TSA Abuses and Failures
by
Ron Paul
Recently
by Ron Paul: How
Should Government Treat Energy Producers?
Listen
to Ron Paul.
The press reports
are horrifying: 95-year-old women humiliated; children molested;
disabled people abused; men and women subjected to unwarranted groping
and touching of their most private areas; involuntary radiation
exposure. If the perpetrators were a gang of criminals, their headquarters
would be raided by SWAT teams and armed federal agents. Unfortunately,
in this case the perpetrators are armed federal agents. This is
the sorry situation ten years after the creation of the Transportation
Security Administration.
The requirement
that Americans be forced to undergo this appalling treatment simply
for the "privilege" of traveling in their own country
reveals much about how the federal government feels about our liberties.
The unfortunate fact that we put up with this does not speak well
for our willingness to stand up to an abusive government.
Many Americans
continue to fool themselves into accepting TSA abuse by saying "I
don't mind giving up my freedoms for security." In fact, they
are giving up their liberties and not receiving security in return.
Last week, for example, just days after an elderly cancer victim
was forced to submit to a cruel and pointless TSA search, including
removal of an adult diaper, a Nigerian immigrant somehow managed
stroll through TSA security checks and board a flight from New York
to LA with a stolen, expired boarding pass and an out-of-date
student ID as his sole identification! He was detained and questioned,
only to be released to do it again 5 days later! We should not be
surprised to find government ineptitude and indifference at the
TSA.
At the time
the TSA was being created I strongly opposed federalization of airline
security. As I wrote in an article back in 2001:
"Congress
should be privatizing rather than nationalizing airport security.
The free market can and does produce excellent security in many
industries. Many security-intensive industries do an outstanding
job of maintaining safety without depending on federal agencies.
Nuclear power plants, chemical plants, oil refineries, and armored
money transport companies all employ private security forces that
operate very effectively. No government agency will ever care about
the bottom-line security and profitability of the airlines more
than the airlines themselves. Airlines cannot make money if travelers
and flight crews are afraid to fly, and in a free market they would
drastically change security measures to prevent future tragedies.
In the current regulatory environment, however, the airlines prefer
to relinquish all responsibility for security to the government,
so that they cannot be held accountable for lapses in the future."
What we need
is real privatization of security, but not phony privatization with
the same TSA screeners in private security firm uniforms still operating
under the "guidance" of the federal government. Real security
will be achieved when the airlines are once again in charge of protecting
their property and their passengers.
In the meantime,
this week I am introducing the American Traveler Dignity Act, which
establishes that airport security screeners are not immune from
any US law regarding physical contact with another person, making
images of another person, or causing physical harm through the use
of radiation-emitting machinery on another person. It means they
are not above laws the rest of us must obey. As we continue to see
more and more outrageous stories of TSA abuses and failures, I hope
that my colleagues in the House will listen to their constituents
and join with me to support this legislation.
See
the Ron Paul File
July
6, 2011
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
The
Best of Ron Paul
|