TSA and CSC
Note #1: The Reporting Sexual Harassment page has been updated with contact information for Orbit.
Note #2: Each year Pat Rothfuss runs a fundraiser for Heifer International. He’s offering a ton of prizes to donors, including autographed copies of Goblin Quest and Stepsister Scheme. Go forth and check it out.
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Apparently the TSA is now offering would-be travelers a choice: either go through the full-body scanner or submit to a pat-down that includes “checks of the inside of travelers’ thighs and buttocks.” Of course, even if you do opt for the scanner, if the screeners decide you have a blurred groin, it’s groping time.
In Michigan, second degree criminal sexual conduct is defined as:
1. Sexual Contact (intentional touching of intimate parts or clothing covering intimate parts, for the purpose of sexual arousal or gratification) and…
2. Any of the circumstances from First Degree CSC, including when the assailant “is aided by another person, and assailant uses force or coercion.”
Security screeners work in teams, right? There’s your aid from another person. Given that screeners are apparently reaching into people’s pants and feeling around, we’ve got the touching of intimate parts. As for coercion, these are people who have the power to refuse to let you on your plane, to isolate you in a holding pen, and to use any number of other tactics.
What about the first point of the definition, where it specifies the contact must be “for the purpose of sexual arousal or gratification”?
That’s a fair question. At first, I wondered how much intention matters to the victim. If I deliberately run you over with my car, are you less injured than if I simply didn’t see you and ran you down by mistake?
But then, there are certain medical screenings/examinations that are just as personal as these TSA “enhanced patdowns.” It’s not assault every time my doctor checks me for a hernia, is it?
To me, the differences are:
- I know and trust my doctor
- I understand what my doctor is screening for, and believe that
- it’s a real risk
- this is an effective way of screening for that risk
This is where people jump on me for implying that terrorism isn’t a real risk. Obviously, it is a real threat. But is it a big enough threat to justify this kind of intrusive violation? (The odds of dying in a terrorist attack are far slimmer than the odds of dying in a car crash; when do we get the War on Automobiles?)
And are the scanner and pat-down an effective way to prevent that threat? I’m not convinced on the pat-down, and I’m not aware of the scanners having prevented any real-world threats yet. (If there are examples of the scanners working in a real-life scenario, please let me know.)
Getting back to the sexual arousal point, I believe many, even most of the folks working airport security are good, decent people. But does anyone really believe some individuals aren’t getting off on the chance to grope travelers day after day? Particularly given the TSA’s apparent laxity when it comes to background checks.
Now imagine what it’s like to be a rape survivor forced through these procedures if you want to fly.
But remember, it’s for your own good, right?
My agent also has a post about this. He said last week that he was jealous of how many comments I got on my blog, so go check it out. As my agent, I believe he’s entitled to 15% of my blog comments.
Discussion welcome, as always.
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Steve Buchheit
November 17, 2010 @ 10:21 am
Okay, I’ll say it, terrorism isn’t that big of a threat. This is security theater, and now it’s gone in a really bad direction.
If we adjust for every “possible” threat, 1) it can’t happen (unless we just go the whole 9 yards and just allow body cavity searches right now, because, really, you can hide a bomb in there – you know where-, and these new procedures won’t detect it) and 2) if I were the terrorist, I would game the system (I don’t need to blow up an airplane to gain my goals, because my goals are to make these rules overbearing to you the populace so you hate your own government). So as a terrorist, what I would do is make attacks that really weren’t intended to succeed, but had the possibility to do so, but the main thrust would be to adjust TSAs rules and screening procedures to make traveling a horrendous experience (like having officers “grab your junk”).
However, I’m solidly a bastard when it comes to cointel. If it were me, I’d increase “chatter” to phantom agents right before Thanksgiving (like this weekend) and Christmas (the two holidays that have the highest rate of air travel). I’d plant ideas in the heads of those likely to be captured to seed the paranoia of the US. But, like I said, I’m a solidly a bastard. Good thing our opposition doesn’t have those ideas.
SylviaSybil
November 17, 2010 @ 11:58 am
I went through a full body scanner a few months ago. I didn’t know it was going to be there because previously my home airport had had a normal metal detector. I went through, didn’t think much of it. Then recently I learned it’s been potentially connected to cancer. As someone who has to get CT scans and X-rays for the rest of my life due to unrelated medical issues, I am well aware of my increased cancer risk.
So from now, every time I want to fly out of my home airport my choices are a) add yet another fraction to my already heightened chances of cancer or b) get intimately groped by a stranger. Hmmm. Decisions, decisions.
miakoda
November 17, 2010 @ 5:38 pm
I was on a plane for the first time this summer — never really traveled far enough to have a need for it, before then. Thankfully that was before this scan-or-pat-down fiasco. It just blows my mind that this is happening, and with full-body scans already leaking to the internet, of course. How can anyone not be infuriated by this?
I did come across a resource website, http://flywithdignity.org. I have little faith in online petitions, but the site is collecting stories related to the new screening rules and provides links to people and organizations (Congress persons, airports, airlines, etc.) who need to hear complaints about these policies.
James
November 17, 2010 @ 9:42 pm
Recently, a friend of mine pointed me to this article: http://www.thestar.com/news/world/article/744199—israelification-high-security-little-bother
I can’t help but think that once again the US is simply conveniently ignoring other countries because they obviously have nothing to teach us. /sarcasm]
David
November 18, 2010 @ 11:37 pm
My wife and I (and the 2 cats) spent most of October in the New York City area. We took a bus tour into the city one day and on that tour twice went through “airport style security” — the Empire State Building and the Statue of Liberty. This only involved emptying my pockets of everything metal and taking off my belt. I didn’t get patted down — I guess nobody gets a thrill from a 63-year old man.
In two weeks of walking around the sights we didn’t run into anything similar — only a few bag checks. And the Library very sensibly checked us again as we went out!
Didn’t someone write a story about the fellow who is running the operation and said “I bet I can get the Americans to take their shoes off before getting on a plane”?
Laura Resnick
November 21, 2010 @ 12:43 am
I had many full body patd-downs and searches when I was working in Jerusalem. However, a KEY difference there (based on what I’m reading about the TSA searches–I haven’t been on a plane since May) is that the people searching me were WELL-TRAINED army personnel, and the searches were VERY professional, impersonal, and well-managed. I didn’t like being patted down, but I never found it intrusive or offensive, precisely because it was always managed in SUCH a professional manner. Those experiences, however, seem to be a WORLD APART from what’s happening in our airports here in the US. And therein lies the outrage.
Angela Barry
November 22, 2010 @ 12:17 am
Honestly, I find it ridiculous. If someone is willing to die to make a point, you can’t stop them from doing something new to hurt people. What’s next? Soaking your clothes in some flammable solution with cloth of gold wires for the pinstripes? And if that happens will we all have to strip down completely?
Have I mentioned how glorious cruises are? You may not get somewhere fast but you will be relaxed when you do. Mmm, could be the next big thing. 😉