Got
No Baum But Still Dead
by
Becky Akers
by Becky Akers
DIGG THIS
Contortionists
worldwide must be mourning the death of Carol Anne Gotbaum. She
was an artist of unparalleled talent, if you believe the cops who
arrested, trussed, and imprisoned her at Sky Harbor International
Airport in Phoenix, Arizona. She died in their custody last Friday
because "[she] had possibly tried to manipulate the handcuffs from
behind her to the front, got tangled up in the process and they
ended up around her neck," according to Sgt.
Andy Hill.
Go ahead: try
it. Hold your hands behind your back and raise them. Now you truly
appreciate Mrs. Gotbaum’s unbelievable skill: it’s impossible to
lift your arms more than a few vertebrae upward. They won’t go anywhere
near your neck.
Oddly, no account
of Mrs. Gotbaum’s death mentions her prowess as a pretzel. We learn
instead that she was 45, that she held an MBA from a South African
university, and that she leaves behind "three very small children.
It's a very delicate matter," her grieving mother-in-law told the
New
York Daily News.
"Delicate."
Hmmm. Not exactly the word I’d use.
Mrs. Gotbaum
was late for a flight on US Airways Express Friday afternoon. Don’t
even think of blaming the Transportation Security Administration
(TSA) and its senseless checkpoint charade; tardiness is always
our fault, as the
TSA’s website explains: "Be prepared and plan ahead for
security. Passenger preparedness for the security process can have
a significant impact on wait times at the checkpoint."
Nevertheless,
something – and it’s a good bet those "wait times" played
a significant part – kept Mrs. Gotbaum from reaching her gate until
"the plane
was already preparing to depart." She then made the fatal
mistake of complaining rather than kowtowing when USA Airways personnel
prohibited her from boarding. Thanks to the laws
deputizing airline crews, most passengers smile and shuffle
no matter how abusive those uniformed bullies become. Not Mrs. Gotbaum.
As a customer who’d bought a seat on a plane still sitting at the
gate, she apparently thought that the airline should accommodate
her.
Since Mrs.
Gotbaum isn’t here to defend herself, we have only the word of US
Airways and the cops on what happened now. "She was rebooked
on the next flight, but ‘she became extremely irate, apparently
running up and down the gate area,’" according
to Derek Hanna of US Airways.
That’s a no-no.
The aviation industry no longer tolerates any reaction but subservience.
It tacitly equates rage at its abuses with terrorism. This allows
its myrmidons to call the cops when customers vent their frustration.
We aren’t told
how many thugs piled on to subdue a 45-year-old mother of three.
"Airport workers… said one cop put his knee in her back to
restrain her while others grabbed her flailing arms." The
New York Daily News quoted a witness: "I believe she was
a little not-there. She kept punching. She kept screaming. She kept
kicking. She looked really scared, really frightened. I think she
was afraid to go to jail."
Meanwhile,
poor Mrs. Gotbaum labored under another illusion as fatal as her
belief that airlines should treat customers like customers: the
totalitarianism at airports is meant to catch terrorists rather
than to intimidate citizens while conditioning them to government
searches. And so she sought to set her captors straight. "I'm not
a terrorist! I'm a sick mom! I need help!" she
"yelled."
Wanna bet the
cops laughed at her naïveté as they hauled her off to a cell? But
Mrs. Gotbaum didn’t go gently into that dark night. Her kidnappers
say she screamed and kept on screaming.
Astonishing,
the mettle required of police. We civilians would feel responsible
for traumatizing a fellow human being so badly that she shrieks
without intermission. We’d try to relieve her distress by releasing
her. Not Phoenix’s finest. They contented themselves with "[coming]
in to check on Gotbaum every fifteen minutes. About five to
10 minutes had passed and the officers had not heard Gotbaum's voice,
so someone came in to check on her, according to police." A
woman healthy enough to "run up and down the gate area"
an hour or two before now lay "unconscious and not breathing.
Paramedics were unable to revive her." But "authorities"
assure us that "neither a Taser nor pepper spray was used
on the woman." Uh-huh.
Not counting
crashes, this is the second fatality to American aviation’s credit
since 9/11. Air marshals killed a 44-year-old missionary in December
2005 when they shot Rigoberto Alpizar in a jetway. Mr. Alpizar had
changed his mind about flying and tried to disembark from a flight
preparing to leave Miami. Two marshals followed him off the plane
and slaughtered him. They claimed he was shouting about a bomb.
Other
passengers aboard the flight flatly denied that. Many insisted
the only time they heard the b-word was when authorities later questioned
them.
But the government’s
version triumphed over the truth. Florida’s
State Attorney refused to indict the marshals for murder; the
White
House even commended them. Those who never knew Mr. Alpizar
as a "loving,
gentle and caring husband, uncle, brother, son and friend"
quickly forgot his death. He had no politically powerful relatives.
Mrs. Gotbaum
does. Her mother-in-law is Betsy Gotbaum, a Democratic hack who’s
pestered New York City for decades. Betsy now reigns as Public
Advocate – an office one step below the mayor’s. When she
says, "We are very concerned about what happened at Phoenix
airport. It's under investigation and we are following that investigation,"
goons in Arizona tremble. They know that enforcers in a police state
can murder folks like Rigoberto Alpizar with impunity. But snuffing
a politician’s family or friends…that’s as big a no-no as a passenger’s
protesting shoddy service.
Betsy’s got
them sweating so profusely that spokesman Andy Hill was out there
again, trying to bolster their lie. This time he wants us to believe
that contortionists are a dime a dozen and even less law-abiding
than your average serf: "’There are many people that are able
to get handcuffs around their back and get them up and around,’"
Hill
said. "How the handcuffs ‘got placed on that neck area…we
don’t know yet.’"
Ah, but something
tells me we soon will.
October
2, 2007
Becky
Akers [send her mail]
writes primarily about the American Revolution.
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
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