Bombers Can't Banter
by
Becky Akers
by Becky Akers
Repartee is
not something at which terrorists excel, or so the Transportation
Security Administration (TSA) has decided. Folks plotting to blow
up planes are naturally short on words and wit. They may be ingenious
enough to smuggle explosives aboard their flights despite wands
and X-rays, but the TSA fondly imagines they are unable to talk
while doing so. Ergo, the bureaucracy is training some of its workforce
to converse with passengers, presumably beyond the level of "Git
yer feet apart" and "Didja pack yer own bag?"
Several of
these chatty Cathies already haunt airport checkpoints, studying
passengers as they submit to the anti-Constitutional indignities
screeners visit on them. Others roam terminals like cheap hookers
in New York, Los Angeles, Miami, Houston, and a couple of New England's
airports. According to USA Today, both hunt for victims they
deem suspicious and then "engag[e] travelers in a casual conversation
to detect whether a person appears nervous or evasive and needs
extra scrutiny." Folks startled, or offended, by such pushiness
apparently flunk this extremely subjective test. They'll be punished
with "extra physical screening," a euphemism for the TSA's warrantless
and humiliating personal searches. They may even "face police questioning."
That's right: tell the pest bothering you at the ticket counter
or checkpoint to buzz off, and you could be explaining yourself
to the cops.
Imagine the
conversational delights of being simultaneously chatted up and patted
down:
Screener [scowling
as befits Leviathan's lowliest lackey while sliding a cold and creepy
hand down your waistband]: Where ya going to?
You [nervously
eyeing your watch because you're late for your flight after waiting
45 minutes at the checkpoint]: Um, I, ah, to my gate, I –
Screener [raising
voice]: What're ya, a wise-ass? I said, where ya going?
You: I'm, ah
– Hey! Get your hand outa there!
Screener: Not
too friendly, are ya? Nervous, too. OK for you, pal – Yo, Bruno.
I need some extra security here.
Even if you
flash a big ole smile and declare yourself a hunnert and ten percent
behind the War on Terror, your "body language" can still earn you
an interrogation. Yep, the pop psychology of the 1960's has, in
our absurd age, been elevated to criminal behavior. Carl Maccario,
a TSA program analyst at Boston's Logan International, watched a
tape of three 9/11 suspects navigating security at Dulles International.
With the penetrating insight that hindsight affords, he observed,
"They all looked away and had their heads down." That could indicate
deep, dark plans, he told USA Today. Of course, it could
also indicate shyness, a young girl's hope that she won't be singled
out for the dreaded "secondary screening" in front of her friends,
a man who's lost in thought, or even that rarest of phenomena: an
individual who simply wishes to be left alone.
This fascist
watching of passengers will infect 40 more airports this year as
the TSA continues to train screeners in "behavior analysis." Goons
who can't tell bosoms from bombs without a hands-on analysis will
be quick studies, I'm sure. "The screeners will join a growing number
of police officers learning to detect the subtle, often unspoken
clues that terrorists and criminals could display," USA
Today breathlessly reports [emphasis added]. "The technique
is called behavior detection or behavior-pattern recognition. It's
rooted in the notion that people convey emotions in subconscious
gestures, facial expressions, speech patterns and answers to simple
questions such as what flight they are taking."
Actually, it's
rooted in mumbo-jumbo. This isn't science or anything close to it.
It's simply the opinion of a few academics and other misfits with
too much time on their hands. A leading proponent is Paul Ekman,
who taught at the University of California at San Francisco for
over 30 years after a stint as an army psychologist. He's also proficient
at filling out grant applications. These have netted him windfalls
of our taxes via the National Institute of Mental Health, the National
Science Foundation, and the Advanced Research Projects Agency of
the Department of Defense. Ekman straddles the fence between outright
voo-doo and psycho-babble. His website invites us to contact his
colleagues, one of whom specializes in "Buddhism and Emotion, or
the Cultivating Emotional Balance Project" and another who brags
that she is part of a team of "Detection Wizards (Experts on Lie
Detection)." Wizard is right, and no doubt the woman believes she
can read minds, but is that any reason for us to relinquish our
freedom?
Alvy Dodson
thinks so. He's the "public safety director" at Dallas/Fort Worth
International Airport. "I don't want [officers] just sitting there
waiting for a call to come in," he opines. With staggering disregard
for the Fourth and Fifth Amendments, as well as our right to be
left alone, he continues, "I want [officers] observing people, observing
their behavior and engaging them in conversation. They're looking
for people whose activities don't look right."
Rafi Ron agrees,
probably because he's profiting from this balderdash. Ron presides
over a company in Virginia called New Age Security Solutions that
"teach[es] police how to detect 'indicators' of a possible terrorist."
He advised USA Today that "There needs to be a shift in law
enforcement culture from being responsive to criminal situations
to being preventative by detecting the possibility of a terrorist
attack."
Ron previously
worked as security chief at Israel's Ben Gurion Airport. Ever notice
how statists consider Israelis experts on security despite the suicide
bombers making mincemeat of the place? Israel is an explicitly socialist
country, founded on socialist principles, with kibbutzim, conscription,
and a people who long ago traded essential liberty for a little
temporary security. It's not surprising, then, that they have neither.
Despite its checkpoints, soldiers, and barbed-wire, Israel is still
as dangerous as driving over a bridge with Ted Kennedy. Emulate
the Israelis? Heck, only if we want half of America blowing up the
other half.
"Security"
only pretends to protect people. In reality, it controls them, and
"behavior detection" proves this. It hasn't nabbed any terrorists,
but it has allowed cops to arrest other menacing types at airports:
pot-heads, immigrants running afoul of the INS's arcane and ridiculous
regulations, and Americans daft enough to think they can travel
with as much cash as they please. "Because of [their] physical manifestation
of stress and nervousness, we did identify them," bragged George
Naccara, TSA security director at Boston's Logan Airport.
Looks like
the War on Terror is pretty much over. And Leviathan won.
January
3, 2006
Becky
Akers [send her mail] writes
primarily about the American Revolution.
Copyright
© 2006 LewRockwell.com
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