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TSA Bullies at the Airport
by
Rep. Ron Paul,
MD
by Rep. Ron Paul, MD
If you traveled by air last week for the Thanksgiving
holiday, you undoubtedly witnessed Transportation Security Administration
agents conducting aggressive searches of some passengers. A new
TSA policy begun in September calls for invasive and humiliating
searches of random passengers; in some instances crude pat-downs
have taken place in full public view. Some female travelers quite
understandably have burst into tears upon being groped, and one
can only imagine the lawsuits if TSA were a private company. But
TSA is not private, TSA is a federal agency and therefore totally
unaccountable to the American people.
TSA was created in the wake of the September 11, 2001 terrorist
attacks. Although the National Guard, DOD, FBI, CIA, NSA, and FAA
utterly failed to protect American citizens on that tragic day,
federal legislators immediately proposed creating yet another government
agency. But the commercial flying community did not want airport
security federalized, and my office was inundated with messages
from airline pilots opposing the creation of TSA. One pilot stated,
I don't want the same people who bring me the IRS and ATF
to be in charge of airport security. But Congress didn't listen
to the men and women who spend their working lives flying, so it
created another agency that costs billions of dollars, employs thousands
of unionized federal workers, and produces poor results.
Problems within TSA are legion. In the rush to hire a new workforce,
28,000 screeners were put to work without background checks. Some
of them were convicted felons. Many were very young, uneducated,
with little job experience. At Kennedy and LaGuardia airports in
New York, police arrested dozens of TSA employees who were simply
stealing valuables from the luggage they were assigned to inspect.
Of course TSA has banned locks on checked luggage, leaving passengers
with checked bags totally at the mercy of screeners working behind
closed doors. None of this is surprising for a government agency
of any size, but we must understand the reality of TSA: its employees
have no special training, wisdom, intelligence, or experience whatsoever
that qualifies them to have any authority over you. They certainly
have no better idea than you do how to prevent terrorism. TSA is
about new bureaucratic turf and lucrative union makework, not terrorism.
TSA has created an atmosphere of fear and meek subservience in
our airports that smacks of Soviet bureaucratic bullying. TSA policies
are subject to change at any moment, they differ from airport to
airport, and they need not be in writing. One former member of Congress
demanded to see the written regulation authorizing a search of her
person. TSA flatly told her, "We don't have to show it to anyone."
Think you have a right to know the laws and regulations you are
expected to obey? Too bad. Get in line and stay quiet, or we'll
make life very hard for you. This is the attitude of TSA personnel.
Passengers, of course, have caught on quickly. They have learned
to stay quiet and not ask any questions, no matter how ludicrous
or undignified the command. It's bad enough to see ordinary Americans
bossed around in their stocking feet by newly-minted TSA agents,
but it's downright disgraceful to see older Americans and children
treated so imperiously. But any objection, however rational and
reasonable, risks immediate scrutiny. At best, complainers will
be taken aside and might miss their flight. If they don't submit
quickly and attempt to assert any rights, they will end up detained,
put on a TSA list that guarantees them hostile treatment at every
airport, and possibly arrested or fined for their "attitude."
Airlines should be using every last ounce of their lobbying and
public relations power to stop TSA from harassing, delaying, humiliating,
and otherwise mistreating their paying passengers. They should be
protecting their employees, passengers, and aircraft using private
security and guns in the cockpit. After all, who has more incentive
to create safe skies than the airlines themselves? Many security-intensive
industries, including nuclear power plants, oil refineries, and
armored money transports, employ private security forces with excellent
results. Yet the airlines prefer to relinquish all responsibility
for security to the government, so they cannot be held accountable
if another disaster occurs. But airlines are finding out the hard
way that millions of Americans simply won't put up with TSA's abuse.
Wealthy Americans are using private planes via increasingly popular
fractional ownership plans, while ordinary Americans are choosing
to drive to their destinations and vacation closer to home. Even
business travelers are finding ways to consolidate trips and teleconference.
Who can blame anyone for avoiding airports altogether?
While
millions of Americans undoubtedly welcome any TSA indignity under
the guise of "preventing terrorism," millions more are
not willing to give blind obedience to arbitrary authority. TSA
creates only a false sense of security, at great cost not only financially
but also in terms of our dignity. How we as Americans react to authoritarian
agencies like TSA is an indicator of how much we still value freedom
over our persons and effects.
December
1, 2004
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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