Child With Brittle Bone Disease Detained By TSA For An Hour
from the if-you're-going-to-be-oppressive-at-least-do-your-job-right dept
It's no secret that I don't think much of the TSA. In addition to a long list of pieces we've done on what I consider one of the most useless government agencies, there's also the more recent story I covered discussing whether or not the agency's operations have resulted in more deaths in the past decade than all the terrorism against American's combined. Still, there is some discussion over whether all of this freedom-taking and death is worth the fuzzy feeling we all suposedly get when boarding a plane, knowing that at least all of this asshat-ery is making us safer.But then you hear the story of someone like Shelbi Walser, a twelve year old girl from Texas who suffers brittle bone disease and also apparently has to suffer with over-zealous federal employees that don't have enough common sense to fill a thimble.
Shelbi Walser, 12, has brittle bone disease, and was flying to Tampa, Fla., to receive treatment on Sunday when she was randomly selected for an explosives screening on her way through security. Tammy Daniels, Walser's mother, said that her daughter tested positive for explosives when a screener swabbed Walser's palms and fingers.Here's the thing. Even if you believe that the threat of terrorism via explosives on airplanes is everything that the government would have you believe (and I don't), and even if you think that the methods used by the TSA can help make us safer (and I don't), we're still left with a federal agency that is given so much leeway in curtailing our liberty that they at least should get their damned jobs right. There can be such a thing as common sense in airport security, where you understand that the 12 year old Texan with brittle bone disease probably isn't going 'splode a jetliner. Certainly it seems unlikely that it would take an hour for the TSA to come to this determination.
Speaking with ABC affiliate WFAA, Walser said that she has no idea how the traces of explosive got on her. "It could have come off fertilizer, because we have chickens. I could have run through something from them," she said. "It could have just come off the ground, because I roll through everything."
"I am by no means undermining our safety in the air. After 9/11, by no means am I doing that," Daniels told WFAA. "But when it comes to children, common sense is not in a textbook."This has always been the problem with the TSA: in the absence of common sense there is such a thing as the paralysis of bureaucracy, and when that paralysis comes to the people in the form of handbook-style security, then that's a win for the very people we're supposed to be protected against.
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Filed Under: children, detention, failures, security theater, tsa
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but now they are safer
Except if you go to school or visit a mall or ride/operate a motor vehicle or... at least you're safe in the air.
I think back to all those terrorist attacks on a weekly occurrence before the TSA stepped in, we're so safe now!
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Not that I want to defend the TSA...
I agree with Timothy that the TSA is the wrong agency, pursuing the wrong things, with the wrong methods, but the line agents don't, (and shouldn't) get the discretion to change any of that. Given the parameters they have to work inside, I find it pleasantly surprising that it only took an hour to clear up.
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- Your career is over if anything bad happens on your watch.
- There is no penalty for screwing up, except for rule #1.
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Screening 10%, for example, of people randomly (and I suspect they screen very few for explosives) is not going to deter a suicide attack (and bringing explosives onto an airplane is almost certainly a suicide attack.) What is this supposed to do, stop 1 out of 10 attacks? Security through blind luck? Do they think the terrorists say to themselves, "Yeah, we'd try to bring down that plane, but there's a 10% chance we'd be caught, so we aren't going to try"?
Screen everyone, or screen suspicious people, or don't bother. For crying out loud, even if the frail 12 year old girl WAS carrying an explosive, what's more likely: that she'd have explosive materials on her hands, or that someone ELSE made the explosives and planted them in her carry-on?
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Re: Not that I want to defend the TSA...
It's not the agents fault, they were ordered to do it right?
Indeed.
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Re: Not that I want to defend the TSA...
This article does not make the TSA line agents look like monsters.
My experience is that when TSA agents behave poorly, they do so with very unhappy looks on their faces. They know they're out of line, they just don't know what else to do. The shame is on their superiors.
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Re: Re: Not that I want to defend the TSA...
If they know what they are doing is wrong, and still do it , they are most certainly to blame for their actions. Now, this is not to say that their superiors get away scot-free, far from it, as they are the ones ordering such things done, but that just makes both groups equally guilty.
As the person above notes, 'I was just following orders' is not a valid excuse for wrongdoing.
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Re: Not that I want to defend the TSA...
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Re: Not that I want to defend the TSA...
As stated common sense.
OK so they have a positive hit on a machine now what? Unfortunately it seems those involved were incapable of using common sense and looking at the girl making a determination that she didn't pose a risk in less than an hour. It should have taken 5 minutes max.
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They have no incentive to do a good job as they get paid either way.
Replace the TSA with competing private security firms if you want 'common sense'.
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Damned if you do, damned if you don't
When will people make up their minds...? Do we want people to be checked or not? Someone with a vendetta couldn't have possibly told the 12 y/o to handle possible explosives, right?
Quit proselytizing. and get a write a real article. No wonder TD is a useless news service full of a**ho... I mean opinions.
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Re: Re: Not that I want to defend the TSA...
I highly doubt that any child who knows they a BRITTLE BONE DISEASE is going experiment with a capgun much less some thing more damaging such as a bomb...
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Re: Re: Re: Not that I want to defend the TSA...
He lit fireworks on the 4th with us once as I was close friends with his cousin.
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Re: Damned if you do, damned if you don't
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Wow...
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Re: Re: Not that I want to defend the TSA...
To grill a child based on just that is to tell the child that you don't have any trust in them, and will encourage them to not trust you in return. That return trust is pretty important for keeping the child safe.
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Re: Damned if you do, damned if you don't
That's a false choice -- it's not an all or nothing situation. But if it was, I'd prefer "nothing".
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Re: Re: Damned if you do, damned if you don't
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What has this gotten us?
The TSA has the 4th largest budget in the entire federal government (it's part of DHS, which is actually second, but if you break down exactly how much of DHS's budget is TSA, it's 4th) and has cost the constantly-failing airline industry equally as much as it has cost taxpayers directly. Over the past 11 years, there has been 1 new TSA job for every 4 jobs lost by the airlines, so it's a net job loss too. Add to all this insult the probably millions of people who are dying of cancer as we speak from the damn body scanners, and the true "cost" of the TSA is incredibly high.
So what has this all bought us? Has the TSA stopped one single terrorist in the past 11 years?
I know the FBI has stopped a few (and pretended to stop many more) and I know the passengers, not the TSA, stopped that shoe bomber guy. Hell, the flight attendants stopped a guy trying to shoot someone on SouthWest several years ago. Yet, for all this talk of stopping terrorists, has the TSA stopped any at all? Even one?
Or perhaps the more appropriate question is in order: has it stopped more deaths at the hands of terrorists than it has caused through the body scanners? Has it saved more lives than it has all-but-destroyed through the overly invasive pat-downs and cavity searches? Has it caused more terrorists to miss their would-be flight than it has stopped people from making it to important meetings, holidays, or even people trying to reach dead or dying family members halfway across the country?
I'm willing to bet the answer is no. In fact, I'm willing to risk flying cross-country on a non-TSA-secured plane the rest of my life to prove it.
After all, the flight attendant has a better chance of saving me anyway.
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Re: Not that I want to defend the TSA...
"Well, she may have traces of explosives on her hands, but she's not carrying explosives, so she's not a threat to this flight. She may have swallowed explosives and a detonator, but if she's that smart and well-prepared she probably would have washed her hands. So there's no evidence that she's any kind of threat, so let her through."
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Common sense is dead.
I remember a few years ago reading about an older woman who received a jury duty notice in the mail. She called up the courthouse and told them that she was exempt because of her age. They asked if she had filed the necessary paperwork and she told them that she did. They asked when she filed it and she told them that she did it the year before. They told her that was the problem, she had to file it every year! Apparently they want to make sure that nobody is getting younger...
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It's not the TSA as a whole...just the Texas branch...
It should be noted that this is Texas...a state known for not understanding any disabilities what so ever...and should not represent the TSA as a whole.
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TSA: "Mam, we need to check your drink for explosives."
Me: "What?!?! I just bought this here!"
Thank god the TSA has the forethought to check their own already screened drinks for explosives after people have had a drink. It made me feel so much safer when I got onto the plane.
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Re:
LAX is a mixed bag, but if you could have bought the Coke in the terminal and not been hassled. Either way, no worries :-)
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Just a reminder of TSA drama queens
The source of those fumes? Honey. Bee Vomit.
And now you know the rest of the story.
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Re: Not that I want to defend the TSA...
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I'm still waiting...
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Common Sense?
So many comments are saying it is common sense that the kid didn't have explosives... But it seems to me that someone in more misery is more likely to decide to choose that path.
Unless they mean that any 12 year old wouldn't carry explosives? But Palestinians have shown that even kids that age have carried bombs.
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Ahem. We need Hank McCoy here.
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Re: Common Sense?
There are child soldiers in Africa... quick, frisk all children for hidden weapons!
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Re: Re: Re: Damned if you do, damned if you don't
I'm surprised no one else brought this up sooner than you did. I'm also surprised that yours is the ONLY reference to this concept, throughout the entire comments section, as I write this.
The most common false positive on the TSA's explosives test is GLYCERIN. You know, a prime ingredient in many common soaps and lotions?
Believe it or not, because one of the things the TSA tests for is nitroglycerin, freaking HAND LOTION tests positive for explosives so often that the screeners actually SAY, "It's probably just hand lotion."
But still ..... Test positive, and you've TESTED POSITIVE. Period.
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Re: Common Sense?
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Don't you see?
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Poor QA crashes more planes
Change the design of the plane, so that passengers can not access the cockpit.
Since 2004 I have quit flying and also quit traveling to the US. As security is excessive, intrusive and humiliating and then there is the Border Cop's roulette method of ruining some ones travel experience.
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Re: Re: Not that I want to defend the TSA...
why don't YOU do some 'soul-searching' (like jon stewart said of faux news, i'm sure you'll find one) and consider if you're an abject authoritarian who will reflexively defend any and all idiocy 'cause it is by -you know- THE Gummint! ! !
dick
1. the idiotic 'bomb swipes' they do give about 5 zillion semi-false positives for every 'real' bomb residue they detect...
2. the nitrites they test for can be there from cardboard, numbnuts; not to mention a WHOLE mess of other 'normal' stuff that can be false-positives...
3. handling chickens? walking nitrite dispensers, with their hot manure, i'm sure they are covered in the stuff...
4. a little grrl w/brittle bone disease is our next terrorist vector ? ? ?
you stupid shit, you drank the whole gallon of kool-aid, didn't you ?
you're no American, you're an amerikan...
STFU
art guerrilla
aka ann archy
eof
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Re: What has this gotten us?
No need to resort to baseless hyperbole to criticize the TSA.
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Re: Re:
I don't know about LAX specifically, but generally once you get past security you can buy anything and bring it onto the plane because it's already been screened. I have certainly never been hassled bringing bottled water onto a plane.
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Re: Re:
Neither is the power to detect jokes at long range. ;-)
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Re: Poor QA crashes more planes
They took the even simpler expedient of just locking the cockpit door. No hostiles have gotten into the cockpit of a plane in-flight since then. Most of the rest of their actions are security theater, but that was a good (and obvious) idea.
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Re: Re: Common Sense?
I agree that the residue tests are poor. But if the TSA is using that test, and it turns up positive, them saying "oh it's just a 12 year old in a wheelchair, ignore the positive result" would be the stupidest thing ever. (Of course, being the TSA, then maybe we should expect that...)
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Re: Re: Common Sense?
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Not that I want to defend the TSA...
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Re:
Quite possibly when a) She told them, b) Texas is not known for accommodating disabilities (look at the workers' compensation laws), c)The wheel chair she was in which seems to automatically paint a target for bigots, d) It was painfully obvious to the general public, e) It's Texas...
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Not that I want to defend the TSA: 2nd
Very easy to say when you are not responsible for the lives of potentially hundreds of people if an event defies probability.
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