Vic
Elite Member
- Jun 12, 2001
- 50,422
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The right to travel is inherent and protected in the Constitution. Your argument is akin to a saying that your employer should be able to strip-search its employees whenever it wants to because no one "has" to go to work.
Something like that. Most people lock their doors at night. Chances are slim that your home will be invaded, but most people lock their doors anyway. A car accident can be an example too. There's a very small chance you'll be in one but the law says you have to buckle up. If you have small children the law is very specific about car seats.Lesser of 2 evils we all have to deal with on a daily basis? Do you mean the odds of getting killed in a terrorist attack or in a car accident?
Trolling? Really now. You did state the following:Where did I agree with any Muslim scholars? Oh wait, I get it, you're just trolling now...
Personally, I think it says something impressive about the Muslims who object that they aren't distracted by strip searches being dressed up in impressive technology with a fancy user interface.
I don't know how others interpret this but to me it say volumes about organized religion.
Apples and oranges comparison and you should know it. Locking my doors or putting on my seatbelt does not invade my privacy. While at the same time, both are actually effective and necessary solutions, while these body scanners are neither.Something like that. Most people lock their doors at night. Chances are slim that your home will be invaded, but most people lock their doors anyway. A car accident can be an example too. There's a very small chance you'll be in one but the law says you have to buckle up. If you have small children the law is very specific about car seats.
Trolling? Really now. You did state the following:
They'll stand up for their rights more than you?
No, they will tell their herds of sheep what to think because they apparently can't figure things out for themselves. And if you dissent they'd burn your sorry ass at the stake if they could.
I'm finding it difficult to believe you're connecting the dots between "Airport body scanners violate Jewish law" and what you're saying. What we have here is a unique case of religion on the side of privacy and it seems you take great offense to such a thing.
Is the very notion of the Bill of Rights so contrary to your beliefs?
Let me on a plane without any screening at all. It could lead to anal probing, who knows?
On second thought some might like that.
The amount of fear and paranoia in the US has gone over the deep end. Scanners will protect no one.
Anyone could go to a mall, bus, train, etc and blow themselves up.
A bus attack would only kill 30-50 people.
A plane attack could kill anywhere from 150-600 depending on what aircraft it is.
A mall, bus, or train attack won't create the same psychological effects to the American people as using a plane would which is what Al-Qaida wants.
Are you kidding? If these guys just walked into malls around this country and started blowing themselves up or shooting the places up, we'd definitely be shitting our pants even more than them hijacking airplanes.
The whole notion of investing hundreds of millions into these scanners is dumb. Airport security (and any point-based security) should be the LAST line of defense. This money should be funneled into helping us identify our attackers before they've put their plans in motion.
Are you kidding? If these guys just walked into malls around this country and started blowing themselves up or shooting the places up, we'd definitely be shitting our pants even more than them hijacking airplanes.
The whole notion of investing hundreds of millions into these scanners is dumb. Airport security (and any point-based security) should be the LAST line of defense. This money should be funneled into helping us identify our attackers before they've put their plans in motion.
Are you kidding? If these guys just walked into malls around this country and started blowing themselves up or shooting the places up, we'd definitely be shitting our pants even more than them hijacking airplanes.
The whole notion of investing hundreds of millions into these scanners is dumb. Airport security (and any point-based security) should be the LAST line of defense. This money should be funneled into helping us identify our attackers before they've put their plans in motion.
I would rather have a pat down search then go into one of these new full body scanners. I am atheist and feel that this a invasion of privacy. Any patriotic citizen of the USA would not want such a machine searching his daughter or his wife. I call complete bullshit in the need for these machines. An oz of prevention is worth a pound of defenese or what ever the fuck the saying is I dont know.
Any way question why this is so good for you and think what the future holds if such intrusivce measure can be passed off so easily into your daily life. What happens when your full DNA sample is needed just to start your car. It is a slipperly slope such measures treaspass on. Be prepared for the worst if you expect full protection from all external influences.
Being able to board a plane is a privilege and not a right. As such, I have no freaking problem with them putting whatever scanners they want.
For all I care they can make it mandatory for passengers to blow the pilot before you can get on the plane. A lot less people will fly then - but it's still fully within their rights.
Can someone explain to me why the full body scanners are an invasion of privacy but a full patdown by a TSA employee touching my nutsack, your wife/girlfriend's tits and ass is not?
Either they're both an invasion of privacy or they're both not.
Let me on a plane without any screening at all. It could lead to anal probing, who knows?
On second thought some might like that.
If you ask me, they both are, and the TSA shouldn't be doing either without a reason specific to the person in being searched.