PDA

View Full Version : The unfriendly skies: TSA pats down 95-year-old cancer patient



Dogman
27th June 2011, 01:17 PM
This has been in the news for a couple of days.

Do not know if posted before, the ass hat walking donuts have really done it this time. And guess what , the tsa said it was a good and proper job done. :mad:


The unfriendly skies: TSA pats down 95-year-old cancer patient

Our view: Latest screening horror story involving 95-year-old cancer patient demonstrates the difficulties of keeping both planes and dignity intact


http://media.trb.com/media/photo/2011-06/62805926.jpg

The 95-year-old woman was forced to remove her adult diaper.

(CNN) The Transportation Security Administration (http://www.baltimoresun.com/topic/crime-law-justice/laws/law-enforcement/transportation-security-administration-ORGOV000000157.topic) could scarcely have bought itself worse publicity then recent revelation that a 95-year-old wheelchair-bound woman, a late-stage cancer patient, received a security pat-down and was ordered to remove her adult diaper by TSA agents in Florida.

The thought that this poor woman who is so unlikely to pose a serious threat to anyone would face such indignity is painful just to think about.

She was, according to her daughter who filed a complaint with federal authorities last week, simply trying to get from Florida to Michigan in order to spend her final days with relatives.

Intolerable, outrageous, indecent, any of the words are appropriate descriptions of what is alleged to have happened at Northwest Florida Regional Airport on June 18.


TSA stands by officers after pat-down of elderly woman in Florida (http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/opinion/editorial/la-na-tsa-patdown-20110627,0,3212525.story)

But here's another: Appropriate. The TSA can't tell its employees never to give a pat down to a 95-year-old woman, or a 6-year-old boy, or an adult who doesn't want anyone to touch his "junk" — to quote a couple of other embarrassing moments for airport screeners.

Why? Because as soon as certainly classes of people are identified as non-threatening, then terrorists are likely to recruit people who fit that exact profile.

That's apparently what happened in a remote village in Afghanistan on Sunday when an 8-year-old girl was tricked into carrying a remote controlled bomb to police officers. It wasn't the first time insurgents have used a child to carry out a lethal attack, but it may have been the most shocking.

Couldn't happen in the U.S.? Perhaps, but do you want the security of your next flight to rest on that assumption? Finding homemade bombs in people's shoes and sewn into underwear seemed unlikely at one time, too.

Of course, one expects the TSA to handle such circumstances with the utmost care and civility. According to the TSA, the officers involved "acted professionally and according to proper procedure.

" Whether they did or not is probably worth closer examination and not just by the TSA's own top officials.

The family is obviously upset over the incident, and one can scarcely blame them. As the woman's daughter told a Florida newspaper last week, one doesn't expect something like this to happen on "American soil."

For that, she can blame not the TSA or U.S. Department of Homeland Security (http://www.baltimoresun.com/topic/unrest-conflicts-war/defense/u.s.-department-of-homeland-security-ORGOV0000136.topic)

but the hijackers of Sept. 11, 2001 and al-Qaida (http://www.baltimoresun.com/topic/unrest-conflicts-war/terrorism/al-qaeda-ORCIG000003751.topic) and its extremist sympathizers who continue to look for ways to terrorize the U.S.

As technology and techniques of security screening improvement, perhaps the TSA will gradually have less need to be so intrusive. But until that happens, the traveling public has the right to expect screeners to go to any reasonable length necessary to ensure the safety of flights, both foreign and domestic.
Far more embarrassing for the TSA would have been the alternative headline: "Plane crashes in bomb attack from unexamined passenger." Dignity might have been left intact under such circumstances but not much else.

That's not to endorse giving the TSA a carte blanche to torture and humiliate travelers. There's generally no shortage of airport screening horror stories out there. But until the unlikely day when there is no serious threat of terrorism in air travel, airport screenings are a fact of 21st century life and better to err on the side of safety then sensitivity.

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/opinion/editorial/bs-ed-pat-down-20110627,0,3847137.story

Canadian-guerilla
27th June 2011, 01:24 PM
Far more embarrassing for the TSA would have been the alternative headline: "Plane crashes in bomb attack from unexamined passenger."


this is simply a TSA apologist article

a little sympathy for the old girl, but TSA has got to keep us all safe, zero tolerance

nunaem
27th June 2011, 01:39 PM
Why? Because as soon as certainly classes of people are identified as non-threatening, then terrorists are likely to recruit people who fit that exact profile.

But wait, TSA screeners can control who gets searched and who is allowed to board the plane. How do we know terrists aren't recruiting TSA agents? We need people to screen the TSA agents, and we need people to screen the people who screen TSA agents, and so on ad infinitum.

This will have the added benefit of ending all unemployment, everyone in the country will be a screener and there will be no other professions.

Ares
27th June 2011, 01:40 PM
Why? Because as soon as certainly classes of people are identified as non-threatening, then terrorists are likely to recruit people who fit that exact profile.

Unless of course you're a Muslim woman.


http://www.mrctv.org/public/checker.aspx?v=hdSUSU2GZu

ximmy
27th June 2011, 01:44 PM
TSA hits paydirt!!!

Whilst inspecting grandma's "Depends" TSA agents discover "Dirty Bomb." A special bomb squad was called in with the ability to handle unconventional dispersal material. The team led granny away from public to an isolated "safe-place" where she could be relieved of impurities & extraneous matter. A TSA spokesman said, "Just goes to show how important a thorough search of American elderly and infant Caucasians are in our present age..."

[insert funny icon here]

Dogman
27th June 2011, 01:49 PM
But wait, TSA screeners can control who gets searched and who is allowed to board the plane. How do we know terrists aren't recruiting TSA agents? We need people to screen the TSA agents, and we need people to screen the people who screen TSA agents, and so on ad infinitum.

This will have the added benefit of ending all unemployment, everyone in the country will be a screener and there will be no other professions.

Back in the bad old days in the cold war days and still continuing today in some country's. You have just that, neighbors spying on neighbors and reporting to the guys that knock on the door late in the night or early in the morning. And then drag you out and then you just "Disappear" forever.

gunDriller
27th June 2011, 01:52 PM
it really is time for American troops to march on Tel Aviv. metaphorically speaking, i don't think any Americans deserve to die in order to restrain Israel from their rabies outbreak.

Israel & Israel loyalists in the US gov. brought us 9-11.

Israel & Israel loyalists in the US gov. brought us the TSA, including all the ridiculous assaults on Depends-wearing Americans. (i think the TSA has covered both ends of the diaper spectrum in their searches - baby diapers and adult diapers.)

Israel & Israel loyalists in the US gov. brought us the Patriot Act.

Israel & Israel loyalists in the US gov. brought us the Iraq War & the Afghanistan War.

Canadian-guerilla
27th June 2011, 02:07 PM
Israel & Israel loyalists

patriots who know the truth know who the enemy is

and if they wake up and realize the zionist BS they've been put thru for decades
the sheeple could be more of a mouthful than TPTB ever realized

but i fear it may be the 3%'ers who are actually willing to fight the good fight

po boy
27th June 2011, 02:35 PM
TSA hits paydirt!!!

Whilst inspecting grandma's "Depends" TSA agents discover "Dirty Bomb." A special bomb squad was called in with the ability to handle unconventional dispersal material. The team led granny away from public to an isolated "safe-place" where she could be relieved of impurities & extraneous matter. A TSA spokesman said, "Just goes to show how important a thorough search of American elderly and infant Caucasians are in our present age..."

[insert funny icon here]

Dirty bomb or elderly woman charged with smuggling hazardous waste the EPA evacuated the airport and a effort to sanitize the facility are underway. Officials estimate one week for completion at cost ranging from 500k-1.6mil.

mrnhtbr2232
27th June 2011, 04:06 PM
The next time John Pistole tells you TSA agents are trained professionals, consider this: the minimum qualifications to be a TSA agent are being a U.S. citizen, having the ability to speak english, lift 70 pounds, have a High School diploma or GED, be at least 18 years old, and pass a medical and background check. That's not exactly what I would call a professional. Yet they have the gall to pretend these people are responsible for our safety and deserve our respect. In that case, we could just as easily hire a cadre of day laborers that meet the requirements and put them to work, saving the government millions. Instead we get whiskers, wet skin, and a beach ball on their noses and they expect us to roll over and obey them. There is not one open source proven terrorist attack on U.S. soil using the TSA's boogieman metrics. Think about that for a minute and then ask yourself if the cubs that hassle us going to the jetways are really that good or if they're just personally insecure and need fraternal protection that happens to come with a paycheck.

Uncle Salty
27th June 2011, 04:15 PM
That fucktard apologist writer doesn't even know how to use the word "then."