As a very frequent flyer, I have wanted to write about the abuses of the  Transportation Security Agency (TSA) for years now. To tell the truth,  since I am such a frequent flyer and often recognised by individual TSA  employees, I was a little timid about this because I did not want flying  to become an even bigger hassle and more invasive than it already is.  But the recent brouhaha over the Chertoff-O-Scanners has given me the  courage in numbers to be able to write about my experiences.
The  first thing that bugs me is how complacent my fellow travellers are  about the civil rights abuses we endure to be able to take the airplane  seats we pay hundreds of dollars for. The second we click 'purchase' on  the airline's website, we are treated as though we are guilty just for  wanting to go from point A to B by plane. This goes against our  constitutional right of being presumed innocent until proven guilty.
Every  time a TSA operative asks me if he or she can "take a look in my bag," I  say: "Sure, if you can show me a warrant." I cannot say how many times a  fellow traveller has proclaimed: "It's for your own safety!"
Speaking  of "it's for your own safety", who can forget Richard Reid, the "shoe  bomber" who allegedly tried to detonate explosives on a flight from  Paris to Miami in 2002? That incident is the reason why in the US we  have to take our shoes off and put them through the x-ray machine. But  did you know that the US is the only country that forces flyers to do  this? Reid is a citizen of the UK and was flying from France, but if one  flies in either of these countries, or anywhere else for that matter,  it is not common practice to remove your shoes. So why are planes not  dropping from the skies all over the world? Well, because this has  nothing to do with our "safety". Shoe removal and shoe throwing are the  same act of disrespect and intimidation unless one is entering a  Japanese home or walking on holy ground.
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