I'm a Terrorist

Yes you read the title right at least according to the TSA, Bone Heads.
For about a Year now I have had to prove who I am before I could get an airline ticket or should I say check in early on-line, what a Pain in the A-- this is standing in line every time I fly when I could just use the Sky Cap and by pass standing 50 people back in a line.

Now I know they don't like to profile, BUT DAMN IT PROFILE. From what I have seen 80 year old ladies and Blond Hair guys are not the ones blowing up planes. I'm sure my last name being CAMPBELL puts me on a watch list with Mohammad for some reason and I'm not sure why.

I just had to sign on-line with TSA and send off Birth Certs and Drivers LIC so I could prove who I am for the 20th time. I hope it go's faster then standing in line for my Health Care. :speechless:

Anybody else been on there Watch List?
 
Have you proclaimed yourself a terrorist on any public forums?
That might have tipped them off.
 
Terry, you forgot to fill out your key tags when you started this thread. :bash: Now its gonna take an extra 2 days for the world to find this thread on google. :rolleyes:
 
Thad said:
Have you proclaimed yourself a terrorist on any public forums?
That might have tipped them off.
:rotflmao1:

I like this Andrew Napolitano a lot, another great article on this nonsense http://www.lewrockwell.com/napolitano/napolitano13.1.html

What would it take to take back air travel? If all the airlines together just stopped, just shut down the country and said 'tsa - get out'
 
Why are these jacka**es getting "rights" in court? The ******cker tried to kill a planeload of people. Why didn't they shoot him in the head as soon as they took him off the plane?

Why wasn't there a pigskin bodybag waiting for him at the gate to zip his dead a** up and have live interviews right in front of his pig encrusted carcass?

SLOOOOOW justice has turned to NOOOOOO justice.

This is our country. Any foreigner who attempts to kill our citizens is a COMBATANT and should be shot dead on sight just like any COMBATANT in war. Last I heard we are still in a war.
 
Why are these jacka**es getting "rights" in court? The ******cker tried to kill a planeload of people. Why didn't they shoot him in the head as soon as they took him off the plane?

Why wasn't there a pigskin bodybag waiting for him at the gate to zip his dead a** up and have live interviews right in front of his pig encrusted carcass?

SLOOOOOW justice has turned to NOOOOOO justice.

This is our country. Any foreigner who attempts to kill our citizens is a COMBATANT and should be shot dead on sight just like any COMBATANT in war. Last I heard we are still in a war.


I agree Tony...

I also get pissed off everytime I get searched, or when they take my hairgel and toothpaste. BUT.......at least I have not been blown-up or flow into a building yet.....

I guess what I am saying is...YES, profile the arabs. YES, Search me. Yes, Take my gel if it does not meet the requirmentsand YES....keep me safe.
 
Nope, it is a conflict with sovereign nationalists.
 
Lol you think that is bad, when I use to travel I knew things would be delayed, my last name is Al-Jazrawi, when I went to austrailia in 05 I had to sit in a security office for 5 hours before letting me in the city

Would you willingly give up your time for the sake of other Americans who aren't unlucky enough to have a name like yours? Would you approve of profiling and give up your own rights for the sake of others?
 
I just watched a story on Huckabee the other night about Israel's awesome airport security, They wanted to help this administration on this subject but we told them we didnt need their help!!

What Israeli security could teach us
By Jeff Jacoby, Globe Columnist | August 23, 2006

THE SAFEST airline in the world, it is widely agreed, is El Al, Israel's national carrier. The safest airport is Ben Gurion International, in Tel Aviv. No El Al plane has been attacked by terrorists in more than three decades, and no flight leaving Ben Gurion has ever been hijacked. So when US aviation intensified its focus on security after 9/11, it seemed a good bet that the experience of travelers in American airports would increasingly come to resemble that of travelers flying out of Tel Aviv.

But in telling ways, the two experiences remain notably different. For example, passengers in the United States are required to take off their shoes for X-ray screening, while passengers at Ben Gurion are spared that indignity. On the other hand, major American airports generally offer the convenience of curbside check-in, while in Israel baggage and traveler stay together until the security check is completed. Screeners at American airports don't usually engage in conversation with passengers, unless you count their endlessly repeated instructions about emptying pockets and taking laptops out of briefcases. At Ben Gurion, security officials make a point of engaging in dialogue with almost everyone who's catching a plane.

Nearly five years after Sept. 11, 2001, US airport security remains obstinately focused on intercepting bad things -- guns, knives, explosives. It is a reactive policy, aimed at preventing the last terrorist plot from being repeated. The 9/11 hijackers used box cutters as weapons, so sharp metal objects were barred from carry-on luggage. Would-be suicide terrorist Richard Reid tried to ignite a bomb in his shoe, so now everyone's footwear is screened for tampering. Earlier this month British authorities foiled a plan to blow up airliners with liquid explosives; as a result, toothpaste and cologne have become air-travel contraband.

Of course the Israelis check for bombs and weapons too, but always with the understanding that things don't hijack planes, terrorists do -- and that the best way to detect terrorists is to focus on intercepting not bad things, but bad people. To a much greater degree than in the United States, security at El Al and Ben Gurion depends on intelligence and intuition -- what Rafi Ron, the former director of security at Ben Gurion, calls the human factor.

Israeli airport security, much of it invisible to the untrained eye, begins before passengers even enter the terminal. Officials constantly monitor behavior, alert to clues that may hint at danger: bulky clothing, say, or a nervous manner. Profilers -- that's what they're called -- make a point of interviewing travelers, sometimes at length. They probe, as one profiling supervisor told CBS, for ``anything out of the ordinary, anything that does not fit." Their questions can seem odd or intrusive, especially if your only previous experience with an airport interrogation was being asked whether you packed your bags yourself.

Unlike in US airports, where passengers go through security after checking in for their flights and submitting their luggage, security at Ben Gurion comes first. Only when the profiler is satisfied that a passenger poses no risk is he or she allowed to proceed to the check-in counter. By that point, there is no need to make him remove his shoes, or to confiscate his bottle of water.

Gradually, airport security in the United States is inching its way toward screening people, rather than just their belongings. At a handful of airports, security officers are being trained to notice facial expressions, body language, and speech patterns, which can hint at a traveler's hostile intent or fear of being caught.

But because federal policy still bans ethnic or religious profiling, US passengers continue to be singled out for special scrutiny mostly on a random basis. Countless hours have been spent patting down elderly women in wheelchairs, toddlers with pacifiers, even former US vice presidents -- time that could have been used instead to concentrate on passengers with a greater likelihood of being terrorists.

No sensible person imagines that ethnic or religious profiling alone can stop every terrorist plot. But it is illogical and potentially suicidal not to take account of the fact that so far every suicide-terrorist plotting to take down an American plane has been a radical Muslim man. It is not racism or bigotry to argue that the prevention of Islamist terrorism necessitates a special focus on Muslim travelers, just as it is not racism or bigotry when police trying to prevent a Mafia killing pay closer attention to Italians.

Of course most Muslims are not violent jihadis, but all violent jihadis are Muslim. ``This nation," President Bush has said, ``is at war with Islamic fascists." How much longer will we tolerate an aviation security system that pretends, for reasons of political correctness, not to know that?
 
El Al Profiles :thumbup2: and Guess what? they have the safest air travel in the world. So what I'm saying is PROFILING WORKS Just a little proof that they care more about saving lives then offending anyone.

I don't mind being safe on a plane and being checked out, but every time I fly I have to be checked out, by now you would think they would have figured out who the heck I am. 2 Months ago the searched my carry on, they pulled me out of line in front of all these people and swabbed my baggage for explosive chems. I don't get it and never will.

Maybe it's the Blue Eyes.........
 
Would you willingly give up your time for the sake of other Americans who aren't unlucky enough to have a name like yours? Would you approve of profiling and give up your own rights for the sake of others?


Absolutely, I like that they do hold me, as well as others with an arab last name, That means our airs will be safer. Im never angry when they keep me, I know they are just doing their jobs.

My whole family moved here from Iraq 45 - 60 years ago, Reason being is my entire arab half of the family are all, Born Catholics. During the time of saddam, christians, has to have a cross tatooed on their forearms, so that the general muslim public could Identify them, Their lives were greatly destroyed because of the faith they chose.

So most of my family fled Iraq and now 45 - 60 years later live all over the united states.
 
Terry,

why do they pull you aside? Have you asked them? It clearly is not your name...is there someone that has the same name on a watch list somewhere? Do you have something on your record that alerts them?

Profiling is good and it sounds like that is exactly what is happening.
 
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