TSA Molests Miss USA, Makes Her Cry... For Your Safety
from the feeling-safer? dept
Since the TSA "enhanced patdown" experiences started last fall, I've heard from a variety of people who came out of the experience feeling seriously violated, with more than a few asking about legal actions they could take after feeling sexually assaulted and molested by the experience. It really is a lot more common than you might think. Many of those I've spoken with have decided that they didn't want to go public with the story of their own experience and their own feelings, because it felt so intrusive and so personal, that having to "relive" it by fighting the TSA would be just horrible. This is part of what I find most nefarious about the TSA groping brigade: like many sexual assault victims, they're put in a position where after it's over, doing something about the assault only forces you to relive the experience.Thankfully, some people are speaking out. The latest is former Miss USA, Susie Castillo, who has posted an emotional video right after being groped by the TSA and feeling totally violated, leading her to break down and start crying:
In a blog post about the experience, Castillo notes that she's gone through the patdown before, but this one was much more invasive than previous ones:
Well, this pat down was completely different. It was MUCH MORE invasive than my first one at LAX, just a week before. To say that I felt invaded is an understatement. What bothered me most was when she ran the back of her hands down my behind, felt around my breasts, and even came in contact with my vagina! Honestly, I was in shock, especially since the woman at LAX never actually touched me there. The TSA employee at DFW touched private area 4 times, going up both legs from behind and from the front, each time touching me there. Was I at my gynecologist’s office? No! This was crazy!Yes, for your safety, the TSA needs to sexually assault Miss USA.
I felt completely helpless and violated during the entire process (in fact, I still do), so I became extremely upset. If I wanted to get back to Los Angeles, I had no choice but to be violated, whether by radiation or a stranger. I just kept thinking, “What have I done to deserve this treatment as an upstanding, law-abiding American citizen?” Am I a threat to US security? I was Miss USA, for Pete’s sake!
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Filed Under: airports, patdowns, sexual assault, susie castillo, tsa
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I don't feel safer,,,but I didn't feel unsafe to begin with
As for the security theater, I have been flying in and out of Atlanta lately which is the busiest airport in the country. They have 2 x-ray/backscatter/nuke screeners for over 20 lines. I have yet to see them nuke anyone while I was going through screening. I have yet to see them pat anyone down either. So thousands of people are being let onto planes without being nuked or groped.
How safe is that? I would wager it is as safe as it would be if they nuked and groped every passenger. Why we the sheeple put up with this is beyond me.
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Never thought I'd say this
It's good to see someone in this position taking on a tough issue for once.
Hopefully this garners some attention to this issue for the minor fraction of americans who don't read techdirt.
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Re: I don't feel safer,,,but I didn't feel unsafe to begin with
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World%27s_busiest_airports_by_passenger_traffic#2010_statis tics
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Working for TSA
One wonders what kind of background check they do for TSA workers? Do they check for criminal records at all? do they care if they hire convicted molesters?
Not only does TSA molest people, they also riffle through your luggage and then steal items of value. It's a great opportunity for criminals.
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The saddest thing is...
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Of course she was picked for a pat down
I have flown internationally and once domestically in the last month and a half and not once have I been patted down or scanned by the machine. Just the metal detector. Because I'm not a good candidate for a good time during a pat down.
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Re: Of course she was picked for a pat down
[Citation Needed]
Aren't pat-downs done by the same sex? I'm sure the male TSA employees love picking out the men that they want to fondle.
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Why not file a police report
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Disappointing.
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Re:
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Complaint card
They may want to take those away from people.
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TSA Molests Miss USA, Makes Her Cry... For Your Safety
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Re:
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So is 'sexual assault' really so hyperbolic?
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Let's help TSA make it better
All they need to do is to direct their HR department to hire all new inspectors. Go to Hooters, Cheetah Club, Gold Rush - and for the ladies - Chippendales and Harlequin to find new TSA agents. There isn't a man alive that wouldn't gladly volunteer to be patted down during a lap dance or by a totally qualified Hooters girl. And the women would be lining up for their Chippendale dancer or Harlequin cover model. The only complaints would be the length of the line to get to the inspectors! And if TSA is short on funds, they can start charging for the "service".
Approach and Attitude - makes all the difference.
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3 words: Soft on terrorism. Those 3 words scare politicians to death, and because of that you wont get a President with the political capital to fight the TSA until one kills Osama Bin Laden with his pair hands on the steps of the White House.
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Re: Re:
But, No?
Ok, I guess it only matters when it's Tea Bagger's tax bills are concerned.
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Re: Why not file a police report
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Re: Re: Of course she was picked for a pat down
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Re: I don't feel safer,,,but I didn't feel unsafe to begin with
By that, I mean that pre-9/11, most airline hijacks were for the purpose of hostage taking. Common knowledge dictated that these men were probably desperate or ruthless but ultimately wanted to land the plane and demand ransom. Better to just sit down and shut up if you're in that position as trying stop them would get you shot.
Post-9/11, it's the opposite way round. If someone makes a move on your flight, you'll immediately assume they're going to blow it up - so any would-be hijacker has every able bodied passenger on the flight to deal with.
My big worry nowadays is the queues. If you want to blow up a lot of people now, the best target is the queue of people proving they're not carrying bombs...
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Re: Let's help TSA make it better
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The TSA made me cry last week too. And wrecked my eye.
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Re: Re:
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Study
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Re: Re: I don't feel safer,,,but I didn't feel unsafe to begin with
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Re: The saddest thing is...
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Re: Working for TSA
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America, Land of the Free?
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Re:
Rand Paul even wrote about this serious and pointless invasion of privacy in his book called...what was it..."The Tea Party Goes To Washington."
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Re: Let's help TSA make it better
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Maybe the answer is MORE groping?
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My way of protesting the issue, I suppose...
http://sites.google.com/site/tsagame/
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Re: Re: Of course she was picked for a pat down
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Isn't saying that the constitution should be followed enough to cover all the minutiae?
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Re: The saddest thing is...
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Thats kinda the point, buying an airline ticket shouldnt put me in a class under civilian and just over criminal
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Re: TSA Molests Miss USA, Makes Her Cry... For Your Safety
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Re: Re: Of course she was picked for a pat down
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Tea party movement beliefs
Oh, wait. We do.
http://lmgtfy.com/?q=tea+party+tsa
Pretty much all people in the tea party movement seem to be very opposed, mostly condemning it as unconstitutional abuse. Note, of course, that the tea party movement is not a political "party", but rather a fiscal philosophy named after an event that happened to be called the "tea party", so if you think it's a party like the Republican Party or the Democratic Party (or even the Libertarian Party, which would be the closest match), you're probably so confused about politics, it's best to start with a basic primer of the difference between a political movement and an organized political party.
There are plenty of atheists and evangelicals in the movement, gay marriage supporters and homophobes, open borders and controlled borders folk in the tea party movement: the belief that we need to have a balanced budget and not lay the cost of unnecessary wars and other government directed excesses on following generations has nothing to do with cultural views.
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Re: Re: TSA Molests Miss USA, Makes Her Cry... For Your Safety
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Re: Re: Re: Of course she was picked for a pat down
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Or judging by your second sentence, you must think there are situations where constitution needn't be followed. Good to know where your kind is coming from.
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Unless one of you come up with a FAIR, LEGAL and Fool-proof method of identifying and stopping terrorists, all your whining isn't helping.
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Re: Re: Of course she was picked for a pat down
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Or perhaps, "With agencies like the TSA, who needs Terrorists?"
Or maybe: "TSA: Terror Services Agency"
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Response to: Vincent Clement on Apr 28th, 2011 @ 8:42am
> is just fine
Yes, this security nonsense is useless and ridiculous, but how the he'll is it "socialized"? It's not comparable in any way to Obamacare.
You seem like one of those people with a personal axe you like to grind and will turn every issue into an opportunity to grind it, no matter how tortured the logic.
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Personally, my rights being intact are more important than some supposed government supplied 'safety'. So first, let's make sure it's FAIR and LEGAL; then if we can somehow add some safety within the bounds of our legal system; then so be it. But if we toss out the 'rule of law' in order to 'preserve our society' - then what good society governed by the rule of law that are we seeking to maintain, since it's been destroyed by those that would supposedly 'protect us'.
If we forget the rights of the citizens in an attempt to protect them, we've lost the whole concept of what we are trying to protect, then it becomes pointless as we'll just be another tyranny.
In reality; there's no way to really 'stop terrorists' - some of these people are willing to commit suicide to reach their goal, obviously.
I suspect as many people have been traumatized by the TSA now, if not more, than those traumatized by 9/11 itself.
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Re: Why not file a police report
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Re: Re: Re: I don't feel safer,,,but I didn't feel unsafe to begin with
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Re:
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Re: Re: The saddest thing is...
(Some kind of irony in pushing "I feel lucky" and getting AOL News.)
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Re: Let's help TSA make it better
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It's yet another example of the "government nanny".
They are claiming to be protecting us, but at what cost?
You can protect your house with an 18 foot high wall, razor wire, carbon steel doors... so ok, you're protected, but isolated from society. You may not die from an external threat, but eventually, any normal person would become highly depressed due to the isolation. Making life unbearable anyway.
On that note - why not just lock the pilot's door tight and put an Air Marshall on each flight. Doubt it would cost much more than this farce now.
But hypothetically; let's say a group of 10 board a plane - all of them are trained in martial arts or some other fighting style giving them a severe edge over other typical passengers. What would stop them from being able to hi-jack the plane? Do they even need a weapon?
I mean - where does it stop? Shoe stings/purse straps/laptop bag straps/luggage straps could be used to choke someone. A laptop, book, or luggage could be a blunt weapon. Someone with suitable physical ability could easily take a knife from another person. Especially when they are more than willing to give their own life and have been in years or life-long training for just such an event.
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Re: Re: I don't feel safer,,,but I didn't feel unsafe to begin with
That was my exact thought last Friday when standing in line at the Atlanta airport. There are more people in line than any one airplane can hold.
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Re: Let's help TSA make it better
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March 23, 1775
By Patrick Henry
http://www.law.ou.edu/ushistory/henry.shtml
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Since the current screening methods are neither FAIR nor Fool-proof, can I count on your support in calling for the end of them?
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Re: Let's help TSA make it better
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Re: Re: Re:
So are stop signs.
And pedestrians.
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Re: Re:
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But how about taking some actual action instead of posting on the Internet about the action you want everyone else to take? The civil rights movement happened without the Internet - let's remember that.
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TSA Screening Techniques
All the screenings I've seen either on video; witnessed first hand; or experienced is not groping. Some people just don't like to be touched. Those people shouldn't fly, so quit complaining.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Of course she was picked for a pat down
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Re: Re: Re: Of course she was picked for a pat down
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Sieg Heil...Must see your papers!
CS
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Re: Of course she was picked for a pat down
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you know, the inferior people - Takes one to know one.
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Re: TSA Screening Techniques
"Some people don't like to be touched" -- yes, some of us have been sexually assaulted and go through what's called "triggering" when we're touched by strangers in that way. Ever heard of it? Basically what happens is that kind of touching triggers a violent memory of assault. You get to stand there and relive your assault and then you get to be told you're a whiner for it.
That isn't to say that every person who complains about a TSA pat-down/feel-up is an assault survivor. Still: there's really no conclusive evidence that these measures are doing anything to increase security, and there's plenty of conclusive evidence that they're being badly implemented. The return on investment here is terrible.
If you're trying to say that you don't feel violated, then I counsel you to cut your comment off after the first sentence. If you're trying to say that you're tired of listening to/reading from people who do, then I counsel you to, you know, stop reading articles about TSA overreach and the people it's affected.
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Re: Re: Re: Re:
Get back to us when observing a stop sign is anything like being assaulted, sexually or otherwise.
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Re: Re: Re: Of course she was picked for a pat down
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"Exactly, so when I stop at a red light and I have no choice to, no control over it and no power, the light is assaulting me." - Just go outside and ask someone to kick you in the nuts.
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Re:
well known for their hiding mechanisms, the trollicanus will frequently employ a method of camouflage which attempts to hide the real issue by resorting to irrelevant rhetoric that in no way pertains to the topic at hand and ad-hominem.
the rabidinus trollicanus is the predominate food source for the sawwhatinus youdidicus where it has followed an evolutionary track that allows it to easily spot the camouflage techniques being employed.
This episode of trolling toady was made possible by a grant from the corporation for not listening to idiots and by sponsors like you!
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Re: Re: Let's help TSA make it better
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Re: Response to: Vincent Clement on Apr 28th, 2011 @ 8:42am
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The red light isn't stopping you. It is letting others pass. For others to be free, you give up some control.
The equivalent to TSA's situation would be: you are sacrificing the freedoms of EVERYONE ELSE so that YOU can be free (or just stay alive). I find that behavior pathetic coming from the supposed "leader of the free world".
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Beep Beep.
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Re: Response to: Vincent Clement on Apr 28th, 2011 @ 8:42am
1. Underpinned by reliance on a universal mandate for participation by all citizens
2. Funded by the federal government
3. Constitutes an (arguably misguided) attempt at a top-down solution to a nationwide problem which opponents believe is a non-issue
4. Subject to broad constitutional critiques by opponents
Significantly, neither program meets the classical definition for Socialism. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Socialization_(economics)#Misuse_of_the_term
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Re: The TSA made me cry last week too. And wrecked my eye.
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Re: Study
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Re: Sieg Heil...Must see your papers!
:)
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Re:
Unless you can come up with a FAIR, LEGAL and Fool-proof method of stopping car accidents, we shouldn't be allowed to drive, right?
And, um, do you think that sexually molesting people is a fair, legal and fool-proof way of stopping terrorists?
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What nationality was Timothy McVeigh? I was under the impression he was American.
This quote the stupidest one I've seen in two years of reading Techdirt articles and comments.
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Re: The TSA made me cry last week too. And wrecked my eye.
BTW: the title of your blog post may get you special attention in the future. I used to travel all the time, I was always selected for extra questioning, by ICE, upon return to the U.S. I never knew why. This was before 9/11 and I hate to think what the process would be like for me now.
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Re: Re: Re: TSA Molests Miss USA, Makes Her Cry... For Your Safety
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Re: TSA Molests Miss USA, Makes Her Cry... For Your Safety
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That reminds me of the time a gang of teenage crooks tried to rob me on a Philadelphia street corner, about twenty years ago. I took off my backpack full of books, which must have weighed at least ten pounds, and began swinging it, swinging it like a baseball bat. They did not succeed in robbing me, and eventually ran away. Three of them ran away from the one of me. Ha!
A lot of people here have said, at one time or another, that they have to fly for their jobs. However, it may be possible to divert around the edges. Granted that you have to fly from California to visit a customer in Indianapolis, IN, but you can volunteer to rent a car and visit other customers in Louisville, KY; Cincinnati, OH; Dayton, OH; Columbus OH, Pittsburgh, PA; Youngstown, OH; Cleveland, OH; Toledo, OH; Detroit, MI; and Chicago, IL, taking a week or so, sleeping in cheap motels, and eating at Micky D's when you aren't treating a customer. With any luck, that gets you ten customers who ask for you personally when they call the home office, plus giving your boss the feeling that you've done your share of "commercial traveling" for a couple of months. You develop a collection of funny stories about the truck driver in the next room, to suggest that you've been away on hardship duty, and that you are more dedicated than the other people in office.
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Re:
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Re: The TSA made me cry last week too. And wrecked my eye.
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Re: Re: Sieg Heil...Must see your papers!
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Re: Re: Re: Re: I don't feel safer,,,but I didn't feel unsafe to begin with
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Re: Complaint card
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Re: Re:
What plane did McVeigh use in his attack? I was under the impression we were discussing terrorism as it relates to air travel and the TSA's role in it.
This reply [is] the stupidest one I've seen on Techdirt in two hours.
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which, ya, its not really the nuts and bolts of this particular discussion but surely you realize that its a point that is very frequently going to be brought up.
both points could have been worded better for sure, but its a valid question and the answer of "its the brown guy" is not always the correct answer.
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Re: Re: Re: TSA Molests Miss USA, Makes Her Cry... For Your Safety
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Its like watching a child on the playground, sticking out their tongue and saying "Nah, Nah, Nah, I cant hear you" its funny to watch you self destruct.
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ugh
Do you have any idea how outrageous that sort of allegation sounds coming from a group of otherwise intelligent people (i.e. Mike and the other alarmist commenters).
Such finger pointing is baseless and without merit; if you read through all the "hate" comments here, the general conclusion seems to be that as long as it's POSSIBLE that any given TSA agent could be gay, perverted and sadistic, then we should treat all of them as if they ARE."
Very, very shameful.
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Brenda: Hey guess whose vag I got to fondle today?
Joanne: Who!?!?!
Brenda: Miss USA's!!!
Joanne: Wow you're so lucky...you have the best job in the world...
Brenda: I know right...now let me touch yours..
Joanne: Yippeee skip!!
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Do NOT ask why I know this, it is Top Secret Umbra information.
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Re: ugh
Oh, so sexually assaulting a stranger is OK, as long as you're not perverted or gay, and you don't enjoy it?
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Re: Re: Response to: Vincent Clement on Apr 28th, 2011 @ 8:42am
The definition of socialism is not "government run".
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Re: Re: The TSA made me cry last week too. And wrecked my eye.
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Gosh, perhaps Mike didn't use "that phrase"?
'sexual assault' to describe this woman touching this other woman.
sex·u·al assult
Sexual assault is an assault of a sexual nature on another person. Although sexual assaults most frequently are by a man on a woman, it may be by a man on a man, woman on a man or woman on a woman, or adult on a child
What's next? Gonna defend Adult on child situations as 'OK'?
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Re: Working for TSA
So quip at something else--- this girl is Really blowing it out of proportion as a natural drama queen
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Re: Re: Re: The TSA made me cry last week too. And wrecked my eye.
The scanner that you walk through uses infrared. Technically it is radiation, but then again so is visible light. Its not an xray, like what your luggage goes through.
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I guess if you try to stop them assaulting you they'll just shoot you. Boo America :(
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A proper search is much more invasive still
So a simple patdown is pointless, it doesn't catch much. An "enhanced patdown" is equally pointless, but it is also invasive and annoying. So logically, either cavity search every passenger (good luck with getting them to accept that) or stop the stupid searches entirely and just use a metal detector to catch big lumps of metal to do a coarse screening of stupid hicks carrying big handguns through.
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Re: Response to: Vincent Clement on Apr 28th, 2011 @ 8:42am
Next announcement, "Due to increased health care costs and to help share the burden of increased security to protect the children. TSA agents will now be performing prostate exams and pap smears during their regular screening exams for a nominal mandatory fee. Please have your health insurance card, or the appropriate cash deductible ready when you get to the screening area.
All Agents will be fully trained with this handy video we produced (points to VHS tape labeled "Molesting people for fun and profit" with a sticky note saying 'replace label with TSA Medical Procedure Training' before releasing), and all proceeds from these procedures will go to supporting future TSA training video production. This will cut down on unnecessary doctor visits, and help share the cost of health care with TSA agents, who after all have your health in mind every time they screen someone."
Yeah... It's been one of those days already
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Can I apply for my Top Secret Umbra Clearance now? I happen to be the other guy geeky enough here to know exactly what you're talking about.
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Re: Re: Working for TSA
She may be exaggerating, but that doesn't mean it isn't a problem. So go try to minimize the impact of something else.
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Re: Re: Re: I don't feel safer,,,but I didn't feel unsafe to begin with
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Re: Re: Working for TSA
Yeah, I didn't think so, but nice try... troll harder
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People don't want to fly...
My fanily will vacation in our own state.
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And your doctor enjoys prostate exams too...
And what no one seems to have mentioned is that the scan is available. She didn't have to be "violated".
If we weren't such prudes, maybe we could look at this from a practical point of view and address real issues with security.
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Re: Re: Of course she was picked for a pat down
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TSA, Things Will Get Worse
Department Homeland Security and Police intend to use hundreds of new X-ray Back Scatter Vans and other scanners with long-distance capability to secretly scan and search lawful persons’ bodies—when driving, walking and X-ray Citizens in their homes. DHS plans to mount X-ray scanners on buildings and utility poles to monitor groups of pedestrians. Citizens that drive or walk to work or lunch in monitored areas may be radiated several times a day.
There is nothing to stop government agencies and police repeatedly targeting (persons of interest) on the street and in their homes with X-ray scans that may cause cancer or induce other medical problems—including individuals afflicted by poor health. DHS new scanning will record eye and facial features of pedestrians, so subjects can be identified for covert X-ray scanning. Consequently some Americans may be X-ray scanned every time they set foot on the street.
How could anyone prove his or her cancer was caused by (accumulated radiation) from repeated government X-ray scans? Can you think of one U.S. Government agency you would trust to limit the number of times and duration secret Government scanners can penetrate a person’s body with X-ray radiation, when walking, driving; inside their home? Citizens driving or walking to work, that must pass DHS X-ray scanners on buildings and utility poles, could be exposed to radiation several times a day. The press recently reported that X-ray scanners now used at airports are 10-times greater that what U.S. Government told the American People.
Currently Citizens can purchase small sensitive radiation detectors on key chains that set off different sounding alarms for each radiation level detected. Key Chain radiation detectors sell for about $160.00 and some appear capable of detecting government X-ray scanners penetrating their home, or their body when walking or vehicle when driving. It should be expected more pedestrians might start carrying radiation key chain detectors to learn if X-ray scanners on buildings and utility poles are targeting their neighborhood, the streets they drive or walk. Radiated pedestrians and drivers should protest, especially if they are being hit everyday with X-ray scanners.
The U.S. can’t become a total Police State until the 4th Amendment is either terminated or so watered down it has no legal effect. That will be the result if government / police are allowed (without probable cause or warrants) to expose the public to covert X-ray scans and scans at airports; train and bus stops and other check points.
One can’t help wonder if today’s outspoken Americans that lawfully defend the Constitution, e.g., writers and bloggers will be deemed combatants by U.S. Government; constantly stopped, searched, and questioned by TSA and police; forced to endure no warrant searches of their car, body and forced cancer causing X-ray scans. The Nazi Military and Police repeatedly searched and delayed Citizens labeled politically undesirable boarding trains and buses and driving to work to cause targeted Citizens to lose their jobs. Citizens were placed on (Nazi do not hire lists) similar to the lists U.S. Homeland Security started in 2010.
See: TSA, DHS plan massive rollout of mobile surveillance vans with long-distance X-ray capability, eye movement tracking and more at: http://www.naturalnews.com/031603_surveillance_police_state.html#ixzz1GGDd24RG
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i disagree with the above statement. i think it should read 'Of course, the real issue is that the record labels are more afraid of LOSING CONTROL than they are of trying to provide actual value to users'.
it always has been and always will be about them being able to control what people do with what buy. their opinion seems to be more like nothing is bought anymore, it is either only rented or a license is bought which only lasts as long as the 'industries' want and you're only allowed to do with your 'purchase' what those industries say.
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But how about taking some actual action instead of posting on the Internet about the action you want everyone else to take? The civil rights movement happened without the Internet - let's remember that.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: The TSA made me cry last week too. And wrecked my eye.
@xenomancer: For both types of scanners used by the TSA, the radiation is not penetrating, it is absorbed by the skin and so vital organs, other than the skin, are not affected.
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Even Will Wheaton
http://wilwheaton.typepad.com/wwdnbackup/2011/04/i-dont-feel-safe-i-feel-violated-humiliated-and -angry.html
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...
http://www.tekgadg.com
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Re: TSA Screening Techniques
Don't like your phone calls being illegally tapped? Simple, don't use a phone. Your e-amil is illegally spied on and filed for future reference and you don't like that? Simple, don't use e-mail. The surveillance cameras everywhere, recording everyone who comes within range of the cameras lenes--don't want to be filmed, photographed, everywhere you go? Well, simple, don't go in those stores, banks, post offices, hospitals, schools, sports arenas, parks, parking lots, office buildings, airports, train or bus stations. And, you don't like being arrested, booked, photographed and a rap sheet filled out and filed on you? Simple, resign your rights--all of them--never protest, never assemble, never march, never sign a petition objecting to the invasion of your privacy or the rampant denial of your (former) civil rights.
There, problem solved. Don't like it when your rights are violated? Simple: surrender them. Traveling around, using public carriers, who needs it? The rich---they have private planes, chauffered limos, private entrances, exclusive elevators, offices with separate out-of-the-way doors, etc.
You? You're not rich? You don't have these perks? Simple: shut up and submit or just renounce enjoying the freedom to travel about unwatched, unfilmed, unphotograped, without line-ups, pat-downs, body-scans and searches, without having to remove your hat, jacket, belt, shoes---and, depending on what new and ingenious methods those who scheme to attack 'our faithful public servants and protectors, the government authorities, come up with next, your who-knows-what?, too.
While you were watching sit-coms and pro sports television, people in high places of government authority decided to take away your rights and everything attached to them and leave you with the "choice" between liking it or lumping it.
"Have a good one!"
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Re: Re: Sieg Heil...Must see your papers!
The typical officer, enlisted man, whether a party member or not, under Nazi rule in 1930s and 40s Germany was precisely like the servile, obedient fuctionaries of the TSA: average people doing what others above them in authority told them to do, without thinking, without questioning, without objecting or refusing.
If you don't recognize the many parallels between the deepening autocratic bureaucracy's ever-more Draconian ways and means, then you, I suspect, are very ignorant of the history you object to others' raising in example. And that ignorant oobjection on your part is also very, very STUPID and blind.
Next time you are tempted to invoke "Godwin's Law," if you cannot honestly assert that you've read and are familiar with such standard works on Nazi history as William Shirer's The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich, Victor Klemperer's diaries, (in English) I Shall Bear Witness, and Ian Kershaw's texts on Hitler and Nazism, then you should do yourself and us a favor and stop yourself from invoking "Godwin's" stupidity.
Go, read these sources, inform yourself and THEN think before you parrot stupid nonsense in internet fora or, if you have not, then, please STFU about "Godwin's Law". THANK YOU!
Today's forms of tyranny-in-everday-life often (usually) resembles that of former regimes--including, yes, the Nazis of Germany in the 1930s and 40s. But clueless and ignorant publics just repeat Bwak! Nazis! Bwak! Godwin's Law! Bwak! Bwak!
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Re: Why not file a police report
You are very, very naive.
Guess what? The TSA's practises have been challenged in court and, instead of protecting our rights, the courts have ruled often, if not always, in the government's favor; apparently, your privacy rights are merely an optical illusion. When needed, they vanish--by courts' rulings.
NEXT?
(All the same, court challenges should be made again and again--by thousands of people-- as long as this nightmare continues.)
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tsa
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Re: Re: Why not file a police report
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: The TSA made me cry last week too. And wrecked my eye.
Anyway, nice a diversion as the machine specifics are, my point was the medical issue and the failure of the TSA to adequately address it. I may have over emphasized my hypothetical hyperbole a touch too much.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: The TSA made me cry last week too. And wrecked my eye.
http://www.npr.org/assets/news/2010/05/17/concern.pdf
"Unlike other scanners, these new devices operate at relatively low beam energies (28keV). The majority of their energy is delivered to the skin and the underlying tissue. Thus, while the dose would be safe if it were distributed throughout the volume of the entire body, the dose to the skin may be dangerously high."
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Obama's Rectum?
'So what happens when, you know, Obama, or somebody, a terrorist puts something up their rectum?'
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Air port security
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is a great opportunity for perverts to fondle not only adult women, but underage children. Why is anyone surprised? Once they bring up "National Security", the government feels that anything they want to do is perfectly allowable.
One wonders what kind of background check they do for TSA workers? Do they check for criminal records at all? do they care if they hire convicted molesters?
Not only does TSA molest people, they also riffle through your luggage and then steal items of value. It's a great opportunity for criminals.
https://www.fileshipposoftwares.com/shareit-for-pc-filehippo
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