Full body scans for US bound flights

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In summary: I may opt to go through security a few times just to be sure!In summary, Amsterdam's Schiphol Airport will start using full body scans for US bound flights. I remember seeing this technology in its early stages a few years ago and remember the privacy issues. I am glad to see it actually going into use. I think they should have it at all airports and use it at random, kind of like the pre-boarding searches. The people that are agaisnt it because of the privacy issues would be very unhappy if all the airports suddenly switched to this technology, the random searches would be a good starting point. I am all for every airport using it.
  • #71
Cyrus said:
Besides, those marines were white.

And McVeigh was blue?

Last pictures I saw he was orange.
 
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  • #72
Monique said:
Wouldn't it be too easy to dress up as a marine and skip a security check? It is a basic human right to be treated equally, so I think everybody should.

As an American, I don't want any more airplanes blowing up or crashing into buildings where I live. I think your idealism is not founded on any form of rationality.
 
  • #73
Borek said:
And McVeigh was blue?

Last pictures I saw he was orange.

How many Muslim terrorists were white?

As a side note: Janet Napolitano was an idiot saying "the system worked." If she thinks that is 'working' she should be fired.
 
  • #74
Cyrus said:
As an American, I don't want any more airplanes blowing up or crashing into buildings where I live. I think your idealism is not founded on any form of rationality.
And as an American you also think that Marines should not have to go through security checks, I don't think your idealism is founded on any form of rationality.

I have a story for you: drug trafficking was a big problem from flights out of the Caribbean. These drug traffickers were usually people who looked like Caribbean people, so what did they do? They started thoroughly screening every person who looked Caribbean. What did the drug traffickers do? They started enlisted tourists to traffic the drugs for them. These people are not stupid.

There are also going to be white American people who are willing to perform terrorist attacks on airplanes. There are white American people who have already performed terrorist attacks out of extremist motives, ignoring that would be stupid. (not to mention the other non-terrorist motives that people could have to hijack airplanes)
 
  • #75
Cyrus said:
How many Muslim terrorists were white?

Not many, perhaps none. But you are making a mistake assuming that Muslims are the only source of danger and that it is so obvious that white Marine can't be a Muslim terrorist. I suppose that's what Monique means and all are equal is not an idealism - she just points to the fact that everyone can be a terrorist and should be treated in exactly the same way.

Edit: she already posted that in the meantime.
 
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  • #76
Monique said:
And as an American you also think that Marines should not have to go through security checks, I don't think your idealism is founded on any form of rationality.

Do you think police should go through security checks at airports? Why do you think uniformed marines should be subjected to taking of their shoes, belts, and hats so they can walk through a bomb detecting machine?

I have a story for you: drug trafficking was a big problem from flights out of the Caribbean. These drug traffickers were usually people who looked like Caribbean people, so what did they do? They started thoroughly screening every person who looked Caribbean. What did the drug traffickers do? They started enlisted tourists to traffic the drugs for them. These people are not stupid.

There are also going to be white American people who are willing to perform terrorist attacks on airplanes. There are white American people who have already performed terrorist attacks out of extremist motives, ignoring that would be stupid. (not to mention the other non-terrorist motives that people could have to hijack airplanes)

You are basing this on an extrapolation of exactly zero cases where this happened. This is absurd.
 
  • #77
Borek said:
Not many, perhaps none. But you are making a mistake assuming that Muslims are the only source of danger and that it is so obvious that white Marine can't be a Muslim terrorist. I suppose that's what Monique means and all are equal is not an idealism - she just points to the fact that everyone can be a terrorist and should be treated in exactly the same way.

Edit: she already posted that in the meantime.

White muslim terrorist count: zero. :rolleyes:. Everyone should not be treated the same way. Middle eastern people should be more throughly screened.
 
  • #78
Cyrus said:
Do you think police should go through security checks at airports? Why do you think uniformed marines should be subjected to taking of their shoes, belts, and hats so they can walk through a bomb detecting machine?

Because anyone in marine uniform looks like uniformed marine.

You are basing this on an extrapolation of exactly zero cases where this happened. This is absurd.

Assuming someone may use commercial flight as a flying bomb to destroy building was an absurd before 9/11.

Cyrus said:
Middle eastern people should be more throughly screened.

Which doesn't mean others should be not.
 
  • #79
Borek said:
Because anyone in marine uniform looks like uniformed marine.

You do realize that marines have proper military ID, right? This is a bit of a cartoonish argument here Borek.

Assuming someone may use commercial flight as a flying bomb to destroy building was an absurd before 9/11.

This unrelated fact validates her point...how? (It does not)
 
  • #80
Cyrus said:
White muslim terrorist count: zero. :rolleyes:. Everyone should not be treated the same way. Middle eastern people should be more throughly screened.
http://www.balkanpeace.org/index.php?index=article&articleid=14021"
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mirsad_Bektašević

And as said, non-muslim white people also perform terrorist attacks: Timothy McVeigh & Terry Nichols, Theodore Kaczynski, Eric Robert Rudolph, Samuel Bowers, Michael Bray, Richard Grint Butler, Robert Edward Chambliss, David Lane.

Or have you been brainwashed to think that the only people who are capable of doing bad things are black Muslims?
 
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  • #81
Monique said:
http://www.balkanpeace.org/index.php?index=article&articleid=14021"
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mirsad_Bektašević

And as said, non-muslim white people also perform terrorist attacks: Timothy McVeigh & Terry Nichols, Theodore Kaczynski, Eric Robert Rudolph, Samuel Bowers, Michael Bray, Richard Grint Butler, Robert Edward Chambliss, David Lane.

Or have you been brainwashed to think that the only people who are capable of doing bad things are black Muslims?

Monique, what does a terrorist in serbia have anything to do with what we are talking about? Is this supposed to be more of a stretch of the imagination with irrelevant examples?

Now,...please. Give me a relevant example next time. I don't need to see another link to an unrelated article about McVeigh. This is not making your point.
 
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  • #82
Cyrus said:
You do realize that marines have proper military ID, right? This is a bit of a cartoonish argument here Borek.
Anyone who is willing can make a fake ID card.

Cyrus said:
Monique, what does a terrorist in serbia have anything to do with what we are talking about? Is this supposed to be more of a stretch of the imagination with irrelevant examples?

Now,...please. Give me a relevant example next time. I don't need to see another link to an unrelated article about McVeigh. This is not making your point.
This person had ties with al-Qaeda in Iraq, you don't think that is relevant?
 
  • #83
Please don't take this the wrong way, but you are incredibly naive. The reality of national security does not allow me to share this view with you.
 
  • #84
Who is naive?
Bektašević allegedly was an Internet recruiter, under the alias Maximus, for young Muslims to join the insurgency in Iraq. According to the British newspaper The Times, citing police and intelligence sources, Bektašević had visited the former leader of al-Qaeda in Iraq, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, and run one of his web sites. Bektašević also went by the alias Abu Imad As-Sandzaki on various internet forums.

In particular, Islamic radicals are looking to create cells of so-called white al Qaeda, non-Arab members who can evade racial profiling used by police forces to watch for potential terrorists. "They want to look European to carry out operations in Europe," said a Western intelligence agent in Belgrade, the capital of Serbia and Montenegro, adjacent to Bosnia. "It's yet another evolution in the tools used by terrorists."
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/11/30/AR2005113002098.html
 
  • #85
Cyrus said:
You do realize that marines have proper military ID, right? This is a bit of a cartoonish argument here Borek.

This unrelated fact validates her point...how? (It does not)

It doesn't validate Monique's point, it invalidates your point. You seem to be sure that you can base your preventive actions based on past experience. That was done earlier and was not effective. And if you ASSUME that some groups are not suspected for any reason, you can be sure terrorists will try to use it against you.
 
  • #86
Some people are just so pathetic! :mad:...IMO, all should go through the same process equally, if there is any needed.
 
  • #87
First off, OF COURSE discriminatory screening will induce those actually leaning towards terrorism to make themselves more invisible (i.e, to gain a position in the relatively unsupervised group rather than the more supervised group).
This is just a perfectly normal arms race, and there's nothing wrong with that.

HOWEVER, any such added effort the would-be-terrorist must make in order not to get busted is a COST for him, one way or the other.

By always following a "one-step-behind" policy (it is impossible for the government to be one or more steps ahead) towards these perpetrators, the perps will enter the diminishing-returns-zone, where the increased costliness necessary to remain effective will become a barrier to their plans to begin with.
I.e, the number of attempts that will be successful, ALONG with the number of attempts tried will plummet/be significantly reduced, until we reach what we could call the "acceptable risk"-zone.


Secondly, let us say that the average time for a full body scan of any passenger is half a minute.
For a domestic flight with 300 passengers, at least 150 minutes, i.e, 2 and a half HOURS of screening time will be needed to scan everyone. If 20 minutes of total security delay is acceptable, this will require the installation of about 8 or 9 scanning devices and a similar number of separate operating crews on every airport that is an initial take-off site for such planes.

Of course, this is WAY too expensive, and at the very least, something that cannot be installed overnight, or even within a year or so.

What is, therefore, the necessary result?
SAMPLING PROCEDURES of passengers to be scanned WILL develop, whether we like it or not!

Since, in the given example, a 10% sampling pool will suffice for a single scanning device in order to be within the 20 minute delay, the only rational thing to do is to pick that 10% on basis of characteristics well-known to have within their midst a gross over-representation of terrorists, rather than picking our sampling pool out of a confused, irreflective policy, which is precisely what we would get if you, for example, left the criteria for sampling up to thousands of half-educated airport personnel.


That terrorists then will gradually shift their characteristics away from the initial sampling criteria should be expected but should merely result in a requirement of continuous monitoring, and a willingness to change the sampling criteria as the situation evolves.
 
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  • #88
drizzle said:
Some people are just so pathetic! :mad:...IMO, all should go through the same process equally, if there is any needed.

Why?
 
  • #89
Borek said:
It doesn't validate Monique's point, it invalidates your point. You seem to be sure that you can base your preventive actions based on past experience. That was done earlier and was not effective. And if you ASSUME that some groups are not suspected for any reason, you can be sure terrorists will try to use it against you.

I'm not going to argue in hyperbole with you.
 
  • #90
Cyrus said:
Why?

Why for what? for being pathetic or for being treated equally as others?
 
  • #91
drizzle said:
Why for what? for being pathetic or to be treated equally as others?

Being treated equally is this biggest load of nonsense someone can say. Let me spell this out for you: no one is treated equal. The laws that apply to me, a US citizen, DO NOT apply to you a foreign national. You WILL NOT be treated equally when coming to my country, nor I to yours. If you are visiting my country from the middle east, I want you and your bags searched. You don't like it, don't visit. Not having airplanes blow up is more important than your feelings of misgivings for being searched at the airport.
 
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  • #92
The United States still has to abide the laws put forth by the United Nations High Commissionar for Human Rights. It it not right to be treated as a terrorist based on some general characteristic, the same as it is not right to be treated as a drug trafficker based on an incident.
 
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  • #93
Monique said:
The United States still has to abide the laws put forth by the United Nations High Commissionar for Human Rights. It it not right to be treated as a terrorist based on some general characteristic, the same as it is not right to be treated as a drug trafficker based on an incident. I sympathize with arildno's point of view, he actually seems to have given the issue some thought.

There is no right to 'equal airport screening'.
 
  • #94
The United States still has to abide the laws put forth by the United Nations High Commissionar for Human Rights. It it not right to be treated as a terrorist based on some general characteristic,
Complete nonsense.

It is eminently rational, for example, to deny homosexual men to be blood donors due to extreme over-representation of HIV positives within that group. (Being gay myself and not engaging in high-risk behaviour in that department, I still have not the slightest resentment against that policy)

To gain sufficiently detailed information about any arbitrary group so as to expect minimal variance WITHIN that group (i.e, that the group can be regarded as homogenous in a salient aspect) is an extremely COSTLY procedure.

That is why it is more rational to single out some general, (fairly) readily identifiable characteristics, that are strongly associated with "high risk" (i.e, grossly over-represented), and take important decisions based upon that.

We always have limited resources available, and must put them to use most efficiently.
And such efficiency is NOT gained by fussing about variance-minimizing information gathering, because it is..too costly.
 
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  • #95
cristo said:
Didn't you have an incident very recently where a mass murder took place inside an army base?
That merely shows that Muslims should be more thoroughly screened relative to others before being allowed to serve in the Army.
 
  • #96
Monique said:
http://www.balkanpeace.org/index.php?index=article&articleid=14021"
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mirsad_Bektašević

And as said, non-muslim white people also perform terrorist attacks: Timothy McVeigh & Terry Nichols, Theodore Kaczynski, Eric Robert Rudolph, Samuel Bowers, Michael Bray, Richard Grint Butler, Robert Edward Chambliss, David Lane.

Or have you been brainwashed to think that the only people who are capable of doing bad things are black Muslims?

Sure.

If you extend your list of prime suspects to also include committed Marxists and KKK's, you've covered most groups.

This means, for example, that tenured academics in the "humanities" departments, due to their Marxist leanings should be screened more often than others.
 
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  • #97
drizzle said:
Some people are just so pathetic! :mad:...IMO, all should go through the same process equally, if there is any needed.

They have been doing since Christmas day, which has resulted in 2 or 3 hour delays on flights to the US (at least from the UK). Hardly something that can be kept up long term!
 
  • #98
Cyrus said:
Now,...please. Give me a relevant example next time.

How about Ann-Marie Murphy, a 32-year old 5-6 months pregnant Irishwoman, who was caught carrying 1.5 kilos of semtex on a timer on an El Al flight from London to Tel Aviv?

Indeed, she was chosen specifically because she didn't "meet the profile".
 
  • #99
Vanadium 50 said:
How about Ann-Marie Murphy, a 32-year old 5-6 months pregnant Irishwoman, who was caught carrying 1.5 kilos of semtex on a timer on an El Al flight from London to Tel Aviv?

Indeed, she was chosen specifically because she didn't "meet the profile".

I googled her name and interestingly enough ran across this article:

http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2002/01/15/60II/main324476.shtml

In it it says

What’s the safest airline in the world?

There's no question. It's El Al, Israel’s national airline.

What’s the safest airport? Ben Gurion, Israel’s international airport.

It's ironic, when you figure that Israeli aviation has been the single most desirable target for terrorists since the 1960s. Correspondent Bob Simon reports. What do the Israelis do that the Americans don’t do? Well, they’ve had sky marshals since the 1960s. And racial profiling...

Since Sept. 11, America has gotten serious about airline security - or has tried to. Dror asks how Richard Reid, the shoe bomber, was ever allowed on that American Airlines flight from Paris to Miami.

"The first thing: Where is your suitcase? You are not going to the United States without any suitcase," says Dror. "How, where are you going to spend your time? Are you, are you going to sleep naked in the Central Park? What are you going to do over there without suitcase? So, this is the first question and that (will) raise a lot of red lights."

In fact, the Israelis got a chance to ask Reid a lot of questions, because he flew El Al last summer. They didn’t like the look of him, so they checked everything in his bags, and everything he was wearing, and then put an armed sky marshal in the seat right next to him.
 
  • #100
So, who can show me some statistics on global aircraft hijackings? Apparently some people are convinced that only Middle Eastern people hijack airplanes, so I at least would like to see some raw data that proves that point.
 
  • #101
Monique said:
So, who can show me some statistics on global aircraft hijackings? Apparently some people are convinced that only Middle Eastern people hijack airplanes, so I at least would like to see some raw data that proves that point.

But I don't care about global hijackings. I care about hijackings that concern the united states, there is no need to obfuscate the issue.
 
  • #102
Full body scanners are not the best answer. Since all of the full body scanners I've heard of intentionally obfuscate the crotch or at least have a blurred view of the entire body, they may not have detected this last bomber. Even if you had a full view of the man, you are still limited to what seems abnormal.

Explosive sniffer portals are the better answer. They are less intrusive, and they detect explosive even when they don't look like explosives. You still have to deal with compounds they don't detect, or chemicals which are harmless on their own, but combine to form explosives. These problems however can be solved somewhat by adapting what they detect.

Do terrorists change their tactics to fit the security measures? Sure. Does this preclude things like racial/religious profiling? No. When 85 year old grandmothers start attacking airliners we can give them the whole body and cavity searches. Security has to adapt to be effective, but treating everyone the same in the short run is foolish. We always go back to timothy McVeigh, but you know what, after the OK city bombing anyone with ties to a gun club was looked upon as a potential terrorist nut by the media. Same thing with columbine, every high school student who wore a trench coat was suddenly going to shoot up the school. The reaction is natural, and somewhat justified, but suddenly when the terrorists are not white we decide to be politically correct? Kids can go to school in trench coats again today and people can be members of gun clubs without being called terrorists because the stereotypes didn't hold water.

As for the argument that terrorism is much less deadly than car crashes, there is one key difference: When I sit in my car and drive somewhere I chose to take that risk. The same is true with the risk of non terrorism airplane crashes. If someone put a bomb on the road and used it to blow up my car it would not be a risk that I intentionally took. The same is true of the outrage felt when a product is found to have a life threatening defect that the manufacturer ignored. We are not upset about inherent risk, we are upset about intentionally added risk.
 
  • #103
Cyrus said:
But I don't care about global hijackings. I care about hijackings that concern the united states, there is no need to obfuscate the issue.

Does that mean you don't have any statistics to argument your position?
 
  • #104
mgb_phys said:
Casualties from 'the troubles' 3500
Casualties from Muslim terrorists 52 (also not on planes)
True (for 7/7). 3500 in England or mostly in N. Ire? Obviously Jihadists would blow up a plane given any chance, but the IRA never did suicide bombings, nor have they given any indication they'd blow up a civilian airliner. Bottom line, it would be a waste of time to screen the Irish at the same rate as Middle Eastern travelers.
 
  • #105
Monique said:
Does that mean you don't have any statistics to argument your position?

All right, the number of Hijackers in 911, so 19 for starters.

Now your turn.
 

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