The American surveillance society is one of the worst in the world.
According to Privacy International and the Electronic Privacy Information
Center, we
are among the nine most “endemic” surveillance societies.
The U.S. is supposed to be the beacon of liberty, the example to all
the world of what a society of liberty under law ought to look like.
But we have become an embarrassment.
Several facets of the surveillance society exist: the police state
at the air port, massive biometrics databases of innocents, implantable
microchips, secret spy forces, and much more. This report covers just
one piece of our massive surveillance society: airports.
Part I: AIRPORTS
You’ve just walked into an airport. Don’t make a joke
about a bomb, or you’ll be arrested. Dump out your water before
you go through the line. And if you haven’t properly put your
personal items in the correct sized zip-lock bags, they will be confiscated.
Is that tooth paste you’re trying to smuggle by? Hand it over.
And missy, don’t even think about trying to bring that lip gloss
through…that could be a liquid bomb for all we know.
Ma’am, you can’t have that bottle of milk…but it’s
for my baby, this is breast milk that I pumped for him…well,
you’ll
have to take a sip so that I know that it’s not a bomb…I
have to drink my own breast milk?...yes, take a sip, Ma’am.
Face it: this is not a free country. The moment you walk into the
airport, there are Behavioral
Detection Officers examining your “micro-expressions,”
attempting to read your emotions for signs of terroristic motives.
This practice began
all the way back in 2002. It’s called “SPOT”:
Screening passengers by Observation Technique. Flying make you
anxious? TSA make you mad? You’d better not show it, or you
might miss your flight and have to pull your pants down for the TSA
agents.
(ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW)
The airport police state is illegitimate on its face. It is immoral
and unconstitutional. Our women endure sexual
humiliation having to bare their breasts, and our men in wheel chairs
have their pants taken off in public, and we simply let it go
on as if it’s normal.
But if one is not convinced based on a moral calculation or an appeal
to the Fourth Amendment, an argument based on pragmatism is necessary.
And the verdict is in: airport “security” does not
make us any safer. TSA agents confiscate dangerous water bottles
faithfully, while they allow
bomb parts and other prohibited items to pass them without a hitch.
You know you’re not living in a free country when there is little
to no reaction to the outrageous suggestion that cameras
should watch airline passengers from the moment they sit down
on the airplane to the moment they get up. That they would actually
have the gall to suggest that all
passengers should be fitted with shock bracelets should tell us
how highly they think of us. We are mere dogs to them.
And does it get any worse than the famed x-ray screeners? You
get to choose: endure a good government groping, or a quick peep show.
I hate to post inappropriate material, but ask yourself, would you
be comfortable having your body (or your sister’s or mother’s)
exposed in this fashion?


Then, you really know you’re living in a high tech police state
when NASA
and the Pentagon
say they’re going to read your mind and examine
your physiology with bio-scanners in order to determine if you’re
a terrorist or not. And getting agitated by the police state will
only make you appear suspicious.
Not to mention, they’re watching what
you read, where you travel, and even what size
bed you sleep in while traveling.
In addition to the litany of creepy Big Brother facets of our so-called
free society, much has been said about the no-fly lists and other
databases of information about travelers, which are collected and
kept without the travelers’ knowledge or consent. AP
reported,
Without notifying the public, federal agents for the past
four years have assigned millions of international travelers, including
Americans, computer-generated scores rating the risk they pose of
being terrorists or criminals.
The travelers are not allowed to see or directly challenge these risk
assessments, which the government intends to keep on file for 40 years.
The scores are assigned to people entering and leaving the United
States after computers assess their travel records, including where
they are from, how they paid for tickets, their motor vehicle records,
past one-way travel, seating preference and what kind of meal they
ordered.
The program's existence was quietly disclosed earlier in November
when the government put an announcement detailing the Automated Targeting
System, or
ATS, for the first time in the Federal Register, a fine-print compendium
of
federal rules. Privacy and civil liberties lawyers, congressional
aides and even
law enforcement officers said they thought this system had been applied
only to
cargo.
The
Washington
Post reported on the “TIDE” database of supposed terrorists
that had quadrupled between 2003 and 2007, heading toward 500,000 names
as of March 2007. The same article reminded readers that in 2004 and
2005,
a full half of names that were triggered at airports
were misidentifications. And that does not account for the innocent
people who were identified properly, but were flagged for reasons other
than criminal or terrorist activity—namely, those who were flagged
intentionally (though illegitimately) for their political activism.
The famed “do not fly” list,
Raw
Story reported, was edging toward a million names in 2008. One million
terrorists on the U.S. Government’s no-fly list. Wow.
AP
reported on the phenomenon of misidentifications that harass travelers:
Thousands of people have been mistakenly linked to names
on terror watch lists when they crossed the border, boarded commercial
airliners or were stopped for traffic violations, a government report
said Friday.
More than 30,000 airline passengers have asked just one agency—the
Transportation Security Administration—to have their names cleared
from the lists, according to the Government Accountability Office
report.
Hundreds of millions of people each year are screened against the
lists by Customs and Border Protection, the State Department and state
and local law enforcement agencies. The lists include names of people
suspected of terrorism or of possibly having links to terrorist activity.
“Misidentifications can lead to delays, intensive questioning
and searches, missed flights or denied entry at the border,”
the report said. “Whether appropriate relief is being afforded
these individuals is still an open question.”
Last of all, don’t forget that you’re still being watched
when you’re on the airplane. Air Marshals went public in 2006
exposing the insane requirement that they fill out “Surveillance
Detection Reports” (SDRs) even if they witnessed no suspicious
activity. These whistleblowers told the press that they and other Air
Marshals were given monthly quotas of SDRs to fill. How many regular
people were placed on a watch list because of their normal airplane
conduct? The
DenverChannel.com
reported:
You could be on a secret government database or watch list
for simply taking a picture on an airplane. Some federal air marshals
say they're reporting your actions to meet a quota, even though some
top officials deny it.
The air marshals, whose identities are being concealed, told 7NEWS
that they're required to submit at least one report a month. If they
don't, there's no raise, no bonus, no awards and no special assignments.
"Innocent passengers are being entered into an international intelligence
database as suspicious persons, acting in a suspicious manner on an
aircraft ... and they did nothing wrong," said one federal air marshal.
If we endure all of this, what will we not endure? Will we go to FEMA
camps, submit to forced inoculations, hand over our guns, give our children
over to the state?
When we endure the most blatant oppression at the airport, and when
we stand by as our masters loot the people for trillions of dollars
in banker bailouts, one has to really wonder, what won’t we put
up with?
And airport tyranny is only one facet of the surveillance society. And
the surveillance society is only one facet of the emerging tyranny in
America.
Before we can solve our problem, we must first come to terms with the
fact that we have a problem. Admit it: we’ve been in denial about
our so-called free society. Face it: we’re living in a police
state.