Tip of the spear

by · 197 comments

November 23, 2010
Sydney, New South Wales, Australia

Military tacticians and historians often make use of the term ‘tip of the spear.’ It refers to a combat force that is used to puncture the enemy’s initial lines of defense, to be quickly followed by concentrated forces which destroy any remaining threat.

Tactically, the tip of the spear is a bit of a blitzkrieg– an unexpected onslaught of firepower and destruction that takes the enemy by surprise, scatters his resources, and fractures his morale.

I’m convinced that what we’re seeing right now from the US Transportation Security Administration (TSA) is the tip of the spear in the government’s battle for increased control of the public.

The groundwork has been laid for years– legislation empowering the TSA has gradually eroded civil liberties to the point that airports in the United States have now become ‘no rights’ zones. “Please remove your shoes” has now become “Take out your prosthetic breast so I can check it for explosives.”

Passengers who show up to an airport in the United States are now given two options: (a) go through the radiation bath [don't worry, the government says it's safe...] and let the TSA see you naked, or (b) let the TSA thugs grope you and fondle your children’s genitals.

This is not enhanced security protocol, this is a systematic desensitization to government intrusion. The idea is to get people used to new procedures, then continue to add more layers of government control.

Certainly, people will complain. They will be outraged… YouTube videos will abound of TSA agents stroking women’s breasts and disrobing 5-year old boys. The government will hold firm, though, responding that the tactics are necessary and that they will ‘look into’ egregious violations.

To be clear, some of the tactics are designed to be scaled back as concessions. It’s like turning up the volume from 0 to 10… everyone starts screaming that it’s too loud, so the government turns it down to 8. People think, “ah, that’s not as bad…” and eventually become accustomed to the noise.

In time, the government turns it up from 8 to 20. People pour into the streets again, protesting until the government turns it down from 20 to 15. People once again become accustomed to the noise as the new normal. This cycle escalates until no one can remember the sound of silence any longer.

It’s fairly easy to do– there will always be politicians and bureaucrats who can invent stories about innocuous white powders and men in caves that scare the daylights out of people.

Similarly, there will always be long lists of sociopaths, perverts, and pedophiles who are attracted to a job description that authorizes them to grope, fondle, humiliate, and intimidate others.

And of course, there will always be spineless nincompoops who stand by without protest as their wives and children get violated by government agents… and then rationalize their inaction as a necessary sacrifice for safety.

When I was in Bali the other day, I was flipping through channels on the TV and saw Mike Huckabee interviewing Whoopi Goldberg on FoxNews. “Now there’s a couple of intellectual luminaries,” I thought to myself. Whoopi wasted no time in summing up her intellect when she had this to say of the TSA’s tactics:

“… if it’s going to keep me from getting blown out of the sky, you can check anything you want; and if you feel something you like and squeeze it… what am I going to do? [acknowledging laughter from Huckabee]”

The fact is that body scanners are as ineffective at threat detection as metal detectors. Furthermore, the government has ruled out the idea of scanning air or seaborne cargo… because, clearly, cargo would never be a target. The little old lady with the prosthetic hip? Definitely. Cargo? No chance.

These tactics are not about security… they’re about submission, obedience, and cultivating the slave mentality– that people should be afraid of their government and happily yield to authority without question or hesitation.

To be fair, it’s not just in the US; I woke up this morning to a front page photo in the Wall Street Journal of a machine gun toting policeman in Germany cruising a passenger train because of some hackneyed terror threat. Much of the world is living in a similar state.

This is the tip of the spear, and what comes next can only be worse. I don’t say this to stir emotion or create a sense of panic, but rather to appeal to reason:

The threat is very clear– we need not fear men in caves or silly powders, but rather the malignant intentions of our governments and the perverse men who are attracted to its works. If these aren’t the clearest signs of a police state, I don’t know what else could be.

I’m really interested to hear from you about this– what have you experienced during recent travels? Are these offenses -finally- enough to make you consider leaving? If not, where is the limit?

Want More?
Sign up below for the free newsletter Sovereign Man: Notes From The Field to get more information like the article you just read, plus exclusive information that is not posted publicly.
2010-11-23
  • Narceddiver

    Dear Mr. black.
    First of all please excuse me for such an informal forms of communication. To get to the point I feel that most people do not know where to turn when it comes to matters like this. In my mind it is not the “blind sheep” mentality, although that does happen, I see it to be a matter of where to turn. With the world in the state it is in, what nation will be the next neutral location if “it hits the fan” so to speak? I feel this is what people want to know most. Personally I feel the best option is geographically isolated off the grid self sufficient communities of like minded individuals…but that is just me.

    • PJC612

      But have no fear Palin the nincompoop will save us all…..SCARY!!!!!!

  • Lucas

    Simon,

    This is by far one of the best letters you have written in a while.

    After reading your site for quite sometime now (and being an SMC member) I still hadn’t quite figured out how deeply you thought about the governments plans for us. Now I know.

    Thank you for using your position to inform people of the truth.

    As for when I am getting out: A…S…A…P

  • guest

    I had to complete an online book for my own VPs and our investors. Its hard to determine how thick the “civil rights” chapter needs to be, knowing only 25% of Americans believe 9/11 needs further investigation (indicating 75% are either stupid or afraid to admit the truth). Its hard to convince the majority of them that between the media and policies like the TSA groping, they’re being “tested” to their limits prior to a financial and physical slaughter (impoverishment and enslavement does that), a sequence that’s been in process for decades, though accelerating now. To give them an idea of what to expect, I reviewed the 12 part series on Argentina’s collapse (youtube) – a brilliant piece clearly predicting, if not accurately staging the future of America and much of the western world today. The bad news? Its going to get much worse before people wake up. The good news? When they do wake up the Fed, IMF, BIS and D.C. will have hell to pay. I might suggest anyone thinking about surviving this storm reads the tips here and gets ready for the next shoe to fall – like a boulder off a cliff – it doesn’t happen slowly when it goes – though we can sense it coming – but when it hits its a nearly overnight event. Heads up. The fuse is lit and you’re holding the dynamite (called a U.S. passport). Throw it away and get something sane in your hands: my two cents.

  • Bluesky3

    Hi Simon — John Potts here. My answer to the current TSA problem is to boycott the airlines. For me this is easy because I haven't ridden them for over ten years. In fact that dissuaded me from signing up for your Workshop in February. Hopefully I'll have a solution by the time you schedule the next one. Meanwhile I am looking at other ways to get me and my goods 0ut of the U.S. 11/23/10

  • g b

    simon, regarding the “tip of the spear”….while i read with interest and agreement with your comments….i had to take issue with your characterization of both ms winfrey and mr huckabee….their past and there religious beliefs have nothing to do with the subject matter….and so i found your comments to be out of line…

    most americans sit back and do nothing….and so the government or a business gets away with things that they shouldn't….i'm not that kind of person…so, while others may accept your off the cuff remarks about the two formerly mentioned celebraties….i don't….and the fact that i'm not a serious fan of either has not clouded my judgement….

    the letter was wonderful….but the editorial comment was, in my opinion, out of line and certainly not needed to make your point…you are far to talented a thinker and writer to stoop to those kinds of comments….respectfully, g b

  • Craig Mead

    I had to complete an online book for my own VPs and our investors. Its hard to determine how thick the “civil rights” chapter needs to be, knowing only 25% of Americans believe 9/11 needs further investigation (indicating 75% are either stupid or afraid to admit the truth). Its hard to convince the majority of them that between the media and policies like the TSA groping, they're being “tested” to their limits prior to a financial and physical slaughter (impoverishment and enslavement does that), a sequence that's been in process for decades, though accelerating now. To give them an idea of what to expect, I reviewed the 12 part series on Argentina's collapse (youtube) – a brilliant piece clearly predicting, if not accurately staging the future of America and much of the western world today. The bad news? Its going to get much worse before people wake up. The good news? When they do wake up the Fed, IMF, BIS and D.C. will have hell to pay. I might suggest anyone thinking about surviving this storm reads the tips here and gets ready for the next shoe to fall – like a boulder off a cliff – it doesn't happen slowly when it goes – though we can sense it coming – but when it hits its a nearly overnight event. Heads up. The fuse is lit and you're holding the dynamite (called a U.S. passport). Throw it away and get something sane in your hands: my two cents.

  • JH

    I've worked in the US fed govt for about 25 years – both as an employee and contract programmer. The govies are just average people – some smart, some dumb as rocks. Most just want a paycheck, nothing else. You would probably find more wack jobs in the military. I was 3 years there too. J

  • Sp

    Hi Simon
    I came back into the UK from Cyprus the other day. They were separating people with or with out the new wireless chipped passports. I had one so joined that que only to see some kind of face scanner or iris scanner. They were asking you to scan your passport and stand in fron of the scanner at the same time.

    I promptly joined the normal que where there was a human, it was alot quicker as the computer system that hadled it was very slow and they dont have a scan of me yet. Its getting really bad and all under the guise of terrorism which is absolute crock. Its easy enough to do bad things if you were that way inclined with out going near aircraft..

  • CharlesB

    “We cannot defend freedom abroad by deserting it at home.” – Edward R. Murrow

    “Fear is the foundation of most governments.” – John Adams

    “Shun security.” – Thales of Miletos

    “Security is mostly a superstition. It does not exist in nature…..life is either a daring adventure or nothing.” – Helen Keller

    “Nothing can now be believed which is seen in a newspaper.” – Thomas Jefferson

    “You can fool all the people some of the time, and some of the people all the time, but you cannot fool all the people all the time.” – Abraham Lincoln

    “Is an old adage that the way to be safe is never to be secure. Each one of us requires the spur of insecurity to force us to do our very best.” – Harold W. Dodds

    “Beware the leader who bangs the drums of war in order to whip the citizenry into a patriotic fervor, for patriotism is indeed a double-edged sword. It both emboldens the blood, just it narrows the mind. And when the drums of war have reached a fever pitch and the blood boils with hate and the mind has closed, the leader will have no need in seizing the rights of the citizenry.

    Rather, the citizenry, infused with fear and blinded by partiotism, will offer up all of their rights unto the leader and gladly so. How do I know? For this is what I have done. And I am Caesar.”–Julius Caesar

  • Stevekusaba

    No kidding, this was very well put. A study of history from Rome through the inquisition to the modern super nation entities that kept the 20th century embroiled in horror, the most dangerous thing to people are concentrations of power (massive governments) that have no restraint.

    The biggest problem to leaving is that there are not any modern places that are “free”. Singapore is good for business but horrible for personal freedoms. I could go on and on about this pattern. The problem is that freedom loving people have yet to carve out one place that allows real freedom on all levels. I would be most interested in what you think is the free-est country in the world given your first hand experience of going everywhere. Thanks, and another very good article.

  • Capt'n Gabe

    People are fearful. I say to hell with “safety”. I want freedom. Hand every person a 9mm pistol on boarding; those rounds won't bring down a plane. If hijackers appear it'll 2 against 200 and a short fight. That, in itself, will ensure safety. Bombs are the only legitimate threat. Anyone intimidated by cutlery should sit down, shut up, and beg real men to lead.

  • http://NCIDPolicy.org Jane

    As a friend of mine said today just before being dropped at the airport, you go to the airport in the United States and are offered the choice of being forced into pornography or being sexually molested.

    Much to my dismay, many years ago and in work that I began against domestic violence, I discovered institutionalized violence as you have so well described here. The damage that such violence does to a person AND a society is far greater than the damage that it purports to “prevent”. The psychological damage of normalized violence goes so much deeper, is so much more profound, than when a society at least has the civility to condemn that violence. And then it's normalization and institutionalization spreads it to or near ubiquity. “Our Government is the potent, the omnipresent teacher. For good or for ill, it teaches the whole people by its example.”, in the words of the United States' own Supreme Court (Miranda v. Arizona, 1966).

    It is always the most vulnerable and most innocent who are most harmed, in the end.

    Many of the kids now being subjected to TSA molestations will grow up with that same sense of self-righteous entitlement over the bodies and lives of others, will have little or no sense of wrong in such actions in any context. So whether the incessant wrenching up of the volume knob (using your analogy) is preplanned or not doesn't matter – those growing up in this time will normalize the current status, and think nothing of notching it up in the very same way, relative to this newly normalized level of socialized violence. Those who stand by and watch but do nothing to stop it are, as you so well point out, participating in it and perpetuating it themselves.

    As you note, exactly those who we'd least want doing such jobs are those who are most attracted to them, most seek them out, and consequently occupy those jobs in greatly disproportionate numbers. So, statistically, we should all expect that the vast majority of those TSA molesters are, indeed, sexual predators in the clinic/legal sense of the term.

    We've just stepped up the institutionalized violence to an all new high, and your volume knob analogy couldn't have been better for this process that has been going on intensively within the U.S. at least since the fever pitch of the McCarthyist era.

    I don't always agree with your opinions, Simon, but I think that this post could hardly be more insightful and spot-on.

  • Seh

    Agree completely. Problem is – where in the world can one go
    when ALL governments seem to be power-mad and against their
    citizens' interests? Orwell got it right both in 1984 and Animal
    Farm.

  • Diogenes

    Yes, this is making me consider leaving. There are mobile backscatter x-ray vehicles already deployed that can see into other vehicles, and the TSA has made it clear they plan on expanding their operations to bus stops, train stations and no doubt car checkpoints and any public gathering also at some point. No person of dignity and morality can live within such a society.

    While the sovereignman services are an all but mandatory tool for dealing with this situation, the fact remains that this big brother system is attempting to tighten it's noose world wide. Thus resistance in the US and globally is absolutely essential to prevent 1984 from becoming permanently real. That resistance should be expanded from the Tea Party movement, to a states rights nullification and secession movement. In addition to that, sovereignman network members and similar are playing a critical role, by starting global businesses that enable and expand freedom services such as private travel, monetary exchange,communication,global investment and more.

    It will be a 3 way race between big brother tyranny, global economic collapse, and freedom enhancing businesses-including tech- that determines what the future will end up looking like. It will almost certainly be a chaotic mix of factors for at least the next 5 years, if not the next 20. Hence individual preparation and action are the absolutely essential heart of the prospects for human freedom in the future.

  • Unr8d

    It's this type of writing by Simon that really gets me fired up. Sadly, it also helps enforce the reality, as I see it, that there truly is no hope for America…at least the America as it was originally designed.

    Yes, it's true, I'm sure, that from Day One the United States has been devolving. And as much as I'd love to see Ron Paul in the White House as the next U.S. President, I realize that he'd be only one head of a three-headed monstrosity called the Federal Government. And so the demise of the United States will continue, relatively unabated.

    Whatever the case, most Americans appear to be either unaware of or unwilling to confront the two-steps-ahead-and-one-step-back maneuvering by our legislators of both major parties, against our privacy and liberties, that ultimately takes us to the same bad place. It truly is as Simon writes:

    “To be clear, some of the tactics are designed to be scaled back as concessions. It’s like turning up the volume from 0 to 10… everyone starts screaming that it’s too loud, so the government turns it down to 8. People think, “ah, that’s not as bad…” and eventually become accustomed to the noise.

    In time, the government turns it up from 8 to 20. People pour into the streets again, protesting until the government turns it down from 20 to 15. People once again become accustomed to the noise as the new normal. This cycle escalates until no one can remember the sound of silence any longer.”

    The federal government (especially the feds) behave very much like a child (in more ways than one): ask for more then you think you'll get, in the hopes (expectation?) of getting more than you really needed. And the Americans have done a good job of saying “YES.” And once government takes something, it is the rarest of occasions that it gives it back.

    I've long considered the reality that 90-plus percent of the legislation put forward by legislators does little to nothing that enhances Americans' privacy and liberties. In fact, I dare say that that same 90-plus percent actively DIMINISHES personal privacy and liberties.

    But Americans seem to never have learned these important lessons…or they just don't care. And because of that, America will cease to be what it is even now, and will surely never be what it could have been…and what it was called to be.

    Thanks, Simon, for a poignant, relevant and, sadly, all too true set of statements about the “late, great United States.”

  • Liberallychallenged

    Extremely well put.

    God help us.

    http://www.liberallychallenged.com

  • George

    For those of us currently trapped in the US, without an international network yet, Any suggestions? Don't fly? Plan one last trip out, in a year (but where)? Hunker down? Learn to sail?

  • Laura

    Hello,
    I absolutely agree with you on this, and have been checking out other countries where I'd prefer to live, as America is no longer the land of freedom where I grew up. It would have been better to have escaped a few years ago; now I feel stuck, since I won't fly until the TSA is dismantled. So now I need to focus on places I can drive, Mexico, maybe Belize. The comparison with what happened in Nazi Germany is striking; why don't the sheeple see what is happening? Too much fluoride and prescription drugs, I'm sure. But close your eyes and it does NOT disappear; it only continues to get worse.

  • sheepnwolfsclothin

    Here! Here! Bravo! Always good to hear from the voice of the “few”. Meanwhile…back at the ranch, the majority of the sheep will keep getting in line to get sheared for the economical benefit of the Shearerrr. Whilst this dasterdly deed is being done one can hear the subtle whisper…..”it's for your own good, we're cold and your're too hot……it's for your own good, we're. . . . . .”

  • Jonny H

    Simon,
    GB had a point about your cheap shots at Huckabee and Whoopee. I don't agree with either of them, but it's based on ideas, not on their background.
    As for escaping the security state, there really are no safe havens, which is why I'm reading your stuff. I have an American passport but have lived in Asia on and off since 1995.
    The fact that My family and I have to submit to radiation or molestation to see our U.S. relations is quite troubling, and I'm sure you are right that it's a sign of worse things to come.
    Yes,the only effective way for an individual to fight growing government control is to vote with his/her feet. However, the question of where to go gets harder every year.

  • Galter Johnathan

    Here's my trick. Whenever I enter the US, I disarm the guards with love. They are trying to construct a framework of fear, so I just obliterate it by being rediculously nice and gracious. When I refuse a scan, I just tell them, I've done this before, its going to be ok. And I smile to the TSA officer and even to a little dance which puts them at ease, and the pat downs are a lot easier than when I used to resist. It helps me get through the insanity a lot easier than fighting it. It helps them remember we're all people playing this rediculous game, and it keeps me from getting cancer.

  • KJ

    Without all of the trappings I have accumulated in life, and after a couple of debilitating accidents, I have only my integrity and dignity left. Without either of those, there is no point in maintaining an existence on this orbiting rock. So, I will not stand in front of a machine that does not do what they say it will do, and pose for some perv in the back room. As for those machines they are raving about, they only need to visit YouTube and watch the German television show where the security expert demonstrated how the machine did NOT pick up any of the explosives he had on his person. I recognize the need for security, but I do not recognize the efforts being made by the TSA as anything that resembles security.

    I left the USA because I saw that my world had become a police state, where I was required to jump through hoops created by crooks, to control sheep. Europe has its issues, as well, but even if one were to consider Germany a police state, one has to recognize that, unlike the USA, you might not see a police officer for a month or two where I live (near a major city), and then he will only be driving through and not stopping. The other important factor is that an American living in Germany has more rights as a resident of Germany than he does in the USA as a citizen of the USA. Yes, sad, but very true.

    In France, the bureaucracy might make you nuts, but they have the good sense to tell you to grab a glass of wine and relax, while you wait. That, I can deal with and keep my sanity. So far, no airport officials have asked to fondle my genitals in France or Germany.

    I have not been back to the USA in five years and I do not see myself returning to the USA in the future.

    • Spazztic2pola

      “The other important factor is that an American living in Germany has more rights as a resident of Germany than he does in the USA as a citizen of the USA.”

      ..unless you are a parent wanting to home-school your child.

  • Hillwolf61@yahoo.com

    Mr Black,
    Why is it that you are always mining your audience for remedies? You, of all people, the international traveler, should be overflowing with solutions to the very questions that you propose. I find it difficult to give much credence to your questions. Contradictions keep springing to mind. Please forgive my cynicism, for I am an advocate of Mark Twain. Be well and safe in your tavels!

  • Eurpt

    Usually visiting 20+ countries per year I don’t like the TSA either, but unfortunately I have some very good friends in Hawaii so I have to deal with them in Honolulu.

    In Europe we’re blessed with water between the mainland and the bigbrother country of England where London’s airports comes to mind. I purposely avoid England and London like the plague. The airports there are the worst in all of Europe I think and they do their best to make you feel unwelcome and incriminated.

    When I stand in line for the security?? inspection in Heathrow I always look at the people in front of me and think of them as lemmings, just wandering off the cliff because they are followers. Then I look at the security guys and girl and more often than not they are a bunch of obese morons who are enjoying a sense of authority, not questioning how the hell they ended up there.

    London used to be a good transport hub out of Europe with some of the cheapest flights but Amsterdam, Paris and some of the major German cities are now my preference.

    When I go back to my home country to visit family I have to land somewhere in Europe. I almost never land in my home country – rather I land in a neighboring country and drive across the border, which for now is still open. Or worst case I land in an unmonitored airport where passports are not inspected and police presence is extremely rare.

    Australia is also a place I visit on a regular basis and the airports there are somewhere between the American and English – but have to deal with it. I try to land up north somewhere, where people are more relaxed.

    Asia seems to be a bit different, in most airports the guys don’t ask questions about where I am going, how long I am staying or any other stupid question that are none of their business. When they see the number of stamps in my passport they are able to (with their own brain I suspect) figure out that I am likely to leave again before my visa expires.

    In the US and Australia they consequently ask the same stupid questions time upon time, regardless if your “track record” show you are well within your visa limits.

    But to answer the question – yes limits are reached and exceeded. Left my home country 6yrs ago and will never go back.

    For some places such as England where the only thing they offer is shitty weather and cameras everywhere I won’t be putting my feet on the ground there any more and as I go along more countries are being added to the list of places not to visit again.

    There are more than 200 countries out there and a lot of the really nice, so no reason to support governments of bad countries with your hard earned money.

  • Wambo

    Hi Simon

    Notice your in Australia. Be interested on your thoughts and investment/business opportunities for Australians and Australia multiple flag options. For your Aussie readers.

    Thanks

    Mike

  • Angelo

    I’ve seen a woman rejected at the check point because she hadn’t removed the knit booties from her infant’s feet. I’ve seen women being busted for a tube of lipstick, only to find another sitting at the gate with knitting needles big enough to harpoon Moby Dick. Then, while waiting to go through security in Paris, fumbling to get my shoes off, the agent wagged a finger at me and in a heavy French accent reminded me that I didn’t have to remove my shoes – “you’re in France now”.

    I’m moving to France.

    Angelo

  • Chabsentia

    When they camr for the __________I was not concerned as I was not one. When they came for the ____________I was not concerned as I was not one etc. When they came for me it was too late. We lose more of our freedoms every day under the guise of safety. How many people are aware that TSA hired 3000 Behavioral experts which are not being used because of P.C.When the TSA becomes Unionized which is in the works it will be too strong and htere will be no turning back. Israel used behavioral profiling with great success.

  • C0wan081530

    I like the idea of a blast proof booth.All would pass thru .If you are wearing explosives you blow up,it not you are safe.No harm done to no anyone but the bad.

  • Cleve

    I live in LatAm, but have to travel back to the states for work about once a month. It’s not just the TSA junk grabbers who are the problem. Try dealing with the Immigration Orks sometime. The TSA goons are low-level booger-eaters. Immigration/Customs officers are outright thugs.

    I’m a U.S. citizen with a U.S. passport, but am routinely asked by downright hostile ICE agents what my business is in the U.S., where I’m employed, where I’m going, where I’m staying, etc. I was even asked recently whether I was an illegal drug dealer, to which I replied:

    “Why don’t you and I step into secondary screening right now and you can search all of my bags? You’ll find nothing of course, but it will give me profound pleasure to completely waste your time like you’re currently wasting mine.”

    The agent sneered and said “Get out of here” and waved me through… I turned around and said “Now I guess you know why I don’t live in the U.S. anymore.”

    Earlier this year I flew into Dulles arriving at 1 am, and the passengers from my flight stood in line for over 40 minutes because there were no immigration officials present. One or two agents eventually sauntered in… lazily manning their booths, pulling their cokes and Egg McMuffins out of the McDonald’s bags, turning on their computers. No urgency at all, and not a care in the world for the traveling livestock waiting in the pens.

    If you want to be really outraged, check out these two links:

    This guy handles TSA’s threats like a pro… It’s a textbook way to respond to these dumbasses:

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tEJpzVPmih0&feature=related

    If this story is true, we’re in even more dire straits than I thought. Apparently, if you protest the pat downs or X-Ray scanners in any way (that includes even writing disparagingly about TSA) you are now being reported as a “domestic extremist.”

    http://www.canadafreepress.com/index.php/article/30286

    • ann

      That passenger was great and the TSA and police were absurd. I am wondering how did the interview end.

  • RLep

    Simon,
    I saw an article on Politico this morning that seems to agree with your “Tip of the Spear” analogy. It seems we may be being buttered up to accept a National ID card. Turn the volume up too high on physical searches, and then dial it back down a bit by dropping the searches in favor of a National ID card.

  • Tom

    Better than groping would be the use of dogs. The military will tell you that no current technology is better that a dog that is trained for explosives or whatever contraband you want to discover. The metal scanners would for metal and they are not invasive, and dogs at all security points for everything else. Most people like dogs and if they are trained they don’t even need to smell someones crotch unless there is some contraband in it.

    • lrm

      Yes, Israel doesnt even use groping or xray m achines. dogs and many other methods are preferable.

      we wont fly dot com

      and, civil rights attorneys have flat out said, that the ‘new screening’ is essential the groping that cops use, so we are being searched under the same conditions as ‘probably cause’ criminals! yes, they say it’s more effective form of search, but we must be considered potential threats-all of us. That is IF we dare to say no to the Xray machine and opt for a pat down.

  • Craig

    Simon, absolutely the best article and opinion I have read on this subject. My local news station has been discussing this all morning and interviewing people at Hartsville International Airport in Atlanta GA. As common sense as you present the facts I am shocked to tell you, we are in the minority. Most people just can’t see it, unless very possibly, the mainstream media is just selling government propaganda as usual. There is one guy at the airport pushing opt out flyers on scanners but what good will that do other than save you from radiation. You still get groped and held up by a superior with an attitude. I will pass on your article, keep up the good work my friend, Craig

    • simonblack

      Thanks, Craig. We certainly think it's an important topic.

  • Bentley1996

    “All we need to do is develop a booth that you can step into that will not X-ray you, but will detonate any explosive device you may have hidden on or in your body. The explosion will be contained within the sealed booth. ”

    Great idea, but there is no way to detonate a bomb remotely without causing severe injury or death to the person.

    • Ben

      So It just goes off early, less damage

    • Getlost

      That’s the point. :)

    • Charles

      I love it!

    • Warthog

      “…without causing severe injury or death to the person (carrying the explosive).” So… What's your point???

    • Watchman

      Oh actually I think that is the best idea yet!! LOL!

  • Gentarik

    The last time I have been in America was back in 2003, when I've worked for an American drilling Company, and they've sent me to New Orleans to do some training. God bless them for that.

    I had been on the East Coast serving as a cadet on a Merchant Ship, but my impression, while overall positive, was very different from the hospitality I've experienced on the South.

    I've been planning a trip to the USA with my family for the last 4 years. I would love to go to Utah. I also have the dream to ride a Harley on the route 66. It can be cliché, but so what?

    Unfortunately your country government has turned mad lately. I didn't even applied for a renew of my visa and we are going to South Africa instead.

    It is just sad…

    It is like trying to reach a friend through a fence.

    To make things worst I am Muslim and I don't want to expose my family to the humiliation of TSA.

    The Death Valley will have to wait.

    Send my regards to the American people and all friends your bureaucrats prevented me to make there

    • paladino444

      Thanks for the compliment as I am from the South of the USA myself. Unfortunately, my country has gone stone stupid and has voted for government to take over everything in our lives. There is no one to blame except ourselves.

    • Blano

      If you can find a way to come to the US without losing your dignity, you should come and so those things you say. You will be glad you did.

  • Gmagers

    In the South we call this slow cooking the frog! There is no doubt it is exactly what they are doing. Every time we push back they give us a small concession and the a year or two later take another large leap forward. Well this frog is hopping out of the pot.

  • Gregw

    As Simon predicted the government plans to ratchet down the privacy intrusion from 10 to 8. According to a Denver Post article John Pistole, the head of the Transportation Security Administration, said the agency is exploring the feasibility of less-invasive procedures.

    http://www.denverpost.com/news/ci_16697755

    Look for the Supreme Court to jack the privacy intrusion level to 20 by invalidating the exclusionary rule sometime in the next three years. The exclusionary rule prevents the use of evidence that is obtained by illegal means such as coerced confessions and unwarranted searches. The government will be able to jail and convict anybody at anytime.

    Meanwhile the federal government is building a giant unregulated intelligence bureaucracy with undisclosed “black opts” funds. This bureaucracy has nothing better to due than read all our email and monitor all other communications.

  • Dennis

    Expresses my sentiments. If there was a country politically strong enough to tell the IRS to stuff it, and economically sound enough to go it alone, I would leave the U.S.A. for it. I don’t fly in the USA anymore because I won’t submit to being treated without respect or consideration. In some parts of Europe it’s no different. It’s all about control. The masses must be controlled and their behavior modified in order to become submissive work units in the New World Order, controlled by the Billionaires and their political puppets. I am glad I won’t be around 20 years from now!

  • Dan Thomas

    I see only one thing wrong with your thoughts. If you go thru the body scaner all they get is a grey metalic picture of your body outline it is not a photo of you nude. It is no more reveling then most cloths. A small price to play to move about our country safely. It is the refusaul that gets you searched. We should set one standard and all obided lets quit fighting amounst ourselfs and take down the beuricrates that are screwing up our country. Excuse my spelling

    • R.

      You are incorrect. The scanner images are actually very detailed and graphic. And even if you don’t opt out of the scanning, you still may get groped.

    • lrm

      Dan Thomas;
      If you do the research, you find that the xrays are virtual-you can tell if someone is menstsruating!!! And you can most certainly see genitalia, etc. it is NOT simply an xray such as you would receive at a doctor’s office. And, there is evidence that the technology is harmful to humans. please do some further research, and check out for yourself, some of the images online of what these machines ‘look like’ as far as human form. it is not innocuous. And regardless, the point is, it is one more step towards desensitization and acceptance as ‘normal’ these violations. I still am not recovered from the ‘no shoe thing’ and the ‘no water bottle thing’. i am angry and humiliated every da*n time we have to remove our shoes. it’s retarded. literally.

    • auntjody

      Dan, the problem with the body scanners for most people who want to avoid them is not a “nude photo”, it is the amount of unnecessary radiation. Any amount of radiation is bad for human bodies at the cellular level. the only reason to have an x-ray or CAT scan is if there is very good reason to believe their is acute illness in the body. Radiation damage to the human body is cumulative. The more exposure you have, the more illness and ill health you will have. Radiation at any level is toxic, no matter what the government stooges say.

      • ECLIPSEPATH

        Good point. I will add that radiation weakens the immune system. I have good reason to believe that a major influenza epidemic will be unleashed in 7 years. When most Americans are enfeebled from radiation, the pandemic will be completely fatal. “R I P FEDERAL RESERVE BANK 1913-2028″

    • Watchman

      All they see is a grey metalic picture of your body outline? Yeah that is what they want you to think. Beleive me they see more than that, yes they actually see a real picture of your whole body. And what about the X-rays or radiation that you get from going through these things? Especially those of you who fly a lot!! Also they are saving records of these photos. I wonder why?????

  • Tech

    were are all of the tax payer air marshals that are there to stop any threat? I the special people can’t make a profit off of them

    • Tybones

      The Air Marshals are to busy running drugs and money because the are exempt from any kind of search.

  • Soldmifreedom

    I think we are all aware of the situation. I would encourage you to pursue an individual as well as corporate solution verses spending any more verbiage on the elephant in the room. While your rants and platitudes are interesting even a bit entertaining they have zero value for we with boots on the ground.

  • Dobner

    I don’t really think that there is any place to leave to. Air security is sort of a necessary evil. Perhaps it is an illusion of security, but I am of the belief that it at least keeps miscreants from carrying out identifiably hazardous stuff. I think you are right that cargo is the bigger target. But due to the fact that commercial airliners get such a cross section of humanity through their cabins, the potential for abuse by terrorists is huge. So unfortunately, air security is not something I would leave the U.S. for because it is something that is needed worldwide. Groping, shoe removal, x-rays is some of its fallout.

    • http://www.facebook.com/people/Tad-J-Thaddeus-Klopcic/590453852 Tad J. Thaddeus Klopcic

      Please. Anyone with half a brain has seen enough Hollywood movies to think of simple ways to bypass this “security check”. We are no safer than we were before.

    • Watchman

      You have got to be kidding! Or are you one of THOSE who enjoy being groped? There are plenty of comments on here that suggest we use Irael's system, or even using bomb sniffing dogs. So I won't go into that. But you seem to be one of the sheeple, following blindly what your great Sheperd (the Government) says to do! You kind of people make me sick. What will you do when they come to take you off to a FEMA Camp?

    • Jon

      So how does having some one take nude photos of you or diddle your kids make you safer?

  • Fred

    This is what I sent my Senators:
    Senators,

    With all due respect, you are sworn to uphold and defend the Constitution of the United States. It is the supreme law of the land. It is not a ‘living document’. It is the law. If you allow this TSA invasion of privacy to continue, you will be in violation of the Fourth Amendment. Actually, you have already broken the law by allowing these violations to happen in the first place.

    Amendment 4 – Search and Seizure

    The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, SHALL NOT BE VIOLATED, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.

    The amendment does not say ‘except when the government deems it necessary for the safety of travelers.’ Yes, we know what it says in the preamble:

    The Constitution of the United States
    Preamble
    We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defence, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America.

    Here is the definition of defence, according to Webster’s 1828 Dictionary: 1. Any thing that opposes attack, violence, danger or injury; any thing that secures the person, the rights or the possessions of men; fortification; guard; protection; security. A wall, a parapet, a ditch, or a garrison, is the defense of a city or fortress. The Almighty is the defense of the righteous. Ps. 1ix.

    You may not violate our rights in the name of safety. Groping people or taking nude pictures of them is not securing the person or his rights. It is not guarding, protecting, or securing him. It is abusing him!

    Profiling is the answer. The FBI uses it, with great success, I might add. Call Israel. Political correctness must end. Stop stealing our rights in the name of safety!

    Winifred

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Alan-Egner/740606208 Alan Egner

    Airport Security…a GREAT idea

    ANOTHER GREAT IDEA FROM AN AVERAGE JOE!

    WHY AREN'T PEOPLE WITH COMMON SENSE LIKE THIS IN AIRPORT SECURITY?

    Here's a solution to all the controversy over full-body scanners at the airports:

    All we need to do is develop a booth that you can step into that will not X-ray you, but will detonate any explosive device you may have hidden on or in your body. The explosion will be contained within the sealed booth.

    This would be a win-win for everyone. There would be no long lines and delays to take off your shoes. There would be none of this crap about racial profiling and the device would eliminate long and expensive trials.

    This is so simple that it's brilliant. I can see it now: you're in the airport terminal and you hear a muffled explosion.
    Shortly thereafter an announcement comes over the PA system, “Attention, standby passengers! We now have a seat available on flight number…….” Author unknown.

    • the point is

      you must have missed the entire post, because the central problem with your proposed solution is that, as the author explained, its NOT ABOUT security. it sounds like most people you still seem to be under the delusion that government’s primary motivation is to protect and serve you. as anyone by now should understand, when a solution to a problem is available that is ‘so simple i can’t believe its not being done’, then ipso facto, its not being done because those in power don’t actually want to solve the problem.

      when you ask questions like, “why aren’t people like this in airport security?”, or “why isn’t this or that being done?” you are completely missing the point

  • BW

    Watching the news this morning, with the news reporters and celebrities smiling and laughing and giggling about going through security and the opt-out t-shirts, you wouldn't suspect that there was anything majorly wrong developing or that this was symptomatic of the dark clouds building in the horizon. There's such a cognitive dissonance in attitudes regarding this and the other serious issues going on at this time. I suspect some people think that they are but one of the few who are feeling the pain of exceptional mistreatment, and that things will get back to normal soon.

    It will be quite a surprise when that falling shoe finally lands. On their head.

  • Mike

    You had my attention there for a moment. I thought, now here’s someone with the right idea. Then, the word appeared. “Leaving”. Been hearing that word alot lately. During political as well as financial discussions. Leaving, i.e. running away, is most certainly NOT the proper response. Running away is what mankind did for centuries past before the simple science of logistics afforded us the opportunity to gain a foothold out of the reach of these creatures we share the planet with. Those who would enslave us all if they had their way. Who look at us as nothing more than “Property”. Your question should have been, “Are these offenses-finally- enough to make you realize that your hand, aside from being able to make the “Peace” sign, can also be formed into a fist which can be used to smash the face of those who would do this to us and our children?” Figuratively as well as literally? Now i’ll ask you a question. Do you think for one minute that if you did “leave”, you could actually find a place anywhere on the planet safe from them? A place where they wouldn’t eventually come for you and your family to exact their tribute? They WANT everyone to scatter before them. You are familiar with “the tip of the spear” and yet ignore “divide and conquer”? If not here, where? And if not now, when? The time to think about that and choose your side is now, the day of reckoning is fast approaching. If you decide to run, so be it. But when the smoke finally clears THIS time, and it will NOT clear until the job is finished completely, DO NOT expect open arms to welcome you back. I AM SPARTACUS! Either you are too, or you never will be. Their power is nothing more than an illusion that we propagate by running away. there will be no place for “Propagators” after the final conflict. Praise Be!

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_GI4EOUMRZCAMDETXAXAM4NTOZ4 CHARLES M

    When they came for the _____________I was wasnt concerned because I wasnt one. When they came for the___________. I wasnt concerned because I wasnt one etc and when they came for me it was too late. TSA hired 3000 behavioral experts that are being used because of ________?

  • Christopher D Webb

    I have considered leaving…I have to work two jobs. Early in the morning (4am to be exact) I am a fork lift driver for a large multinational furniture retailer. The other job I manage a upstart motorcycle “quick-lube and tire” service shop. Even with these two jobs I barely make enough dough to keep the bill collectors at bay. What I am getting at is I am a thinking-man and working-man. My problem is the United States Federal government doesn't have a stake in “air safety” other than to see who is flying to and fro. This is a nuisance at best and down right evil at its worst. The only entity that has a stake in “air safety” are the airlines themselves. The airlines could handle this process effectively and properly. In today's day and age our government is evil. It is too bad my funds are very limited. I would very much like (and very quickly) move to a freer country. As it goes now I will stay here and resist with all my might the evil that is brought down on us.

    • Michael

      Canada is right up the street! The gov seems a bit better also!

  • lrm

    we wont fly dot com has organized an ‘opt out’ day for the screeners-which means everyone would theoretically get ‘groped’,but hey, it would bombard the staff and put a wrench in things. but the site is a very new one, and designed to create action against the new screeners. They believe, as we all know, that this system will set up potential for these screeners for stadiums, highways, etc.

    Heck, they even quoted an Israeli security person, as saying the machines for canada, US etc are ‘a waste of time and money, which is why we don’t have them in israel’.

    I have been to israel-they obviously have very high security and intensive screening at airports…but even then, you do not feel as though pervs and frankly uneducated, illiterate people with no clue are screening you. You feel that trained, professional individuals, serving ‘national security’ of Israel, are doing their jobs. Period.

    I currently am not flying at all. Which coincides with my current life’s needs. But I am despondent-as someone who has lived abroad and travelled extensively-I’m concerned for when I do need/want to fly again. One can find airports that do not have these machines or as intensive a screening measure…but not for intl flights.

    Anyway, check out we wont fly, everyone…The more the merrier as far as knowing there are others out there who disagree with this ridiculous violation of both human decency and rights.

    • ann

      These people are not listening to Israeli security personnel. Good Post.

  • Ava V

    Simon, I think you make many excellent points that I agree with. I already reached my limit with what is happening in this country. That was in 2004. Began looking for a place to go, recently purchased property in France. Started reading your blog and my husband and I are attending your workshop in Panama and really looking forward to expanding our horizons and possibilites.

  • Paparazzi

    The entire government is unconstitutional. The governments authority is revoked. To the extent that you can evade the government’s coersion, you have no duty to obey or cooperate.

  • Defencev

    May I suggest that you guys look at the big picture. Under any political system the society is driven by self-interest of individuals.
    Think how scary the world would be if it is run by anarchists. Just one “little” thing: disrespect for intellectual property will stop any
    meaningful innovation and drives us all to caves sooner rather than later. Your salary will be averaged with fillipino landless peasant. Your dignity, your life will cost nothing if “the law of jungle” prevails. So-called Doug Casey daily dispatch (distributed free of charge even now) will be your gospel ( I never saw so more junk in one place as in this”publication”). And unsuccessfull real estate agents will be your prophets…

    • Eclipsepath

      I have looked at the “big Picture” and it boils down to this: the US is insolvent and foreigners are cutting off the subsidy of our governmental monster. The Federal Reserve will print fiat money that results in super severe inflation and destruction of the middle class. Its all in this book ” R I P FEDERAL RESERVE BANK 1913-2028″, the long term big picture.

  • TJ

    Please Sir, I think you are a bit extreme! The yellow star of David you are asked to ware is for your own protection and the special sections of town we have walled off for you and your family are to protect you from the commies. Just step this way and one of your friendly TSA agents will help you into your new apt…..The last train is about to leave the station, do you have your ticket? Oh, you only have fiat currency, I am sorry we only take gold.

  • JRHowosso

    Hey they are getting us with the death by a thousand cuts, and we deserve it because we don't have the stomach or the drive any more to stop it…………..

  • Rowena

    An extremely well written article – have forwarded it on to people who are not as well aware of such things and have gotten great responses from them as well! Have gotten several people on to your blog as well….more articles like this and we will really be seeing change! So enlightening.

  • Lepus

    Very astute & well written. Might add that i have been saying same to my friends, and pointed out that Israel doesn't do this kind of “screening”. It's FAR too costly and frankly unnecessary. Their particular screening system WORKS. Why N.American gov'ts don't ask for the details, I have NO idea. Therefore, I can only reason that they want to frighten and make submissive, the “sheeple”.

  • Anon

    What are your thoughts that the next step, or perhaps the one after, is retinal scans? Think how relieved the sheep will be if they can give an eye scan and avoid the current indignities. It would look so much better to the average moron, but the danger to individual liberty is 100 fold over current intrusions.

    • R.

      AFAIK, at least some US airports are already doing fingerprint and eye scans. Houston, for example.

  • Etira

    Very good article for which I totally agree, and from reading some of these comments so do others (Way to go, folks!). For these kinds of unacceptable rights violations and because the U.S. is deteriorating at an alarming rate in so many ways (more rules, more taxes, more money being printed, more unemployment, more prescriptions, more immunizations, more depression, and the list goes on and on), I am so thankful that I left twelve years ago.

    • ECLIPSEPATH

      not to mention more obesity, more illiteracy, more drug use and more suicides. “R I P FEDERAL RESERVE BANK”

  • Sharon Haight

    After watching TSA grope my 88 year old dad because his 2 metal knees set of the alarms on our trip to Ecuador, I wished we could stay in Ecuador. Our next trip (to locate property) is scheduled but now I wonder what my transportation choices are if I don't want to be oogled or groped.

  • Dhovendick

    Janet Napolitano has already told Charlie Rose that security at train stations, metro, and other forum is the next step to keeping the public safe. Who is going to keep us safe from the government police state. It is growing in leaps and bounds all in the name of our safety. Expect the next bomb to be on a train or metro to set the stage for the crack down by TSA. Amazing how these incidences keep coming in step with what the government wants to happen.

    • ann

      Wouldn’t you love to see the real faces of those who are running this country; we all might be surprised.
      Most of the politicians are useless, they seem to want to run for office and that is that.
      When you get that office your job is to look out for the American public, OK I can hear everyone lol.

  • Peri1224

    I have never gone to Russia when it was still the Soviet Union, and now I will not fly to the US anymore until this TSA monster is abolished and hopefully the SOB string pullers who created it are overthrown for good, preferably a la French Revolution.

  • http://www.globalwealthprotection.com Bobby

    I am leaving next year permanently due to this and other policies here in Amerika.

  • US citizen

    Last year my husband had wrist surgery. We took a flight 1 week after this, so his hand was still all bandaged up and in a splint. The idiots at TSA made him take the bandage and splint off. This was totally uncalled for as he had an open wound. I called the supervisor over who apologized and told me to write in a complaint. I did……no response. But these people should not have made him take off his dressings. I was LIVID to say the least.

    • ann

      Now that was over zealous.

      Whatever the hidden adgenda is it seems to be in full swing. I think Americans should stop arguing with each other and focus on what the government and large corporations are doing. The Prime Minister of India said his country is not taking jobs from Americans but, India was making jobs. LOL, for whom are they making jobs.

  • stilo

    “a man who thinks the earth is 5,000 years old.”

    I'll wager he believes the earth is 6,000 years old. And you people believe in millions of years. Yes, yours is a religion, too, because it cannot be proven either way. The only difference is yours gets taxpayer funding. Wait, I hear a fairytale coming… “millions of years ago..”

  • Monique

    Thank you for an insightful, well written article. Hopefully many people will read it and start to think and ask questions. On our last flight, we lost a few toiletries, but mostly we lost our trust. We felt guilty, until proven innocent. What other options are there for traveling besides commercial flights? I don't think the present system can or will be changed now, so it is a matter of looking for other alternatives, from travel plans to planting flags in other countries.

    • midwesterner

      If you think things are bad now, just wait until someone decides to walk into a high school football or basketball game in some midwestern town with a population under 2000, and sends himself to allah, along with a significant percentage of one town's population. That would cause a whole lot more panic and terror than bringing down an airliner using some tactic the Government hasn't thought of.

      There was a recent attempt on the federal building in Springfield, Il. The FBI gave some yahoo a van full of fake explosives and he was supposed to park it next to the Federal Building, and set it off. What would have happened if they were real terrorists who found this guy, not FBI?

      Here in flyover country, we think we are safe.

      • Uncle Chuck

        1st: we’re talking about airplanes, not ball parks
        2nd: reading your post (The FBI gave…), the van job was an exercise, not an “attempt” to blow up a building.
        3rd: NOTHING will stop a person hell-bent on harming someone else.

  • Larry

    yup movin to costa rica 2011

  • Homebiz

    I will not fly. I'm trying to find a way to travel by boat from US to Panama or Costa Rica, but all I've found so far is cruise ships. Any suggestions? Eagle

    • Peter

      Go by bus…

  • Jesseweyer

    These pat downs also serve to deter people from flying. The less we fly the less freedom we have.

    • Noemail

      And, the less money the airlines earn. The airlines should be in an up roar also.

  • Indiecather

    I'm right there with you. I think the American people are terribly gullible, and too many are willing to be led to slaughter like sheep. I don't know if there are enough of us left to stand up and stop this hideous takeover. Have you heard that Homeland Security has hired two “DEVOUT” Muslims. Just what we need !

    • Tybones

      You should see the muslims that clean the plane before you even get on it they don’t have to go thru screening, good people for the most part but a young muslim woman asked me (Aircraft Mechanic) how to start the airplane engines five different times-ways, each time I told her “I can’t tell you that” told my crew chief he reported it to corporate security it was passed along. The gal was told not to ask sensitive questions she was also seen praying on her knees in the middle of the airplane she still works here ie access to the plane.

  • Dirk

    I am with you. Everyday there is another right taken away from the American public and the excuse is always the same. Its for your safety. Whether its driving your motorcycle and getting pulled over for a safety check or getting on a plane. The USA is becoming a police state with total Gov't control. I am busy looking for the new country of choice at this time.

  • Kscanl3

    Since you say you travel 24/7 (we can question your virtual reality vs. real time reality) you must have run up against this insane molestation that you can't believe…so what did you do? I'd really like to know? I mean really tell us all about how you travel 24/7 and how you seem to infer that there is a way for the average schmuck not to get clocked down under… the only way I know of is a certain group of Government Officials that seem to pass by and by and by.

    If you want to tell us about real freedom sir, show your face.

    Or maybe I'll be the widow-woman (or black widow) that gets sacrificed since I am unprotected under the Cheers Bar Law.

    I dunno…Turkey or Chicken

  • http://www.roycobden.com/ Roy

    Well said. I cannot fathom the number of sheeple who subscribe to the “do anything you want to me, it's all worth it if it makes me just a little bit safer. They of course blindly trust that the same politicians who lie about everything else couldn't possibly be “misleading” them about something important like safety & security.

    I'm really in full agreement with the concept of those who don't value their rights & freedoms don't deserve them… unfortunately we all have to put up with the same BS from officialdom.

    But how do you reason with imbeciles who lap up the “dumbertainment” that passes for news (like you mention above), and believe everything the dumberment spin doctors tell them.

  • Ownahome

    There is no limit. History has shown over and over again that people will be herded into the ovens with no so much as a peep. 80% of Americans have said “this is okay if it keeps me safe.” Whoopi is in the vast majority.
    When people give up freedom for safety, they get neither. – Ben Franklin

  • Nene

    Security checks at airports are not just about Government control and brain washing, it is also about businesses that can lobby for rules that favour their interests. British air travelers are banned from taking their own drinks in hand bagage (drinks must be purchased on the plane or in airport shops after checkin) certain items must be placed in plastic bags (which can be purchased).

  • Leah

    It's gotten way out of hand in the US, rights and freedoms that were once taken for granted, no longer exist, and there is nothing but silence, no protest by the people, as these rights slowly slip away.
    Yes, we left, had to. The US is no longer a safe or even sane place to live. I just wish my friends had a way out too!

  • stilo

    That same silly Bible can also speak into the future as it has the past. Indeed, it has already spoken into it, by saying that a little Jew was going to come on the scene and pay for the sins of the entire world, so that all you dense intellectuals have to do is believe (put your trust in). Remember our money, “In God we trust”? Not silver & gold. It even says what town He'd be born in.

    Anyway, as to the future, it says that the last great gentile

    empire on earth would stamp and crush everything in its way. You flag planters should put this verse to memory: Daniel 7:23. You will have no place to run. And that is not just a reference to the Roman Empire, because Rome did not conquer the entre world (ever heard of Hadrian's Wall?) The stage we're about to enter will conquer and unify the world at large.

  • Wjg381

    Hello Simon,
    I quit flying. Earlier this year I had to travel from Arizona to Florida and I just drove my car. I will not put myself through this nonsense at the airports. I did it once when I just had to go thru metal detectors. If I have to go overseas, I'll take a boat.

    I have heard of these procedures being used on trains. Shopping malls are putting them in. Here in Arizona we have “checkpoints” on the highway under the guise of checking for illegal aliens. Yeah, right, we know how concerned the federal government is about illegal immigration.

    You mentioned an incident on a German train. In your writings, when you review particular countries such as your recent one on Chile, I would request that you cover how that country is dealing with what it conceives to be “terrorism”. Do they worry about it? Do they have metal detectors at the airports? Are there checkpoints on the highways? Do they frisk people indiscriminately at shopping malls?

    Best, Bill

  • Twkleinstuber

    Respectfully, I work for TSA and you have got your facts incorrect and are speading false information…

    remember the “Shoe Bomber” – Richard Reed…

    remember the Christmas day “Underwear Bomber” ?…

    remember the most recent toner cartridge threats from Yemen ?…

    How would you suggest we protect Amerinan air traffic from these and other simular threats ?

    • Wisdomseeker

      Come on this is ridiculous to believe that all terrorist only do terror in airports. If they were trying to take hundreds of people why would they go after a hard target like an airport? They would most likely go after a soft targets like any public places where people gather. That’s why I know that this whole airport thing is just another jump for the government to take liberty from the citizen. Wake up we are marching towards what Bush called on 9/11/1990 in front of Congress a New World Order (Look it up on Youtube).

    • Shoe Bat

      Do as Israel does. Profile! Pull aside and question anyone whose profile suggest a possible tie to Islam or to communism (like Obama’s buddy Bill Airs, the bomber). Use dogs!

    • Uncle Chuck

      “remember the “Shoe Bomber” – Richard Reed…
      remember the Christmas day “Underwear Bomber” ?…
      remember the most recent toner cartridge threats from Yemen ?… ”

      And how many of these were American citizens? Why are ALL Americans suspects?

      Good intelligence will catch most “terrorist” plots before they can be put into action.

    • Azretire

      i suggest you profile the nuts, not american grandmothers and kids

    • jimzimmerman

      Of course you as a TSA employee would say that the facts are all wrong. That is what your masters would expect for you to say. Explosive sniffing dogs would be the answer to your question. They can monitor a whole line of travelers in one pass. If a dog sticks his nose in your crotch THEN select that person for a more vigorous search. Profile,Profile Profile. I think we have passed the point where Profiling is Passe'. That is how i suggest that you protect the American people. Lets see the shoe Bomber was Islamic and he had EXPLOSIVES. The Underwear Bomber was Islamic and had EXPLOSIVES and the Govt already said there would be no inspection of cargo so TSA wont prevent toner cartridge bombs EVER. EXPLOSIVE sniffing DOGS WOULD have prevented all of those instances from occuring. So Mr. TSA you just keep yelling the sky is falling and maybe some day with all your JUNK fondling it might be true.

      • Falafel

        I totally agree that bomb sniffing dogs would be a good way to go!

    • Paul077

      the same way Isralies do it. Profile the muslims who are the primary threat. Those you mentioned were they 60 year old american gandmas . Israel has not had an airliner attack for 25 years. Enough of this wuss political correctness. do not make me pay for their transgressions

    • Mountainman91

      If we lived in ‘Amerina’ you could be right. We don’t however, and so you are wrong.
      One idea I heard was to arm pilots and thicken cockpit doors. Profiling suspicious persons, or people who actually are on the ‘red flag’ list (as the underwear bomber was, but still somehow got on.) sounds a whole lot more attractive than fondling and peeping at hundreds of thousands, Then again, you do work for TSA–

    • http://www.facebook.com/Repentorperishnow Tod Turner

      Mr Twinklestuber, have you ever considered these people to be patsies? Have you ever considered that the powers that be would EASILY sacrifice your fellow citizens in order to promote their private agenda. Do you not consider that there are people who want to take America and the West in a different direction. Or do you just “trust” the authorities and believe everything they tell you?

    • Ddarnell

      Very simple sir!!!!! use bomb sniffing dogs at all airports and profile all potential terrorists using the israeli government security system model. It would also help if we started going after terrorists instead of strip searching lil old ladies in wheel chairs and molesting little boys and girls under the guize of security!!. The tsa’s system is a bunch of crap and they ought to be ashamed for their outrageous behavoir. I will tell you right now if anyone from the tsa tried the molestation tactics on me that they are using i would kick the living crap out of them and if i had kids with me and they pulled a stunt like that with my kids it would be much worse for them . It is time for the people of this country to stand up and take it back from the thugs in gvt that are marching us into a police state!!!!!

    • zzzz

      Learn how El Al works.

    • Eclipsepath

      Passengers subdued Reed and the Underwear freak. Terrorists are abandoning hope of these on board tactics ever working again. The next line of attack is from surface to air missles along airline routes. The TSA is a purely a government boondoggle to keep Americans employed and the Dems in power. What better way to employ people than to hire them to spy on their neighbors. I like the posters idea of using charter flights. But most of all I like the idea of decimating the salaries of everyone in government and not allowing them to vote. Read: “R I P FEDERAL RESERVE BANK 1913-2028″

  • Shoebat

    Of course we have considered leaving. But where is there to go?! as you said yourself, the entire world is coming under the grip of the One-World Government assholes.

  • Mrnmt

    I have responded to the current level of intrusion by refusing to transport myself or my loved ones on a commercial airline. I either find another method of travel entirely or I charter a flight through a private carrier (this is a surprisingly affordable, safe and non-intrusive method of travel) which does not require a TSA interaction. Some groups are recommending boycotting the scanners or the pat downs. I believe this to be the wrong approach. When you boycott the scans and pat downs there are no consequences to the TSA. Boycott the airlines and refuse to fly on commercial carriers which directly effects the bottom line profits of the airlines. This sends a much more effective message.

    • Uncle Chuck

      The only way a boycott would work is if most or all people refuse to fly and tell the world their reason. This is America; that won’t happen here.

    • Watchman

      Do charter flights go overseas?

      • zzzz

        They go wherever you pay them to go. That’s called “free eneterprise.

  • jof

    I think you are right about this being a systematic desensitization to government intrusion. Consider this, what if TSA's interest in finding bombs is secondary? What if there are really after is cash, gold and silver confiscation? I saw an interview with a TSA in Houston who said that that is what they are looking for. The US government is broke and can't allow a financial hemorrhage.

    Those of you that live near the border to Mexico may be able to fly from there without these intrusions. I can't imagine they would be able to afford these scanners. At least not yet.

    • Peter

      Hah, that’s funny, you obviously haven’t been in any Mexican airports lately…

  • Mrnmt

    k yall

  • Uncle Chuck

    All you people talking about leaving – to go where?

  • bpai99

    It's like the frog in boiling water.

  • Jesus

    Since this is a search system that protects air plane travel then the proper procedure is to let the air caeeiers be responsible for these searches. They could then tack the cost to their tickets. Then we as tax payers could eliminate another goverment money hole and about 500.000 goverment all benifts paid anti freedom supporters

  • Rwkimble

    If people would sacrifice flying no matter the inconvenience, then do it. Airline passengers drop by 25%+ all screaming hell would
    break loose by the airlines. I would be the first to berate Congress
    to fire the TSA bastards because they’re getting paid to do nothing
    It’s like Ronald Reagan–you’re all fired (referring to air traffic
    controllers)
    But that’s the real problem. We need (and call it a touch of fascism if you will), but Ronald Reagans and Harry Trumans who
    were real with balls of stainless steel. “The buck stops here and
    don’t cross it.” That’s the part Harry left out of that phrase.

    • zzzz

      Hooray!

  • Bob R

    Simon, your article summarizes quite well the feelings of most in this new age of travel. It seems we gave up common sense in the search for security. This “invasion of our privacy” was brought about by our failure to do the obvious. If middle easterners were the threat then we should have banned their travel to and from the US as well as internally. It’s called profiling and is done in most other countries where the rights of the majority are not sacrificed for the rights of a few. We used to have leaders that understood this. Common sense isn’t so common any more. We’re living with the consequences of this stupidity. How much longer? I for one have strongly considered the alternatives.
    Bob R.

  • Blena316

    Liberty and self-determination are the exception not the rule. “Smart people” know that such autonomy is just not compatible with social justice. The previous attempts at social justice (i.e communism, fascism, Nazism, socialism and progressivism) have met with mixed success ranging from global/sovereign catastrophe to bankruptcy. What we are seeing now, in the name of social justice of course, is akin to a zoo. In this scenario the zoo keepers (i.e. smart people) determine location, mobility, reproduction, caloric intake, etc. of the specimen until the specimen is put to sleep. The time for this , also determined by the keepers, is determined by a cost/benefit calculation. Needless to say, the zoo keepers lifestyle is much better than the specimens.

  • John Cleeve

    Control at airports is increasingly invasive, unecessary, . ineffective. En route from Abu Dhabi (good) to UK (bad & likely to get worse up to olympics), I no longer fly through Brussels & Amsterdam (both bad). Frankfurt (OK on last trip but current scare may have changed that) is my preference. Money-losing airlines & bankrupt economies will eventually remove the controls.

  • TWK

    Simon, you wrote…”My method is easy. I’m already outside of the US, and barring absolute necessity, I simply won’t go back unless/until the rules change.” So I guess you have surrendered to the terrorists. TSA has not, and continues to adapt/up-date their techniques as those who would do us harm keep trying. The “rules” will not change until or unless terrorists stop trying to bring down American planes. Do you see this (aviation threats by terrorists) ceasing in the near future ? The enemy is not the TSA, it is the terrorists that continue to try and attack us.

    • Ddarnell

      The enemy is indeed the tsa as they are using terrorism as a way of bringing about the goal of the nobuma administration of a police state in this country and the eventual evolution to a nazi germany style dictatorship.
      Dont ever forget , that the germans didnt think it could happen to them either and it did and they werent even aware till it was too late and we are clearly headed rapidly in that direction also and people are for the most part clueless!

    • zzzz

      If you want to see what a rational security approach is, fly El Al sometime. TSA, Obama, Bush, Barney Frank= idiots.

  • Sally

    This article makes ever so much sense. I totally agree with the evaluation of the Gov’t tactics and the reactions of the people. I,for one, will never fly again if this criminal behavior by our Gov’t continues. It is unconstitutional and most demeaning/humiliating to the public. Profiling is the only answer. The lastest is that women wearing Muslim garb will be excused from these “searches” !! DUH !!!

  • Robert

    On a recent trip to China, every security pat down at the airports was by a young beautiful female security guard.

    Perhaps the TSA can copy China’s example.

  • jerryattrickcarole

    I, for one, would like to see the Obamas’ go through patdowns on worldwide TV. And, I also like the exploding phonebooth idea. So, the point being, get rid of the baddies and no one else gets hurt.

  • DolphinPorsche

    I won’t argue that the described effects will occour but also think that We have violated an area and the citizens there are not going to allow it to continue if they can. They will continue to impress upon us that they want the US out of the whole area and the only way they can do it is to continue to do things to us in the hope that at some point we will do a cost benefit analysis and find that the costs are bigger than the benefits.
    They can’t fight us in the traditional manner since they’re out gunned 100 times over so they’ll continue to use terrorist tactics.
    We in fact CAN”T prevent these, only catch the less skillfull.
    Yes, we’ll end up in a police state but we’ll be able to control Iran, Afaganastan and Iraq’s resources–wooopie.
    As to the scanners, we humans come in two general models with a little variation so if someone sees something they haven’t before, count it as educational, otherwise SO WHAT! Get over it!

  • Ande

    I agree with what you say, but I think the tip of the spear took place a long time ago. The government has conditioned the required critical mass already. What we are seeing, and not just in the recent TSA policy, is the massive attack after the tip of the spear. The tip of the spear was when we bought into letting the government take care of us BS.

  • Joe

    What is wrong with using bomb-sniffing dogs. It is a better solution than those retarded x-ray machines and legalized pedophile groping tsa.

    I agree with you. It is a systemically Trojan Horse for the government to seize its control.

  • John

    I have to disagree for the most part. I think everyone should be obligated to pass through the sensors without exception, except the President. In other words, there should be no opt-out or there is no point in having the scanners in the first place. If you don't want to be scanned, you don't fly. This should also apply to anyone working for the airlines. Obviously, cargo should be scanned as well. With all these preventions, we will probably still have terrorist acts, since nothing is perfect. In case you have not noticed, terrorists are not just men in caves. They come from all over the world, including domestic terrorists. Also, all airport security nationwide should be manned by the US Military and not employees of Homeland Security. I really can't believe the government is so efficient as to control us all.

    • zzzz

      Why omit the “President?” Is it because he is so obviously loyal that he is beyond doubt? Is it because we have such complete knowledge of his past, his actions and associates that we have complete confidence in him? Is it because he passed rigorous security checks and vetting? LOL-LOL-LOL!

  • Achanz

    I noticed that most of the people complaining against TSA scan and pad down are disciples of illusionary “Individual Liberty” which does not consist unity, consideration for others and courtesy. It’s sheer “I time” I’ll do whatever I feel like even if I’m intruding others freedom. That’s the element that scattered America and gives our “Mafiaticians” the satisfaction of “lack of unity” and have taken us apart!
    I have 52” 37” 36” TVs, 26” monitor and two laptops. I don’t know the amount of radiation from these goodies is. Most Americans use microwave not only to kill all nutrients from foods they eat but it actually changes the molecule of the foods. Americans feed their kids French fries, sodas and pizza every day and let them craw on supermarket floor and lick door knobs… and leave them in cars under 90 degree heat! And they complain against scans and pad downs to secure their journey.

    • Mountainman91

      Achanz: this is all I have to say to you, if your barely legible post is anything but a satire:
      “If you love wealth more than liberty, the tranquility of servitude better than the animating contest of freedom, depart from us in peace. We ask not your counsel nor your arms. Crouch down and lick the hand that feeds you. May your chains rest lightly upon you and may posterity forget that you were our countrymen.” – Samuel Adams

    • zzzz

      Achanz:

      The radiation from your multiple boob tube diversionary devices does not reveal your genitals. Obviously, it’s nowhere near as strong as a highly concentrated TSA scanner. Think! Don’t just be BS’ed by government thugs.

      Spend a few minutes in a microwave oven turned on and you are done. Seems like you might have previously done that.

  • Guy R

    The current stance of the TSA is only a step toward more regulation. Simon discussed it well within this article. The whole point behind situations like these is to see how high they can turn up the heat, step by step, until any form of liberty is stripped. In a lot of cases, I would consider the possibility that problems, such as our economic situation, are engineered for their benefit. The current Obama Administration wants to give more regulatory powers to the Federal Reserve.

    In other cases relating to the TSA: The Defense Department declared protesting as low-level terrorism, there are questions that remain ignored or avoided to this day in regards to 9/11, wiretaps have been around since before the patriot act, etc.

    When one has power, they want more. They’ll keep the people ignorant and divided, make sure citizens are dependent, influence/control the media so the majority believes what they want them to believe, and create problems that will benefit their agenda. It’s exactly what I would do if I were a villain.

  • JP

    Why don’t we remove the TSA and just say the next plane down will mean a nuke on teharan and/or west Pakistan. Second plane down two nukes on the same areas. Third plane down, three nukes on the same areas. Lets see how many nukes it takes til we don’t have to worry about planes going down anymore. You could substitute massive B52 attacks if your are squimish about nukes.

    • justenrobertson

      Because the innocent civilians in Tehran are not responsible for or in control of the acts of a tiny gang of religious nuts, because those nuts would not respond to such a threat with anything except increased vigor, because millions would needlessly die a slow, horrific death for the price of retribution for a relative handful of lives, and because the survivors would blame the U.S. government, not the terrorists.

      • JP

        So 300 million US citizens have to suffer because of this tiny group? I think the peaceful citizens in areas above should suffer too. Thats all I am trying to say. They need to supress this tiny group although I am not so sure it is all that tiny.

      • Moreybill

        Perhaps those innicent by standers should give up those responsible for terrorist acts and be done with them. Sure would make things a whole lot easier for the military. The simple fact is there is not threat anymore and the bad guys know it! Hide behind the innocent and your safe. This isn't a war it's a test to see who can hold out the longest. Come on now! We're fighting groups that are straight out of the dark ages and we can't win because of all the rules and regulations placed on our military personnel. You attack our country we will attack your country should be the rule of thumb! May the better force win!

  • Mrcr23wv

    I also think this is a form of governmenal control. Sounds Nazi to me

Previous post:

Next post: