After the attempted Christmas bombing, a lot of scrutiny has been put on national security. The TSA has tightened airport security and soon we are going to be virtually strip searched with the new body imaging machines. These days it feels like the airport is a constitution-free zone.
Several days ago, the terminal was locked down because of a jar of honey. A single uruly passenger on another flight caused F-15's to be scrambled and escort the jet in question down. It's sad day when we are so willing to shoot down our own jets.
These days a terrorist could do far more damage with a phone call threat to an airport than an actual attack. There would be tens of thousands of dollars of lost revenue due to delays, canceled flights, and security response.
When it comes to methodology, terrorists are like prisoners in jail. No matter what you do to stop them, they will always be one step in front of you. Am I saying we should sit idly by and do nothing? Absolutely not.
The best way to combat terrorism is and remains prevention through intelligence. In both 9/11 and the Christmas bombing attempt, we had intelligence that could have been followed more thoroughly to prevent what happened. There are many more attacks that are foiled by the intelligence community that we never hear about. That's because only the failures become widely known.
Statistically speaking, you are far more likely to die on the way to the airport than a terrorist attack. Or from whatever you ate for breakfast this morning form food poisoning.
At what point do effective security measures stop and end up being simply nothing more than security theater? We can either have security that follows the constitution and live with a tiny risk of dying in a terrorist attack or have unconstitutional and heavily invasive security and still have the same small risk of dying in a terrorist attack.
I end this post with a very relevant quote from one of our founding fathers
Several days ago, the terminal was locked down because of a jar of honey. A single uruly passenger on another flight caused F-15's to be scrambled and escort the jet in question down. It's sad day when we are so willing to shoot down our own jets.
These days a terrorist could do far more damage with a phone call threat to an airport than an actual attack. There would be tens of thousands of dollars of lost revenue due to delays, canceled flights, and security response.
When it comes to methodology, terrorists are like prisoners in jail. No matter what you do to stop them, they will always be one step in front of you. Am I saying we should sit idly by and do nothing? Absolutely not.
The best way to combat terrorism is and remains prevention through intelligence. In both 9/11 and the Christmas bombing attempt, we had intelligence that could have been followed more thoroughly to prevent what happened. There are many more attacks that are foiled by the intelligence community that we never hear about. That's because only the failures become widely known.
Statistically speaking, you are far more likely to die on the way to the airport than a terrorist attack. Or from whatever you ate for breakfast this morning form food poisoning.
At what point do effective security measures stop and end up being simply nothing more than security theater? We can either have security that follows the constitution and live with a tiny risk of dying in a terrorist attack or have unconstitutional and heavily invasive security and still have the same small risk of dying in a terrorist attack.
I end this post with a very relevant quote from one of our founding fathers
Benjamin Franklin said:They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety.