The TSA "shot themselves in the foot" in US House Staff Briefing

[A House staffer who attended the briefing] said that several House staffers were so uncomfortable they averted their eyes when the TSA demonstrated an enhanced pat-down in the room of 200 people.

"The dumbest part: they did two pat-down demonstrations – male on male, and female on female," the House staffer said. And they used a young female TSA volunteer "and in front of a room of 200 people, they touched her breasts and her buttocks. People were averting their eyes. The TSA was trying to demonstrate ‘this is not so bad,' but it made people so uncomfortable to watch, that people were averting their eyes."

"They shot themselves in the foot," the staffer continued.

via politico.com

They say daylight is the best disinfectant. Now that our congress critters have seen just how invasive these "enhanced pat-down" procedures are, do you think they might do something about it? I hope so.

Love Pats. Baby, Love Pats!

via youtube.com

Ignoring the whole "naked body picture" issue for a bit, are those new full-body scanners at the TSA checkpoints safe? The TSA insists they are safe, but on No Agenda, they followed the evidence. While they certainly go to great lengths to imply they are safe, there's nothing that says the actual scanners used in our airports were tested and actually found to be safe.

So to be on the safe side, I'm going to opt-opt and get some "love pats." SNL, of course, takes this to its logical conclusion.

It may be snowing, but my fountain is still going.

via Osfoora for iPhone

Scientists say they have solution to TSA scanner objections

A cheap and simple fix in the computer software of new airport scanners could silence the uproar from travelers who object to the so-called virtual strip search, according to a scientist who helped develop the program at one of the federal government's most prestigious institutes.

via washingtonpost.com

What about the potentially dangerous levels of radiation these machines emit? Software can't easily fix that. I'm still opting out, even if it does mean a more thorough, invasive screening.

Ron Paul on the new TSA Procedures

via youtube.com

Ron Paul is my hero. I just hope his proposed legislation goes somewhere other than the round file. Alas, he'll be told to sit down and shut up, SLAVE!

Head of TSA John Pistole Testifies Before Congress

WASHINGTON, D.C.—The U.S. Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation announces the following full committee hearing on Transportation Security Administration oversight.

via commerce.senate.gov

The head of TSA John Pistole is interviewed. To say I'm not a fan of this guy is an understatement.

Radiation Experts Concerned With TSA Airport Security Scanners

The government, though, might be engaging in a little myth-making of its own by insisting that the new airport imaging machines that use X-rays are unequivocally safe for all passengers and airport personnel passing through dozens or even hundreds of times a year. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration says the new device, known as a backscatter X-ray machine, meets the standard of a "general use" X-ray machine, meaning that a person would have to have 1,000 scans a year before approaching the maximum allowable radiation dose for the general public.

But some researchers who study radiation's health effects beg to differ. Last April, four imaging experts from the University of California, San Francisco sent a letter of concern to President Obama's science and technology advisor, John Holdren, questioning, "the extent to which the safety of this scanning device has been adequately demonstrated," they wrote. They added that it might deliver a concentrated dose of radiation to the skin—necessary to penetrate clothes—that could be "dangerously high," possibly increasing the risk of skin cancer and other cancers in susceptible individuals. They called for an independent panel of experts to review all the risk data including whether the scanners pose a higher risk to certain folks like pregnant women, seniors, children, and teens.

via health.usnews.com

The fact is, we don't know what we're getting ourselves into with these scanners. Even if the scanners were safe, I don't feel comfortable with the idea that someone somewhere whom isn't my wife can look at me naked. I don't completely trust that the TSA is doing everything they say they are doing either (namely disabling the save/print/network functions), so even if they were safe, I wouldn't want to walk through the machines anyway.

At least with a patdown--even the "enhanced" ones--I know what I'm getting (molested) and how safe it is.

Chris Selley: Airline security is worse than stupid. It's sociopathic and immoral

"There has to be some sacrifice…when it comes to security," [said a reporter whose toddler daughter was subject to a patdown at an airport recently.] True. "Sacrifice" was what we endured before 9/11 — long lines, metal detectors, emptying your pockets. The current situation is more reminiscent of The Onion's fictional Franz Kafka International Airport, where the average delay is 32.2 hours, the security questionnaire asks, "Is it not true that you are whoever we say you are?" and agents write "LIAR" on the hands of passengers they don't trust.

via fullcomment.nationalpost.com

What scares me is that, even in the face of widespread opposition to the new TSA screening mandates, head of the Transportation Security Administration John Pistole testified before congress yesterday that he intends to continue the use of these unsafe, naked body scanners and the enhanced patdowns which even he admitted were invasive.

Hey Mr. Pistole, how about you take a trip to Israel and see how they do it. They are just as thorough but don't require you to take off your shoes, walk through a potentially unsafe scanner, or have your "junk" molested. And it's a lot cheaper than the scanners, too.

TSO saying "heads up, got a cutie for you" - FlyerTalk Forums

Last week, one of my flying partners (Captain with Skywest) was going through security at DEN with his 18 year daughter. As his daughter approached the detector, the TSO working the NoS said on his headset, "heads up, got a cutie for you." He then confronted the TSA clerk with what he said and that neither of us are going through the NoS. The TSA clerk said you must have misunderstood me.

He said pat-down was pretty evasive, and his daughter felt uncomfortable.

He is taking it up with Skywest, with this behavior. Normally, crews there go through a different screening area, but since he was with his daughter, he got to see the TSA clerks at their finest in Denver.

Its stoiries like this, is why I will not go through the NoS (radiation/health issues) and even refuse the the pat-down thus (if it happens while on duty) canceling the flight due to a hostile work environment.

via flyertalk.com

Read the rest of the responses on this posting. Flight attendants and pilots are refusing the patdowns and the nudeoscope scanners. This results in flight delays and cancellations.

Supporting Sexual Assault: The Left and the TSA

The TSA is there to remind us that the State is all-powerful, and that even to question any act is to commit a crime. (For those who don't know it, openly questioning these procedures at an airport is to commit the crime of "Interfering with the Duties of a Federal Officer," and the maximum penalty is 20 years in prison. Look it up yourself.)

[…]

If government is to give us Utopia, then government must have a free hand. To the Left, since government should control everything, then government also controls your body (except if you want to have an abortion, but government still should pay for it). So, to those who believe we need even more state control, what is happening in airports is a good thing, for it reminds us that we are and should be subservient to the State.

via lewrockwell.com

I thought the woman describing her molestation experience at the hands of the TSA was sick. This all but outright says that sexual molestation is ok if the government does it.