August 2, 2009
Expert: TSA Screening Is Security Theater
TSA Head Disputes Claim, Tells 60 Minutes Measures Are Necessary Because "This Is A War"
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Play CBS Video Video Screening The TSA Are the hassles passengers endure at airport security checkpoints really making them safer? The TSA says they are, but a security adviser who has advised them says those measures are "security theater." Lesley Stahl reports.
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(CBS/AP)
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Interactive America On Guard The Homeland Security Department, the terror alert system, preparedness quiz and more.
"IED components…in some cases," he said.
"But why do I hear a 60, 70 percent failure rate?" Stahl asked.
"I don't know," Hawley replied.
"You don't know what that number is?" Stahl asked.
"I don't know what…I'd have to go look at that report," he said.
"You can't tell me, can you?" Stahl asked. "That you have a chart that shows failure rates going down like that?"
"Well, I can tell you that our results have improved. Knives and guns do not present a huge problem for us now. We're very, very good at those. And completed IEDs, we're very good at those. The small pieces, we have to continue to work to get at even the smallest pieces of an IED," he said.
TSA's solution has been to invest even more money in checkpoints, adding a new layer of state-of-the-art technology, like $200,000 advanced x-ray machines that highlight suspicious objects for the screeners in red boxes.
There's also technology to put an end to one of the most intrusive - some say creepy - procedures: wanding or the pat-down. It's the whole body imager, which has been nicknamed "the peeper" because it sees through our clothes searching for bombs.
When privacy groups raised a fuss about the government "seeing us naked," TSA cut back on the program.
Kip Hawley wants travelers to know that the only place the images are ever seen is inside a locked, windowless room. The machine automatically blurs the face so the operator doesn't know whose body he or she is looking at.
During a demonstration, Stahl noted she was able to see a woman's bra, which according to the screener was normal. "To be frank, I thought I was going to see something almost pornographic," Stahl remarked.
"No," Hawley replied.
Asked what happens to the image, Hawley said, "It's destroyed as soon as the next one comes. The machines are not capable of storing images."
Produced by Karen Sughrue
© MMIX, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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See all 232 CommentsWhen will our congress have enough gonads to put a stop to this idiotic nonsense?
We the people, ARE FED UP ! (no pun intended)
Thank you..
Bob Baldridge, RobertBaldridge@Comcast.Net, Nashville, TN. 37215
Posted by mljohns00
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It''s also saved many thousands of lives and hundreds of buildings...not to mention firemen and police. Since when did protecting the population become a bad thing?
There should be two flights for each route. One for those who don''t have a problem with security, and the other for those who do. Which plane will you board?
Volume: It''s the volume, stupid. Limited volume (3oz) limits the potential outcome from an evil doer. Larger containers create larger results.
The baggie is simply a measuring tool. You are limited to as many 3 oz containers that you can put in a qt size bag. Volume, stupid.
C-Pap: If you knew each one was being tested for explosives, would you try to bring one in. It''s not just finding, it''s preventing! How do you train for a random pull? Security theater? I''d say security magic. Let the security (expert?) find a real job. Good Day!
Their facial reading is thwarted by a valium. Their "war" is a war on Freedom. Simply ... this is all an elaborate cover for LOOTING THE PUBLIC TREASURY. The politicians are invested in the companies that provide the equipment.
99.999% of us are generally peaceful folk who just want an uneventful trip to our destination. Many of us would even help subdue a wrongdoer. Some have.
We are in this together Mr/Ms TSA person. We don''t want the bad guys to cause harm any more than you. Don''t treat us like we do.
The reality: 9/11 occurred because the rules for pilots at that time were: Cooperate with hijackers. Do as they say, fly them where they want to go, and make sure the passengers are not harmed.
Since 9/11 the rules have changed. As noted in the article, the pilots now sit behind bulletproof, locked doors in the cockpit. The instructions to pilots and crew are clear: Do not cooperate. Do not obey the terrorists. Never give up the aircraft. Under ANY circumstances.
Little known factoid: Federal Air Marshals are not on the plane to protect the passengers. They are there to defend the cockpit.
As a consequence, the possibility of a 9/11-style hijacking is very nearly 0%, and has been since 9/12. The measures at check-in security are now predominantly about 1) protecting the aircraft from attack (NOT hijacking) and 2) cosmetics (security theater).
Keep in mind, the PERCEPTION of security is of value, also as noted in the story. Still, $40 Billion might seem a little excessive, but heck, its a jobs program.
The TSA is blackmailing thousands of Citizens, everyday, into "Voluntarily Abandoning Property" (VAP)
liquid, gel, and aerosol, worth millions of dollars.
The alledged reason is these MIGHT be dangerous, toxic, explosive, poisonous, chemicals.
Do you know what is happening to this treasure?
The TSA geniuses are taking these "dangerous, toxic, explosive, poisonous, chemicals" and,
tossing them into big bins, sorted by THE LABEL, and , UNTESTED or CRITICALLY EXAMINED,
storing them.
Gee. What if I was a "terrorist" (are there any?) and made a bomb that LOOKED like a common flammable item.
Yes, you are right. The TSA morons would acommadatingly take it from me,
put it in their pile of OTHER FLAMMABLES, and store it until MY bomb ignited the items it is stored with.
The TSA would have ABSOLUTELY NO IDEA who GAVE them the bomb, because they don''t record such things.
TSA "officers" around the country are drinking "VAP" pop, water, etc.
(and accepting "gifts" of food, drink)
GEE, what if someone injected some hallucinogens? well ..... how would we be able to tell if THAT happened?........
Same as with the stored items.
The TSA reached a mind-boggling new low in customer service this week when it was revealed that one agent had single-handedly absconded with over $200,000 worth of travelers'' belongings, primarily cameras and laptops, and proceeded to unload his booty on eBay. His latest haul: A near-$50,000 camera that an HBO employee had been traveling with.
The culprit is one Pythias Brown, a New Jersey resident who worked in the TSA department at Newark Liberty Airport. Finally busted, police discovered an inventory of 66 cameras, 31 laptops, assorted jewelry, and more when they searched his home. How''d he finally get caught? Brown snagged a camera belonging to CNN, and they found it for sale on eBay, where Brown had been converting the gear into cash.
Regional Director of Homeland Security Arrested for harboring illegal alien
Lorraine Henderson, the Boston regional director of Homeland Security, Customs, and Border Protection, was arrested Friday at her home in Salem, MA. She was charged with harboring an illegal alien and ordered released on $25,000 unsecured bond during an initial appearance in federal court. She was expected to appear in federal court in Boston later Friday on a charge of harboring an illegal alien.
If convicted, Henderson faces up to 10 years in prison. She declined to comment after her court appearance.
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