I believe some (many?) TSA people believe what they are doing is important for the safety of the public. I don't think that makes them ignorant, power hungry, or idiots. And i doubt they all dream of telling their boss: "this is BS, so I'm not going to do it".
I suspect that flying would be more dangerous if there were no airport security at all. I also think it could be made safer with much stricter controls than we have now. Does anyone really dispute either of those?
I am old enough to remember flying on commercial airliners when there was no security to speak of. I remember many trips to my aunt's home in Indiana starting when I was a young child. Back then, passengers walked right onto the tarmac, along with anyone else who claimed to be sending off or picking up a passenger. The only "security" was at the gate (as in, a chain-link gate about three feet high) beyond which only ticketed passengers could walk the last few feet to the pax stand and board the plane. There were no metal detectors, no bag searches, nor anything else like that until I was, I'd guess, about 10 or 12 years old.
My point in mentioning this is not that we should return to those days, but just as a reminder that those days did once exist. Airport security procedures didn't come down from Sinai. They were instituted as a result of a string of hijackings in the 1960s and 1970s. But the procedures were reasonably related to safety, and non-invasive to passengers.
The backscatter scanners on the other hand, are both invasive and of questionable usefulness. It's believed that they wouldn't have detected the "crotch bomber's" rig, for example, nor would they detect any device or material hidden anally.
If not, it should be clear that different people are going to have a different point of comfort between the extremes. I think it's inappropriate for people to insult anyone who doesn't share their same point of comfort. And those sorts of insults always come up with this topic.
It really should have nothing to do with your "point of comfort" or whether your feelings are hurt. Violations of privacy rights have to be justified by a reasonable likelihood that the procedure will enhance safety, and by the absence of any reasonable, less-invasive way to accomplish the objective. These scanners accomplish nothing. Their existence is merely one more factor that a would-be terrorist would take into consideration when planning an attack.
Personally, I don't really care if some random guy sees a scan of me naked. I wouldn't be happy standing around for however long it takes to get scanned and I'm not convinced that the expense is justified, but I don't see it as an invasion of my privacy.
I'm interested to know why myself and other people who don't care about being seen naked are 'sheep' to be denigrated.
It's not a matter of "being seen naked." If that's your position and you really don't care, then why do you feel that the "sheep" comment was directed toward you? You're okay with it, hence you have no need to protest. But others are not okay with with it, but still will not stand up for themselves. They're the sheep.
For what it's worth, I care very little about being seen naked. I've been going to nude beaches and skinny-dipping in convenient bodies of water ever since I was a kid. Back then, swim class at school was also bare-a$$. It never bothered me a bit. I've never had issues with people seeing my naked body even when I was a young man with a body worth looking at. Why would I care now?
I wouldn't call myself a "nudist" because
those people tend to positively
enjoy getting naked. I'm more of a person who doesn't care one way or the other. Most of the time when I go to a nude beach it's because I feel like taking a dip, don't have a swimsuit with me, and don't feel like paying the inflated prices at the beach to buy one. So I go to the nearest "clothing optional" beach instead.
But there's a difference between going nude voluntarily, and being forced to submit to an electronic strip-search by a stranger, along with assuming whatever medical risks the process might carry (the government has been wrong on these sort of issues before), without probable cause that you are carrying any sort of contraband, in order to exercise the "privilege" of boarding a transportation conveyance. The argument that the scanning is optional is obviously bogus, as demonstrated by the experiences of those who "opt out" of the scanning.
In addition, consider that a law enforcement officer in the performance of his duties can't arbitrarily decide to strip-search people at random. Even suspects who are in custody can't necessarily be strip searched. The courts have ruled (and rightly so) that a strip search is inherently humiliating and degrading by its very nature. Therefore, there are policies, rules, and procedures governing when criminal suspects can be strip-searched and how those searches are to be conducted.
If you decide to fly on an airliner, on the other hand, the mere act of doing so is considered sufficient cause to subject you to the virtual version of something that courts have consistently ruled to be inherently humiliating and degrading when applied to criminals. David and our other attorney members correctly assert that the law gives the government the right to do this because there is no inherent "right" to fly.
But the law ultimately is determined by the people. We elect those who make the laws. Good men have died to defend and preserve government
by the people.
Therefore, I submit that people who passively tolerate government behavior that they oppose, simply because it's the law, without exerting whatever pressure they can to change that law, are sheep. I would include in that statement anyone who has any reservations, objections, or embarrassment about these devices, but passively submits to them without making a stink in the loudest manner that is legally possible.
-Rich