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March 09, 2006

QotD: Airport Security

I was directed, shoeless, into the little pen with the black plastic swinging door. A stranger approached, a tall woman with burnt-orange hair. She looked in her 40s. She was muscular, her biceps straining against a tight Transportation Security Administration T-shirt. She carried her wand like a billy club. She began her instructions: Face your baggage. Feet in the footmarks. Arms out. Fully out. Legs apart. Apart. I'm patting you down.

It was like a 1950s women's prison movie. I got to be the girl from the streets who made a big mistake; she was the guard doing intake. "Name's Veronica, but they call me Ron. Want a smoke?" Beeps and bops, her pointer and middle fingers patting for explosives under the back of my brassiere; the wand on and over my body, more beeps, more pats. The she walked wordlessly away. I looked around, slowly put down my arms, rearranged my body. For a moment I thought I might plaintively call out, "No kiss goodbye? No, 'I'll call'?" But they might not have been amused. And actually I wasn't either.

I experienced the search not only as an invasion of privacy, which it was, but as a denial or lowering of that delicate thing, dignity. The dignity of a woman, of a lady, of a person with a right not to be manhandled or to be, or to feel, molested.

Peggy Noonan, "Embarassing the Angels", Wall Street Journal, 2006-03-02

Posted by Nicholas at March 9, 2006 12:18 AM
Comments
If she can't take the heat, get out of the airport. Flying's a privilege, not a right. There's always Amtrak and Greyhound for those with delicate sensibilities. Posted by: Chris Taylor at March 9, 2006 01:47 PM
You know, normally I'd agree with you, but the systematic de-humanization of airline passengers — in pursuit of increased security — has not markedly achieved its stated purpose, but it's been remarkably effective in making air travel even less attractive than it used to be. Most airport screening is a placebo . . . the vast majority of "successes" are not potential terrorists being caught, but innocent passengers who have their personal property confiscated at the whim of the security team. Posted by: Nicholas at March 10, 2006 08:41 AM
Oh I'm not saying flying is a breeze -- far from it. But it's not like they're doing strip searches in the Greyhound terminal. You can travel unmolested, it just isn't that convenient. Do you want your inconvenience in the form of slowness or trashed dignity? Air travel is in for a shock anyway. The airlines are trying in vain to hold ticket prices down to stay competitive, even as fuel and headcount costs go through the roof. Realistically, ticket prices need to go way, way up -- the airlines have to stop pretending that in a year or two their business environment will return to "normal". This, expensive as it is, is now "normal". A few of the uncompetitive lines (hello, Delta!) will have to die, but the rest will get the idea that the govt won't always bail them out. Posted by: Chris Taylor at March 10, 2006 10:14 AM
But it's not like they're doing strip searches in the Greyhound terminal.

Not yet, anyway. There are definite signs that we're not too far away from it.

A few of the uncompetitive lines (hello, Delta!) will have to die, but the rest will get the idea that the govt won't always bail them out.

On the economic level I'm sooo much in agreement with you, but on a practical level, I'll be flying Delta the week after next . . .

I was travelling by air the day that Eastern collapsed, and I'd rather not have to go through what their passengers suffered that day, but that's just my greedy, solipsistic viewpoint peeking through. ;-)

Posted by: Nicholas at March 10, 2006 10:29 AM
I can certainly understand not wanting to be stranded without a way home and without any assurance that the corporation (or what's left of it) will try and do right by you. I know it's not entirely sensible, but when an airline looks like it's going to fold, I try and use up all my freebie miles with them before they die. It's kind of nonsensical, putting yourself in harm's way like that, but I can't resist trying to cash in my free junk before the opportunity vanishes. Posted by: Chris Taylor at March 10, 2006 10:53 AM


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