Flight
of the Living Dead
by
Becky Akers
by Becky Akers
DIGG THIS
Dead men tell
no tales, but apparently those wingdings at the Transportation Security
Administration (TSA) fear cremated ones can hijack planes.
Given all that
the TSA bans, it’s surprising that the agency allows passengers
to transport ashes from a cremated body. In fact, you don’t even
have to check the ashes: you can carry them right onboard. You’ll
be respected for it, too, the
TSA promises: "We understand how painful losing a loved
one is" – I’m sure Rigoberto
Alpizar’s widow appreciates that – "and we respect anyone
traveling with crematory remains."
"Respect"
in the TSA’s lexicon means groping the grieving and rifling their
belongings. The "respect" decomposes further when the
urn in which your loved one now remains thwarts the TSA’s X-rays:
"If
the container is made of a material that generates an opaque
image and prevents the security screener [sic for ‘busybody’]
from clearly being able to see what is inside, then the container
cannot be allowed through the security checkpoint."
Proving you’ve
got brother Bob and not a bomb in there should be a simple matter
of opening the urn. Or so you would think. That’s because grief
has made you forget you’re dealing with the TSA rather than folks
with a lick of common sense: "Out
of respect to the deceased and their family and friends, under
no circumstances will a screener open the container even if the
passenger requests this be done." Balderdash. The agency doesn’t
pry in extremis as a nod to local tyrannies and their various
regulations on handling human remains. Believe me, dweebs who rummage
through our underwear and molest young girls for a living don’t
suddenly grow a conscience when it comes to disturbing the dead.
Travelling
with a loved one’s ashes may not be your preferred way to go, but
the TSA says it’s common. (NB: the TSA’s respect for honesty is
surpassed only by its respect for sorrowing passengers.) The Indianapolis
Star quoted "Rene Harris, a customer service official"
with the TSA ("Customer service"? At the Transportation
Security Administration? Who knew? Who even suspected?): "Maybe
not every day, but at least every week," people take their late
loved ones for that final flight.
So when a
man tried to carry his father’s ashes onboard at Indianapolis International
Airport earlier this month, screeners should have "respected"
him. After all, they’d "respected" passengers in the same
tragic circumstances the week before and the week before that; you’d
think so much "respecting" would teach even these boneheads
how to deal with the dear departed. But no. The Star
reports that "TSA X-ray screener Lyle Harper pulled the
remains aside after seeing a ‘dark image.’ TSA bag checker Brad
Eastman then did an explosive-trace detection test on them. The
results were negative." Alas, the TSA sees negative results
as an invitation to further harassment rather than a reason to desist.
The Star
then quotes a "police report" because, yep, the TSA
"respected" this grieving "customer" so much
they eventually called the cops on him and his dead dad: "’Eastman
spoke to the owner of the urn and learned that the urn was the passenger's
father [Whoa! An urn that spawned! No wonder the TSA’s keeping an
eye on it] . … Eastman was satisfied with the urn and bag and allowed
the passenger and bag to go down the concourse.’ Moments after the
man was sent on his way, Eastman told Harper he hadn't put the urn
through a second X-ray screening." Cremated guys can be sneaky:
you never know when they’re faking death, so it’s best to X-ray
them twice. And when you forget that all-important repeat radiation?
Well, then you alert your supervisor, who, in grand TSA tradition,
shuts down the checkpoint.
It gets better.
Despite its "respect" for the now-departed departed, the
TSA decided to hunt his ashes down for further searching, as if
screeners hadn’t already pestered him and his son with swabs and
X-rays and other voo-doo. He should have been easy to spot, according
to the Star:
his son, who "wore a red shirt and pink hat" was "carr[ying]
the ashes in a box inside a garbage bag." Still, "airport
officials could not find" this distinctive duo.
Ah, the efficiency
of the police state. And the sour grapes, too: since they couldn’t
locate these terrorists who’d taken such crafty care to camouflage
themselves and draw no attention, they punished passengers by closing
the terminal. "About 500 people were evacuated from Concourses
B and C for more than an hour, and eight flights were delayed."
Naturally, the TSA searched these victims all over again before
sending them on their way. Dead men not only hijack planes, they
also pass liquids and
gels to the living.
Even the TSA
admitted this was overkill, so to speak. Lara Uselding, a TSA spokesgal,
said that "…the mass evacuation [was] made ‘out of an abundance
of caution’…"
Yo, Lara: make
that "an abundance of powerlust."
October
13, 2007
Becky
Akers [send her mail]
writes primarily about the American Revolution.
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
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