Back
to the Friendly Skies
by
Burton S. Blumert
It
was like a WWII newsreel: the endless line of defeated people pushing
their baggage, inching towards the inevitable checkpoint.
"Achtung!
Achtung!" blared the sound system at peak volume. "Do
not leave your baggage unattended. It will be confiscated and destroyed."
The
smell of fear was pervasive.
"How
long have you been in line?" I asked the weary gent who looked
as though he might have slept in his clothes.
"I
started my trip two days ago at the Bakersfield airport and last
night I slept in my clothes," he said.
Our
attention was suddenly drawn to a ruckus at the front of the line.
Two uniformed men were struggling to remove a flowered hat from
a little old lady’s head.
"They
are looking for her hat pin," someone whispered. "A hat
pin can be a lethal weapon."
"Remember,
hat pins don’t kill. People kill," I smugly countered.
That
remark obviously earned respect as everyone in the line stayed clear
of me from that point on.
Finally,
two hours and ten minutes later it was my turn at the security checkpoint.
"You’re
tickling me," I giggled as the electronic wand probed from
one sensitive area to another.
The
young security agent seemed like an animal trainer putting her charges
through their paces.
"I
hope you’re in good health," she said. "Earlier today
I short circuited an old dude’s pacemaker."
"Good
Lord!" I stammered. "What happened to him?"
"Well,
after a few scary moments we finally revived him. It was nice that
they gave him a free upgrade to first class."
Exhausted,
those passengers who survive the security checkpoint enter the peaceful,
serene world of the corridors leading to the gates.
It
was a San Francisco International Airport never seen before. The
few passengers seemed dazed and just going through the motions.
The
one dramatic change was the attitude of all airport personnel: from
the restroom porter to the counter ticket agents to the food servers
to the flight crew. All were beaming, polite and conversational.
It’s as if they were atoning for years of cruelty and indifference
towards the passenger.
The
change is so dramatic that the passenger is bewildered. He is actually
being treated like what’s the word? like a customer.
The
passengers on my Delta Airlines Flight 217 were collecting up near
the gate. Now that racial profiling is allowable once again and
all government preferential programs have been set aside for the
duration of the war I can comfortably analyze, without fear, the
racial, religious, national origin, age, and political persuasion
of each traveler.
Here
are some partial results of my survey of the 65 passengers: 37 were
white, Christian males (easily identified by the vacant look in
their eyes). 32 of this group were married (the vacant look had
become resignation).
There
was one copper-colored woman who upon eye contact said to me: "I
am not a Moslem, I’m a Hindu, and although I’m not a political person,
I never was too crazy about Moslems. I happily join you, my Christian
cousins, in smashing these unworthy Islamic savages." She ended
by humming several bars of "America the Beautiful" and
proceeded on to her next eye contact.
The
only other non-whites were two young black men magnificently attired
in business suits. The other passengers were puzzled why they dribbled
basketballs wherever they went, even to the lavs.
One
dribbled so poorly I challenged him "one-on one" and easily
stole the ball.
"I
hate this game," he admitted. "I just want everyone to
know I’m an American Black and that I’m cool."
Leroy
was as nice a lad as you can find.
"In
the late 1980s I changed my name to Mustafa Mohammed, but I recently
changed it back to Leroy Johnson. Please don’t let on that you beat
me ‘one-on-one.’"
Leroy’s
secret was safe with me.
According
to any statistical survey, there should have been 2.7 Jews on board
the flight. There weren’t even any folks that were borderline, and
it finally occurred to me, this was Yom Kippur. A serious day. The
highest of holy days for the Jews. They don’t play basketball, and
they certainly don’t travel.
Even
famous baseball player Sandy Koufax needed rabbinical dispensation
to pitch in the World Series against the Yankees on Yom Kippur.
I
must admit I began to experience personal guilt at traveling on
the Jewish holy day, but it was Lew Rockwell who requested that
I come to Auburn, and that comes close to rabbinical dispensation.
Well, doesn’t it?
An
hour or so into the flight food odors wafted from the rear of the
Boeing 767 through the front cabins.
Was
it possible that this new accommodating attitude toward the passenger
would mean a superb dining experience at 35,000 feet?
In
recent years, airline food disintegrated from being inedible to
being unidentifiable. As the passengers started up their meal there
was some rumbling.
"My
spoon won’t penetrate the jello," complained one woman.
"My
knife just snapped in two when I tried to cut the butter, "
added another.
We
all knew the truth: the plastic utensils were fashioned so thin
and lightweight that they never could be used as weapons.
I
respectfully suggest to future travelers that they add to their
travel kits a pair of wooden chopsticks, but be certain they have
dull ends.
I
write this piece from a windowless room in the bowels beneath the
Atlanta airport. They have taken my papers and I am scheduled
to be interrogated by
the assistant airport commandant.
The
humiliation doesn’t matter as long as I know my flight home will
be safe.
October
4, 2001
Burt
Blumert [send him mail]
is publisher of LewRockwell.com
and president of the Center
for Libertarian Studies.
Copyright
© 2001 LewRockwell.com
Burton
S. Blumert Archives
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