believer;737404 wrote:I wouldn't either but zealots (and we all know who the zealots are)
Yep. Zealots who are willing to murder and die for a cause, be it religious or political, do exist, and they come in all shapes, sizes, and ages. If we stereotype Middle Eastern names, clothing, religious leanings, or skin tones, we're being ignorant. There are blond-haired, blue-eyed radicals. There are red-headed radicals. There are male and female radicals. They are young and old.
believer;737404 wrote:who are willing to do this are not likely the parents of this little girl, or nuns, or the elderly.
Why not? Could religious zealots simply don nun garments? Could they recruit the most elderly of their ilk? Could they find the most middle-America looking of their belief system?
The answer to every question there is "Yes," and in no scenario is it all that far-fetched.
believer;737404 wrote:These intrusive "procedures" are all being done - not for our safety - but so the Department of Homeland Security and the TSA cannot be accused of profiling.
Profiling is not only prejudicial and ignorant, but if you want safety, it's also stupid. All someone wishing to do harm would have to do is recruit someone who doesn't fit the profile. That's not difficult.
believer;737404 wrote:The problem is common-sense profiling is PRECISELY what should be happening.
Not at all. What SHOULD be happening is arming people on the plane to be able to properly handle suspicious activity that takes place. I don't mind an airline (private enterprise) adding security on their flights, including cameras and armed enforcement.
No amount of profile is above exploit. That's the inherent problem with it, and that's why it will always fail in the end. It's a method as old as the myth of the Trojan Horse. The Greeks knew they wouldn't be allowed into the city looking like Greeks. So they came in looking like something the Trojans didn't suspect. In that way, they passed the screening of people allowed through the gate, and inside the walls of Troy.
Same rules apply. If we place rules on profiling, those wishing to get past it will just find a way to circumvent the rules we use to profile.
Forgetting the issue of rights (which I contend is a valid issue), profiling isn't even an effective measure for enhancing safety.
believer;737404 wrote:The more we allow the moronic Feds to keep infringing on our rights, the more this IN-FUGGING-SANITY is likely to grow.
The problem with being outraged about your rights being infringed is that the same argument about your own rights can be applied to anyone else's rights, as well ... that includes those who might wish to do harm to others.
I'd feel safer, without feeling violated, if there were simply more surveillance and security on the planes themselves than the idiotic screening processes we have now. With as invasive as these are, do you know how easy it would have been to hide C4 or a ceramic knife on that girl, or anyone else, for that matter? C4 can be sculpted (carefully), and ceramic knives can be crafted to follow the contour of the body very closely ... or even wrapped up securely and placed in crevices.
Now, I dare you to try to USE those things if you're being closely monitored, and you've got air marshals or other armed security.