Congress To Fund Massive Expansion of TSA Checkpoints
by Paul Joseph Watson
Prison
Planet
Congress is
set to give the green light on funding for a massive expansion of
TSA checkpoints, with the federal agency already responsible for
over 9,000 such checkpoints in the last year amidst increased fears
America is turning into a police state following the passage of
the indefinite detention bill.
The increase
in funding has nothing to do with the TSAs role in airports
this is about creating 12 more VIPR teams to add the federal
agencys 25 units that are already scattered across the country
and responsible for manning checkpoints on highways, in bus and
train terminals, at sports events and even high school prom nights.
The TSAs
25 viper teams for Visible Intermodal Prevention
and Response have run more than 9,300 unannounced checkpoints
and other search operations in the last year. Department of Homeland
Security officials have asked Congress for funding to add 12 more
teams next year, reports
the L.A. Times.
The demand
for $24 million in extra funding is in addition to the $110 million
spent in fiscal year 2011. The figures are completely independent
from the federal agencys role inside the nations airports,
which costs taxpayers $5 billion a year.
The extra money
is being demanded despite the fact that there is no proof
that the roving viper teams have foiled any terrorist plots or thwarted
any major threat to public safety, according to the L.A.
Times report, which also highlights how the TSAs sniffer
dogs are used to single out people for questioning if the dog smells
the scent of the owners pets on their clothing.
The appearance
of thousands more checkpoints on Americas highways and at
key transport hubs will only heighten concerns that the country
is headed towards a Soviet-style police state.
Such fears
were again expressed last week following the passage
of the National Authorization Defense Act, a provision of which
empowers the government to arrest Americans and hold them in a detention
camp with no legal recourse.
Read
the rest of the article
December
27, 2011
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Planet
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