Top Ten Reasons You Should Fear the Transit Searches
in New York City Even if You Don't Live There, Never Plan
to Visit, and Think New York's Noxious Nuts Are Finally Getting
What They Deserve
by
Becky Akers
by Becky Akers
1)
It's Starting Small. On
Thursday, July 21, Mayor Michael Bloomberg announced that all passengers
using New York City's transit system are subject to search by the
City's police. So far, only their bags not their persons
can be violated. Because His Majesty zips about town in a
limousine, he had to rely on his imagination to console commuters.
"We just live in a world where, sadly, these kinds of security measures
are necessary. Are they intrusive? Yes. A little bit."
2)
It Began This Way At the Airports. After a couple of skyjackings
in the late 1960's, the Federal government decided that it had an
"interest" in "protecting" aviation. Congress had so little respect
for the Constitution that it simply ignored the Fourth Amendment,
rather than formally abolishing it, by decreeing that passengers'
bags would be rifled at airports. The judiciary connived and read
our minds. Judges solemnly informed us that we consider airport
searches not "a resented intrusion on privacy, but, instead, a welcome
reassurance of safety." About 25 years passed before ransacking
luggage progressed to pawing passengers.
With
this precedent easing their way, New York's cops will be feeling
up commuters in a matter of weeks, not decades.
There
are other eerie parallels. Both the Transportation Security Administration
(TSA) and New York's rulers blame passengers for the delays
and harassment that characterize searches. The TSA's website warns,
"Taking a few minutes to prepare for security before you pack for
your trip can save you and your fellow travelers precious time when
you arrive at the airport." Meanwhile, Ray Kelly, New York's Commissioner
of Pork, sorry, Police, laments that passengers make searches necessary.
"Ideally, people wouldn't carry any backpacks or bulky packages
on the transit system." For sure Kelly never does: he's got swarms
of underlings who tote things for him.
3)
According to the Courts, You Consent To Being Searched By Flying
And Now Riding. I kid you not. Grown adults wearing silly
gowns have seriously argued that because we "choose" to fly, we
"choose" to be manhandled. Warrantless searches are part of flying.
If you dislike them, don't buy a plane ticket.
New York's rulers have already trotted out this blatherskite to
justify their rifling of commuters' belongings. Our Man Kelly says,
"You have a right to turn around and leave..." rather than submit
to the search. But he offered no advice on how secretaries, nurses,
and other workers dependent on the subway could get to their jobs.
These folks typically live in the outer boroughs, miles from midtown,
because of the exorbitant rents Manhattan's landlords charge to
cover exorbitant real estate taxes.
4)
The Searches Purport To Be Random, But Cops Are Picking on "Suspicious"
Folks. They define "suspicious" behavior as making a fist, apparently
because that's the preferred method among suicide bombers for clutching
detonators. No word on whether babies clasping Cheerios will also
be considered threats. People wearing "heavy coats inappropriate
for the summer weather" rouse cops' curiosity as well. Someone warn
the elderly that if they're cold because of poor circulation, they'd
better stay home. And anyone prone to sweating when it's hot should
avoid the subways: the NYPD is gunning for such miscreants because
terrorists sweat. One fears New York's Brightest will one day realize
that terrorists breathe, too, but let's not hold our breath.
5)
It's Spreading Like Wildfire. Boston inaugurated transit searches
last year at the Democratic National Convention. There was little
outrage: few protests, no riots. Rulers in cities across the country
perked up. New York's latest adventure in fascism fascinates them
as well. They are studying the sheeple's submission. Keenly. Before
rush hour had even ended that first evening, New Jersey and Connecticut
announced that they, too, would begin ransacking bags.
Transit searches easily translate to suburban and rural areas. They're
called "roadblocks."
6)
NYC Officials Have Been Scheming About This For 3-1/2 Years.
But they were waiting for the right moment to spring it on us, as
Ray Kelly confided to the New York Times. "The reality is,
you need an event such as London for people to realize this is a
procedure put in place for their safety...The issue is what the
public will accept. You still need an event to get public support."
I
wonder what else they're plotting, what "event" will unleash it
on us, and how they'll manipulate public opinion. Yo, guys, those
plans for the camps: have you ordered the razor-wire yet?
7)
It Has Nothing to do With Security. New York City's transit
system is the country's largest. At street level, almost 4500 busses
traverse about 2000 route-miles in the five boroughs. Underground
(and occasionally above ground, too) there are 468 subway stations
with multiple entrances, over 31,000 turnstiles, and 656 miles of
track for carrying passengers. About 4.7 million patrons ride the
City's mass transit each day.
Our Rulers actually want us to believe that 40,000 New York City
cops not all of whom will be deployed to the transit system:
after all, someone has to pester pedestrians and ticket drivers
can identify and intercept a suicide bomber lost in this
vastness.
Additionally, the gaps in this "security" yawn so prodigiously that
even dumbed-down public-school graduates could exploit them. The
cops and their "checkpoints" will rove from subway station to station,
depending on the time of day. They will search a certain percentage
of passengers.
Let us suppose for sake of argument that suicide bombers are actually
waiting to blow commuters sky-high. Let us further grant that these
terrorists are of sufficient intelligence to construct a bomb and
plot its effective detonation. Yet, when they come upon a search
at one entrance to the subway, it will not occur to them to "turn
around and leave" so they can hunt a different entrance. And men
eager to die for their cause would never consider walking 7 or 8
blocks to the next station.
"The
public wants to feel safe, as well as be safe," says William W.
Millar, president of the American Public Transportation Association,
"So this has a benefit of perception." Yep. It's also invaluable
to Our Rulers for the cover it provides.
8)
Your Fellow Citizens Think It's Dandy. Johnny Eggz, 31, exclaimed
to The New York Post, "Cool!" Kinda makes you wonder what
Johnny does for entertainment of an evening, doesn't it? He continued,
"We're at war. What are you going to do cry about being searched
or cry about being blown up?" Michael Schultz at least recognizes
that "it's an invasion of privacy," but, as he concluded in The
New York Sun, "if you're not carrying anything illegal, you've
got nothing to hide." Eve Holbrook, 35, volunteered to be
searched. "It gives me a sense of comfort," she told The New
York Times. "I went up there of my own free will." We can only
hope the terrorists among us are as amenable.
The few sheeple who object do so on PC grounds: they fear "racial
profiling," not unConstitutional, general searches. The Times
quoted Hani Judeh, 24, a Palestinian-American living in Brooklyn.
"They should check bags, but they can't discriminate. You can't
tell Indian from Pakistani, you can't tell West Indian from black,
you can't tell Arab from Mediterranean."
On the bright side, Gene Russianoff, a lawyer for the Straphangers
Campaign, understands what's really going on. "Riders being randomly
searched is what they do in Communist regimes," he told the Post.
Ironically, the article in which his comment appeared began, "Call
[the searches] freedom frisks."
9)
Contraband Will Get You Arrested. In another parallel with the
airports, anyone found with drugs, weapons, or the myriad other
things on which Our Rulers frown will be arrested.
10)
Larry D. Hiibel, Petitioner v. Sixth Judicial District Court of
Nevada, Humboldt County, et al. This case, decided last summer
by the Supreme Court, held that citizens must identify themselves
to cops. Refusal can result in arrest.
At some point, Our Rulers will revoke the "freedom" to leave the
transit system rather than be searched. And searching will spread
to streetcorners: if one consents to being frisked by riding in
planes and busses, one consents as well by stepping onto a sidewalk.
Those who don't cooperate, who complain or hesitate or perhaps don't
raise their hands overhead as quickly as ordered, will immediately
rouse suspicion. Names will be demanded and compared against lists
of "protestors." It won't be difficult to join those lists. Writing
letters critical of Our Rulers to one's congressman or a newspaper
editor will be enough. Having written one probably will be
too: computers have long memories. And we all know the patience
police states extend to dissidents.
Are you scared yet?
July
25, 2005
Becky
Akers [send her mail] writes
primarily about the American Revolution.
Copyright
© 2005 LewRockwell.com
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