Amtrak
Antics
by
Becky Akers
by Becky Akers
I'm pleased
to report that I have safely returned from a trip on Amtrak.
I had my doubts.
After all, with the Transportation Security Administration's (TSA)
No-Fly list kicking an estimated 80,000100,000 terrorists
off American aviation, those folks have to get where they're going
somehow. They could drive, of course, but there's a limit to how
much carnage one can wreak with a car, even an SUV. And wreaking
carnage is what terrorists are dying to do, right? So they're probably
opting for trains and busses. Figure half are enduring Greyhound,
while the other 40,00050,000 are hopping Amtrak. Something
like 265 trains run daily nationwide. That works out to about 150
terrorists per train, sprinkled among 300 passengers on average.
Yep: odds are 50-50 the guy in the next seat wants to kill you.
OK, my figures
may be a tad high. The No-Fly List includes many terrorists who
won't be riding the rails any time soon. Edward ("Little Eddie")
Allen is a case in point. His mother doesn't allow the 4-year-old
to leave the house without her, so this terrifying tot probably
won't threaten American transportation for a few years yet. And
Senator Ted Kennedy, while no stranger to murder and mayhem, is
also unlikely to forsake his limo for the pleasures of Amtrak. Ditto
for Representative John Lewis.
So let's halve
the half of the No-Fly List riding Amtrak. That still leaves 75
terrorists per train. Pretty scary, if you ask me. Which is why
I wrote my will a week before my trip and wore clean socks the day
of, just in case.
But at least
on Amtrak, we can arm ourselves against Eddie and Teddie. The TSA's
too busy keeping the friendly skies very, very friendly to bother
feeling up Amtrak's passengers. This allows the savvy Amtracker
to provide for self-defense. We can carry on board all those lethal
items you frequent fliers have to toss in the TSA's bins. Cigarette
lighters, knitting needles, pocketknives amazingly, no one at
Amtrak seems interested in swiping any of these despite their prominence
in skyjackings and crime sprees across the country. You don't even
have to conceal that you're carrying them, so far as I know. I haven't
tried flicking a Bic at a conductor, but I did see several women
openly knitting, needles flashing like rapiers. No doubt they're
on the No-Fly list, and no wonder, either, deft as they are with
those weapons.
Even more amazingly,
these armed passengers haven't yet slaughtered one another with
their lighters and pocketknives nor hijacked any trains. All Amtrak's
rolling stock has so far arrived at its destination albeit a day
or two late without incident. Who says miracles don't happen?
I neither smoke
nor knit, and the only pocketknife I own is so dull it wouldn't
hurt a baby though it sends grown TSA agents into paroxysms. So
my weapon of choice on Amtrak is fingernail scissors. Given the
zeal with which airport screeners were ferreting these tiny shears
out of cosmetics cases and shaving kits, they must be the most murderous
armament since the atom bomb. Though I admit I can't see how. The
half-inch blades on my pair won't even cut through those little
plastic thingies on new clothes, so how do you kill someone with
them? Besides, if nail scissors are so deadly, why aren't mass murderers
and our troops in Iraq wielding them? Heck, cops wouldn't need to
shoot drug dealers: they could just manicure 'em to death.
But the TSA
sees all sorts of things we ordinary folks don't why, just last
month, two of its air marshals spotted a gun on an American Airlines
passenger that no one else did and shot him dead. Talk about visionary!
So who am I to argue if these geniuses consider fingernail scissors
Weapons of Mass Destruction? Anyway, I kept a tight grip on my pair
and an eye out for suspicious behavior when I arrived at the Amtrak
station. Easy enough since Amtrak thoughtfully plasters signs everywhere
reminding us to rat out our fellow citizens. Try as I might, though,
I spied no terrorists. All I saw were cranky kids, stressed parents,
and old folks exhausted after waiting 5 hours for the train. Funny
how the fascist Mussolini got the train thing down cold, but the
fascist Feds can't.
Though they
certainly have a sense of humor: Amtrak's "Silver Meteor" finally
chugged into the station 6 hours late, and we clambered aboard.
"Dining car's that way," the conductor announced, and off I went,
still on the lookout for suspicious behavior.
I found plenty
of it. There were real butter knives on the tables! With
metal blades! Good gracious, a terrorist could butter his dinner
roll with one of those! I don't think I'm being alarmist here:
given that the TSA's banned metal implements from flights and even
airports, shouldn't Amtrak force terrorists to spread their butter
with their thumbs, too?
I hesitated
at the entrance to the dining car, scissors clutched in my fist.
Dare I dine amidst such danger? Chances were good that at least
a couple of the other eight or ten diners already chowing down were
members of Al Qaeda. Sure, they looked like ordinary grandparents
in bifocals and polyester pants, but they weren't fooling me. One
of them could leap to his feet at any moment, brandishing his deadly
butter knife. I'd be forced to produce my scissors...but alas, doesn't
Knife beat Scissors? Or am I thinking of Rock and Paper?
Thank Heaven,
I survived this brush with death. Our train rocked peacefully onward,
despite knives and knitting needles, until I reached my destination.
Unfortunately, the 75 terrorists did, too. That means they are once
again on the loose out there, looking for ways to bring down the
American way of life. So stay strong, stay vigilant, and keep your
fingernail scissors at the ready.
January
19, 2006
Becky
Akers [send her mail] writes
primarily about the American Revolution.
Copyright
© 2006 LewRockwell.com
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