Viva
la Contrebande!
by
Becky Akers
by Becky Akers
DIGG THIS
At what point
do you suppose hapless American passengers will cry, "Enough!"?
When screeners
grope them? When those same perverts molest their children? When
air
marshals gun them down in cold blood?
Nope. But deprive
folks of their lip balm and lotions, and revolt brews.
The Washington
Post reports that a month after the Transportation Security
Administration (TSA) banned liquids and gels in carry-on bags, they’re
still sliding past security checkpoints onto planes. Sometimes the
smuggling isn’t deliberate (one passenger "said she rushed
to catch an early plane and didn't know until she landed that she
had two lip glosses in her carry-on bag") but often it is.
"There is no way I'm putting my Chanel [perfume] in a checked
bag," one woman told the Post. And who can blame her?
Passengers have long suspected the "T"
in TSA stands for Thieves. What’s more, the TSA
confirms it: the agency admits to receiving around "2,100
new claims [from passengers for ‘lost’ or stolen property] per month
though calendar year 2005." And "checked baggage accounts for
approximately 85% of claims volume."
Ergo, the savvy
traveler tucks his valuable or indispensable gels and liquids in
a pocket or his carry-on. He counts on incompetent screeners and
inadequate technology to succeed in his smuggling. Fortunately,
the TSA abounds in both.
The bureaucracy
also abounds in gall. It expects passengers to welcome its nonsense
by voluntarily handing over their tubes of sunscreen and toothpaste.
(Given the TSA’s imbecility, it probably expects terrorists to do
so as well.) Apparently, the TSA chugs the same Kool-Aid as the
IRS, also notorious for urging its victims to help it victimize
them.
And so we have
TSA spokesgal Ellen Howe threatening fines of "several hundred
dollars" while admonishing "travelers" to "realize
this isn't a game." Yo, Ellen, it isn’t travelers who think it’s
a game: according
to a recent survey, you’ve bamboozled most of them. No, it’s
you bureaucrats, with your silly strictures and irrational "reasoning,"
who are playing games. Lipstick isn’t a weapon, OK? Not even if
it’s Fire Engine Red – unless you’re 3 years old and you swiped
it from your mother’s bureau so you could scribble on the walls
Daddy just painted. Nor does lipstick somehow transmogrify into
a WMD when a lady manages to retain hers despite the thugs at the
checkpoints. Indeed, I may be going out on a limb here, but I daresay
every passenger on a packed flight could carry a tube onboard –
heck, they could even uncap and brandish ’em mid-flight – and the
plane would likely still get where it’s going.
"The threat
is real and it continues," Ellen, like the threat, continued,
"and we appreciate the public's cooperation." What’d I
tell you? The IRS Syndrome. "Is it the perfect system? No.
But does it make it right to sneak things through security? No,
it doesn't."
What a hoot!
"Please don’t show us for the fools we are, even though you
easily can. Please be nice to us and play along." Ellen, if
you’re going to appeal to our better nature, you have to believe
we have one first. Treating us like terrorists doesn’t exactly boost
your credibility here.
More troubling
is Ellen’s implication that obeying a bureaucracy’s rules is "right."
Within living memory, bureaucracies have shoved people into gas
chambers in Europe, starved them on collective farms in Russia and
China, and shot them as they ran from homes the bureaucracy torched
in Waco, Texas. No decent man obeys them. Rather, he adopts Jefferson’s
immortal epigram as his own: "Rebellion to tyrants is obedience
to God."
Rebels against
this particular tyranny fall into two categories so far. The first
comprises those practical souls who spurn the ban as more TSA lunacy.
They agree with Gary Boettcher, a pilot and the president of a trade
association concerned with security, who says, "The whole screening
process is a façade to make the public feel safe, to show that the
government is doing something." These folks are danged if they’ll
suffer chapped lips or contagion merely to further that façade:
"[Some passengers] say they're simply not going to tolerate
the new rules. They admit that they ignore the restrictions....One
woman said she slipped her Blistex lip balm into a pocket because
her lips dry out on flights.... A business executive said he always
traveled with hand sanitizer in his pocket because he worries about
germs on planes. He has made about 10 trips since the restrictions
went into effect and hasn't been caught."
The second
group is even more heartening to lovers of liberty. These are Jefferson’s
heirs, equating disobedience to tyrants with the highest morality:
"[I’m] guilty, guilty, guilty [of smuggling stuff past the
TSA]" said
one, "and god [sic] bless the other american [sic]
patriots who defy this crap rule w. me." Said a second, "Stupid,
worthless, hysteria-driven rules. Deliberately instituted to instill
fear." And a third: "I am not going to be a lamb and let
them take my things, we are free, right?"
Not anymore.
September
15, 2006
Becky
Akers [send her mail]
writes primarily about the American Revolution.
Copyright
© 2006 LewRockwell.com
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