weapons and our exceptional mission to enlighten the savages, legally torture 15-year-olds at Guantanamo in order to charge them with war crimes, put in warrantless wiretaps, and place disssenters on the "no-fly-list," and so on. All that is justifiable exercise of power by a well-meaning government in Washington and the corporate profiteers backing it, but patting down wifey and irradiating grandpa and grandma at the airport is off limits -- seriously.

Hell hath no fury like the fury over a morally outraged American. We're are a brave, free, and proud nation -- you must remember that we have ideals and morals, and we will never acquiesce to being treated as a mass of intimidated sheep.

Well if you were patted down every time you went to work wouldn't you expect your co-workers to be ready to strike over it? I mean exploitation is one thing but workers shouldn't stand for such humiliation, I know workers should engage in class struggle over being exploited but engaging in class struggle to stop their masters from humiliating them is better then nothing which is why I really do wish airport/airline workers had the back bone to ground all flights till the TSA backs down.

Comrade Marxist Bro
22nd November 2010, 21:26
Well if you were patted down every time you went to work wouldn't you expect your co-workers to be ready to strike over it? I mean exploitation is one thing but workers shouldn't stand for such humiliation, I know workers should engage in class struggle over being exploited but engaging in class struggle to stop their masters from humiliating them is better then nothing which is why I really do wish airport/airline workers had the back bone to ground all flights till the TSA backs down.

It's very good, Psy. I'm happy that there is a struggle against the scanners and pat downs, and that the pilots, at least, appear to be winning their fight back. But I am also sick of the whole War of Terror joke, and very disturbed that the rest of America has waited so long to become outraged about something.

dearest chuck
22nd November 2010, 21:45
this must be sign of intensifying class struggle. the iso ought to consider infiltrating the hare krishnas.

Psy
22nd November 2010, 23:41
It's very good, Psy. I'm happy that there is a struggle against the scanners and pat downs, and that the pilots, at least, appear to be winning their fight back. But I am also sick of the whole War of Terror joke, and very disturbed that the rest of America has waited so long to become outraged about something.
In the 1970's it was different, militancy was prominent amount American industrial workers which is why the bourgeoisie in the 1980's talked about creating a frictionless economy (a economy without the proletariat resisting exploitation) as a solution of the crisis of capital back then (that of course failed to prevent capitalism from having another crisis of capital).

Burn A Flag
23rd November 2010, 23:47
I guess Americans are such prudes that having their body shape seen digitally is horrifying. But very sad how this sparks huge controversy and struggle while no one cares a bit about labor rights. I mean it's opressions sure, but on the whole scale not a big deal compared to things like immigration and wage slavery.

Comrade Marxist Bro
24th November 2010, 19:02
I guess Americans are such prudes that having their body shape seen digitally is horrifying.

There is no need to be a prude to oppose body scanners. The scanners are merely a security theater project that makes fools of people because it is 1) a worthless hassle at the airport, 2) a needless waste of public money, 3) another blow at the cumulative erosions of the protections of the Fourth Amendment, 4) and a source of radiation exposure that has been questioned by some scientists and has never been assessed as totally safe for every traveling person by independent bodies.

Among the scientists complaining about the body scanners: UCSF head bio laboratory scientist John Sedat, whose wife Elizabeth Blackburn won the 2009 Nobel Prize in Physiology/Medicine, and who writes that the radiation exposure to the skin is many times higher than officially reported because of the uneven effect of the technology on the body; John Hopkins' x-ray laboratory specialist Michael Love, who says the same thing and assumes that someone, statistically, will actually get cancer from these devices; and Columbia University head radiologist David Brenner, who worries about the effects of mass exposure from these "harmless" devices. (http://www.latimes.com/health/fl-nbcol-body-scanner-cancer-brochu-120101117,0,3026203.column) Boian Alexandrov at the Center for Nonlinear Studies at Los Alamos National Laboratory has reported the existence of studies claiming that exposure to tetrahertz waves, such as those emitted from other types of deployed body scanners, might "unzip double-stranded DNA, creating bubbles in the double strand that could significantly interfere with processes such as gene expression and DNA replication" -- a "jaw dropping conclusion." (http://www.technologyreview.com/blog/arxiv/24331/) These scientists' colleagues, such as UCSF cancer scientist Marc Sherman, UCSF x-ray crystollagrophers David Agard and Robert Stroud, physicist Peter Rez at the University of Arizona, and various others, concur that the various scanners may be potentially dangerous and that these health concerns deserve further investigating.

In fact, Dr. Rez asserts that the odds of dying from exposure to body scanner radiation are actually about equal to the odds of death in a terrorist bomb attack (http://www.dailymail.co.uk/travel/article-1331185/Airport-body-scanners-just-likely-kill-terrorist-bombs.html), and Dr. Brenner, who points out that 1 in 20 people carries unexpressed gene mutations that involve extra susceptibility to radiation (you may be one of these people), was actually among the scientists who helped draft guidelines for full-body scanners "but now says he wouldn’t have done it if he knew the scanners would be used in such a widespread fashion." (http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/80beats/2010/11/17/whats-the-real-radiation-risk-of-the-tsas-full-body-x-ray-scans/)

The European Commission, recently charged with investigating the technology, reported that "a rigorous scientific assessment" of potential health risks is needed before the machines are deployed and recommended that the machines should not be used on "pregnant women, babies, children and people with disabilities." (http://travel.usatoday.com/flights/2010-07-13-1Abodyscans13_ST_N.htm)

If pregnant women, elderly citizens, and health-conscious men worried about the extra radiation follow such advice, they must opt out; if they opt out, the natural consequence of doing so is getting touched on the breasts and genital areas by the TSA's security guards in order to avoid bypassing the "extra precautions" set up by the TSA's screening protocols. The body scanners would be even more useless than they already are if people were allowed to opt out without consequently being faced with the extra groping. People prosthetic body parts that interfere with the scanning process are subjected to same scrutiny, and transgender individuals who have not received surgery are additional hassles for the Kafkaesque agents of the Transportation Security Administration.

Americans were pretty skeptical about the technology before the underwear bomber incident, but former Homeland Security Chief Michael Chertoff, a classic insider with obvious connections to the security industry, lobbied hard for the scanners as a consultant for Rapiscan, the company that makes the machines. Ordinary Americans are stuck with the bill.

To add insult to injury, Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Umar_Farouk_Abdulmutallab), the 2009 "underwear bomber" whose ridiculous plot promoted the installation of the machines, was famously ratted out -- by his suspicious father -- to representatives of the American government before the incident; rather than taking action to keep him out, the ever-so-competent protectors of our freedom issued him a visa to board a flight for the US. The government then insisted that Americans subject themselves to scanners or gropes in order to remain safe from people like him.

Taken alone, any one of these outrages might be tolerated by a muted American public long brainwashed by the demagogic politicans and the various other professional War of Terror fearmongers. But, taken together, they provoke widespread outrage -- which, I think, is very justified.


But very sad how this sparks huge controversy and struggle while no one cares a bit about labor rights. I mean it's opressions sure, but on the whole scale not a big deal compared to things like immigration and wage slavery.

This is an understatement -- but I agree that it is damn horrifying to witness the fact that real pushback only starts with things like this; Americans simply have no concepts like "wage slavery" and "institutional oppression" in their vocabularies.

Such concerns are probably too much to expect from a population many of whose members see access to healthcare as a facet of Marxist totalitarianism and endorse privatizing of the elderly's social security through the stock market -- a ready means of enriching Wall Street investors -- as a way to strike back at the "liberal left." The major enemies of democracy and empire -- the major personal enemies of the voters, come election time -- are captured 15-year-old boys tortured at Guantanamo, blockaded Palestinians, Latin American immigrants fleeing a century of destruction wreaked by a century of American-sponsored death squads and "big-stick" interventions, Afghans resisting the occupation of their country, Iraqis who dislike our flag, Iranian madmen who want deterrence against imperialism, nuclear-armed Koreans who invaded us in 1950.

The body scanner is the veritable embodiment of an age where, as Thomas Friedman once boasted, the surest detterent to the mass murder of innocent people may be the ubiquitous presence of the Golden Arches beside cheeseburger-and-fry franchises (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_with_McDonalds_franchises#Golden _Arches_Theory_of_Conflict_Prevention). Far more than the Bill of Rights or the idea of the civil liberties we pay homage to, the scanner represents what modern America is and what America is fighting for. Perhaps, then, whatever their other pretensions to being good Americans, the irate masses protesting the body scanner aren't fully grasping the logic of America itself -- for, however incoherent the objection in this case by some of the patriotic Tea Party types, they are rebelling against the latest addition to our way of living. Who can object to them?

Having been cynically brainwashed by decades of corporate and government propaganda posing as a principled ideology of freedom, the population is indeed a pretty lamentable crowd -- those protesting now are a suddenly bewildered bunch that has long been completely cowed into submitting to the throwing away of the few enshrined Constitutional liberties that were actually guaranteed with the historic passage of the 2001 USA PATRIOT Act and goaded into reelecting the lying corporatist warmonger George W. Bush for a second term -- with pro-war John Kerry as his natural Democratic opponent. The present era of "hope and change" now lingers on, with the same public continuing to be browbeaten into accepting more and more of a police state in the name of freedom and democracy.

The positive news is that there are still some Americans ready to draw the line at any sort of indignity at all.

Psy
24th November 2010, 22:04
This is an understatement -- but I agree that it is damn horrifying to witness the fact that real pushback only starts with things like this; Americans simply have no concepts like "wage slavery" and "institutional oppression" in their vocabularies.

That is because like the industrial proletariat saw setback after setback and become demoralized. Most American industrial workers know of "wage slavery" and "institutional oppression" by have became cynical to being able to do anything about it, due to having to fight both the bosses and the bourgeoisie unions. It is very demoralizing when you realize the UAW is the largest union busting organization in the USA as it crushes all militant movements that start to form in the auto industry.