Ex-TSA Screener: Officers “Laughing” At Your Naked Image

TSA Body Scan SC Ex TSA Screener: Officers “Laughing” At Your Naked Image

A former TSA screener turned blogger who is now causing embarrassment for the federal agency has revealed that TSA officers routinely laugh at and make fun of passengers’ nude body scanner images in back rooms.

In a blog entitled Taking Sense Away, the anonymous ex-TSA worker reveals how he, “Witnessed light sexual play among officers, a lot of e-cigarette vaping, and a whole lot of officers laughing and clowning in regard to some of your nude images, dear passengers.”

The revelation was in response to a reader who asked, “Tell us, please, what really happens in that private room and why the TSA does not want it seen in public nor recorded.”

The ex-TSA screener also ridiculed the existence of I.O. rooms (image operator rooms) where naked images produced by body scanners are viewed by TSA agents.

“The most ridiculous thing is that these I.O. rooms even exist, to begin with. The backscatter machines are useless, as I and many, many others have previously pointed out. They should never have been put into use to begin with; TSA officers should never have been viewing nude, radiation-rendered images of passengers in those private rooms, period,” he writes.

Read More at infowars.com . By Paul Joseph Watson.

“I Saw Daddy Pat Down Santa Claus” (A Very TSA Christmas Song)

Thought you might enjoy this…

One Anarcho-Capitalist Who Knows Conservatism Is As Far As We’ll Go

Dont Tread on Me1 One Anarcho Capitalist Who Knows Conservatism Is As Far As Well Go

I’ve been a voluntaryist (not a misspelling) all my life. Growing up against Jim Crow-lite statism in Georgia confirmed that liberty and free association were the way to go.

A society of like-minded people voluntarily entering into contracts and agreements to govern themselves instead of via government is a fantasy to most folks.

Non-aggression is its chief principle, meaning that no one has a monopoly (unlike government) to use force against others.

Consider how important police and military functions would operate in such a system.

Private security would be the primary means of organized protection, selling their services to subscribers. They would resemble today’s conventional security firms up to heavily armed private military corporations like those seen overseas and in New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina.

Militarized private security presently guard nuclear, electrical, and government research facilities. Some even secure US bases.

I already see police and military supporters (of which I’m one too) objecting. They caution that these functions are rightfully reserved for government.

Placing police and military power in private hands is more disastrous than anarchy, they argue. I won’t quibble, but the real definition of anarchy means no rulers monopolizing executive power, not chaos.

Don’t worry folks; voluntaryism isn’t likely to become America’s chief organizing principle, despite epic efforts of Ayn Rand, Ron Paul, and the Libertarian Party among others.

As an anarcho-capitalist at heart, I know that many of our beloved countrymen need imposed rules to keep them from destroying themselves and others.

This is a bitter pill for liberty idealists to swallow, but it’s too true. Pragmatically, the product of our heavily regulated current society would run wild were government’s heavy hand removed.

America is indeed a free country in relation to other nations, but quite the opposite compared to her liberating ideals.

Businesses of all sizes struggle to create profit against a steady stream of rules imposed (with statist guns never far away) by government.

Higher minimum wages, higher taxes, and higher regulatory hurdles for producers to leap through means less income, less savings, and fewer jobs for employees.

The penalties for not getting Obamacare next year are icing on the cake of the American uber-state, smeared atop repression ranging from seat belt laws to TSA security overload.

I do my duty and obey repressive rules because many fellow Americans don’t want liberty. They simply desire more comfortable shackles at election time.

Conservatism is the happy medium between an uber-state and voluntaryism. Its focus on traditional values and less business regulation doesn’t please liberty idealists.

But, liberty idealists must accept that what they consider man’s natural state is fantasy to most of our peers.

I’m an anarcho-capitalist at heart. That said, I know that conservatism is as close to real liberty as America will get.

Without rules that rankle liberty lovers so much, there is very real peril that undisciplined masses will destroy all that America offers.

They don’t see themselves as free individuals who own their bodes and all that their minds produce.

Correcting this mindset is summed up by this saying:

” Free your mind, and your behind will follow. ”

” Cap Black, The Hood Conservative, says,
“ Sadly, we ain’t ready for voluntary society!”

 

504 214-3082

Help Cap Black Help Others!

http://www.gofundme.com/197xk8

Be your OWN Superhero!”

 

Photo Credit: marsmet 541 (Creative Commons)

Child In Wheelchair Detained By TSA Agents

Security agents claim that this 12-year-old girl in a wheelchair tested positive for bomb residue at Dallas-Fort Worth Airport. Welcome to the USSA, everyone. And don’t just blame Obama for this as the TSA was created under the watch of George W. Bush.


TSA Claims Congress Has No Jurisdiction Over It

tsa col logo SC TSA Claims Congress Has No Jurisdiction Over It

A hearing scheduled for Thursday by the Subcommittee on Aviation, which is a part of the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee (TIC), had an open invitation to agency head John Pistole to attend to discuss how best to improve our nation’s airport passenger security system through common sense solutions. Pistole refused the invitation claiming that the Congressional Committee has “no jurisdiction of the Transportation Security Administration (TSA).”

According to a brief titled How best to improve our nation’s airport passenger security system through common sense solutions, submitted by Subcommittee Chairman Thomas Petri (R-WI):

The purpose of this hearing is to examine the impact that the regulations and policies of the Transportation Security Administration have on aviation passenger experience and the free flow of aviation commerce. The subcommittee will hear from government, industry, and labor witnesses on their observations and suggestions on TSA’s policies.

While Pistole was invited to attend, he is declining and issued a statement via the TSA website:

By U.S. House of Representatives rules which state that the Transportation and Infrastructure Committee has no jurisdiction over the Transportation Security Administration (TSA), no representative from TSA will be present at the Subcommittee on Aviation hearing scheduled for Nov. 29.

TSA will continue to work with its committees of jurisdiction to pursue effective and efficient security solutions. In the 112th Congress alone, TSA witnesses have testified at 38 hearings and provided 425 briefings for Members of Congress.

TSA also continues to work to enhance security screening measures and to improve the passenger experience including through the expansion of TSA Pre✓™. As part of its risk-based security initiatives, TSA has modified screening procedures for passengers 12 and under and 75 and older while pursuing a multi-layered approach to security that includes behavior detection officers, explosives-detection systems and federal air marshals, among other measures both seen and unseen.

TIC’s own website cites numerous areas of reform that are needed concerning the TSA. They list the following:

TSA Waste in Procuring, Deploying and Storing Screening Equipment and Technology

Passenger Screening Reform — Private-Federal Screening Model Is More Efficient & Cost-Effective, and Could Save Taxpayers $1 Billion

A Decade of Costly TSA Missteps

TSA Wastes Over $200 Million Every Year on Flawed Behavior Detection Program

TSA Has Failed to Approve Biometric Technology for Pilots or Port Workers

Read More at freedomoutpost.com . By Tim Brown.

TSA Turkey Search

%7B62c5632b 73d1 4a1d bb81 fcb2fd0d3aa5%7D TSA Turkey Search

©2012 Rick McKee, The Augusta Chronicle

DHS Ready For Massive Civil Unrest, Internment Of “Dissidents”

SOURCE: http://bobpowell.blogspot.com/

In this episode of The Truth Is Viral, the plans of the Department of Homeland Security to violently suppress the citizenry of the US (and reeducate “dissidents” in concentration camps) are revealed through the use of official government documents.

In the past 8 months, DHS has purchased over 1.6 Billion rounds of hollow point handgun ammunition and rifle rounds suitable for use by snipers. Ammunition has gone to government agencies like the TSA, the Social Security Administration, and the National Weather Service.

Really? Armed weathermen?

“Gentlemen, prepare to defend yourselves” – Sgt. Maj. Basil Plumley (RIP)

Supreme Court To Decide If President Can Watch Americans’ Every Move

SupremeCourt building flag SC Supreme Court to Decide if President Can Watch Americans Every Move

On October 29, the U.S. Supreme Court will hear oral arguments in Clapper v. Amnesty International.  The Court will then decide whether Americans have standing to challenge a federal statute that permits the government to intercept their communications without  suspicion of any crime, without a warrant, and with virtually no meaningful judicial oversight of any sort.  Our law firm had the privilege of filing an amicus curiae brief in the Clapper case on behalf of Gun Owners Foundation, Gun Owners of America, Inc., U.S. Justice Foundation, Downsize DC Foundation, DownsizeDC.org, and the Conservative Legal Defense and Education Fund.

The case involves the 2008 FISA Amendments Act (“FAA”), which broadened the 1978 Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (“FISA”).  For years, FISA has permitted the gathering of “foreign intelligence” outside the traditional legal safeguards associated with criminal law enforcement.  Even before the 2008 amendments, FISA has allowed wiretaps so long as there was probable cause to believe that the target of the surveillance was a foreign power, or agent thereof.  And, so long as the “target” is legitimate, all “incidental” information that is picked up has been fair game, even if that includes the surveillance of “U.S. persons” (a term which includes U.S. citizens) not suspected of any wrongdoing.

Although FISA is purportedly designed to gather foreign intelligence, seized communications have been used in numerous criminal investigations and trials, even though FISA is not subject (i) to the same “particularity requirements” as traditional warrants (the who, what, where, and when), or (ii) to any customary oversight by an independent court.  The only judicial checkpoint is the special Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court (“FISC”), which has proven highly compliant with the wishes of the intelligence community.

Seeking still more unfettered authority, the executive branch urged Congress to pass FAA, which eliminates even the need for individual warrant applications.  The FAA removes judicial oversight, as FISC is stripped of any substantive role in determining probable cause.  Its only role is to make sure “that the government has made the proper certifications” — i.e., that the right boxes have been checked.  Further, under FAA, there is no “ongoing judicial review” of approved surveillance.  Instead, federal executive officials police themselves.

As the Clapper plaintiffs in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit put it, the government need only issue an “acquisition order” to capture “[a]ll telephone and e-mail communications to and from countries of foreign policy interest….”  The government never challenged that characterization of its power.  Who knows — that may be exactly what they have done, and if for one country, why not for every country.

The secret nature of FAA-authorized surveillance enabled the government’s remarkable claim that, because the plaintiffs could not demonstrate with certainty that they had been the subject of surveillance, they had no standing to bring suit to defend their Constitutional rights.  If the government wins on this point, the American people will be denied all access to any judicial remedy for clandestine violations of their Constitutional rights.

FAA is not the first such assertion of the power of unlimited, unsupervised, warrantless surveillance of Americans by the federal government.  In January of this year, the Supreme Court decided U.S. v. Antoine Jones, rejecting the claim by federal agents that they could install and use a GPS tracking device on a person’s automobile without a warrant, probable cause, or even mere suspicion.  The court ruled that, by surreptitiously placing a GPS tracking device on Jones’ Jeep without a warrant, the government violated the Fourth Amendment by trespassing on Jones’ property.  This ruling, however, has not deterred the government from tracking our movements without a warrant by means of the GPS chip that the federal government has required to be placed on our cell phones.  The government claims that there is no trespass, and no reasonable expectation of privacy, so the Fourth Amendment does not even apply.

Government-installed traffic cameras, security cameras, red light cameras, and plate-scan cameras already monitor us on the streets and in other public places.  Additionally, federal, state and local governments are already publically discussing their plans to use increasing numbers of unmanned aerial drones to follow us even on private property.  Government agents already interfere with our ability to travel, without, of course, any warrant or suspicion of wrongdoing.  TSA agents inspect our toddlers’ toys and grandparents’ diapers at airports, rail stations, and bus terminals.  Also, local law enforcement conducts random “sweeps” and searches at public transit locations, like subway stations, and stops vehicles at checkpoints under the pretense of looking for drunk drivers, inspecting drivers’ licenses, or conducting the increasingly popular “routine safety check.”

Amidst this vast web of random, suspicionless, warrantless searches and seizures, not only is our privacy at risk, but just as important, our property.  Property rights are meaningless if they do not include the right to exclude others from one’s property (especially the government).  The Supreme Court correctly ruled that, since Antoine Jones had a property right in his car, the government was prohibited from trespassing on it to install a GPS tracking device.  Likewise, Americans should have property rights in the location data emitted by their cellular phones and the content of their phone calls and emails along with, of course, their tangible “persons, houses, papers and effects.”  And yet, all of these rights are being eroded when balanced against the government’s purported interests of “public safety” and “crime detection/prevention.”

Such intrusions may be unprecedented in the United States, but they have not been elsewhere.  United States Supreme Court Justice Robert Jackson, a close friend and confidant of President Franklin Roosevelt, served as the chief prosecutor at the Nuremberg Trials.  While in Germany, he was able to learn first hand how the German people had lost their freedoms.  Upon his return, he became a champion of Fourth Amendment rights.

Justice Jackson’s Executive Trial Counsel at Nuremberg, Whitney Harris, discussed part of their shared experience in Germany in his book Tyranny on Trial, explaining that, as with the U.S. Constitution, “[t]he Weimar Constitution contained positive guarantees of basic civil rights.  Chief among them were personal freedom … inviolability of the home [and] secrecy of letters and other communications….”

However, the Weimar Constitution also contained an extraordinary provision, Article 48, “under which the Reich President was authorized to suspend basic civil rights ‘if the public safety and order in the German Reich are considerably disturbed or endangered….’”  In order to lay the predicate for this suspension of rights, it is generally believed that the Nazis themselves set fire to the Reichstag, which was followed the next day by a Presidential edict that “[personal freedom ... inviolability of the home [and] secrecy of letters and other communications] are suspended until further notice [and] violations of the privacy of postal, telegraphic, and telephonic communications, and warrants for house searches, orders for confiscations as well as restrictions on property, are also permissible beyond the legal limits unless otherwise prescribed.”

Having thus suspended the property rights of the German people, and attributing all the nation’s problems to Communist terrorists, the Nazis began a campaign of random searches and seizures in order to flush out “Communist literature and illegal weapons.”  Constitutional lawyer and Second Amendment scholar Steven Halbrook explains the process in his article, Nazi Firearms Law and the Disarming of the German Jews.  Two days after Hitler took power, the Berlin police, in response to a shooting of a Nazi official, “closed off the street to all traffic while at the same time criminal detectives conducted extensive raids in the houses.  Each individual apartment was searched for weapons.”  A little over two months later, “[h]aving disarmed and mopped up the ‘Communists” with such raids … the Nazis … turned their attention more toward the Jews” and in one case “[a] large force of police assisted by Nazi auxiliaries raided a Jewish quarter in Eastern Berlin, searching everywhere for weapons and papers.”  In order to further “enforce this [campaign of] repression, telephones were tapped and informants lingered in cafes.”

Upon his return to the high court, Justice Jackson wrote a ringing dissent in Brinegar v. United States, warning of the dangers associated with the erosion of property rights.  Ranking Fourth Amendment rights as being of the highest order, Justice Jackson wrote that “[a]mong deprivations of rights, none is so effective in cowing a population, crushing the spirit of the individual and putting terror in every heart.  Uncontrolled search and seizure is one of the first and most effective weapons in the arsenal of every arbitrary government.  And one need only briefly to have dwelt and worked among a people possessed of many admirable qualities but deprived of these rights to know that the human personality deteriorates and dignity and self-reliance disappear where homes, persons and possessions are subject at any hour to unheralded search and seizure by the police.”

Just because the United States Constitution has no provision allowing a President to suspend the Fourth Amendment and other civil liberties does not mean that something akin to what happened in Nazi Germany cannot happen here.  Congress has already deferred to the arbitrary exercise of unenumerated Presidential powers based on the wartime rationale of necessity that could lead to the same dark and dangerous place.  Too many Americans think that it “can’t happen here.”  No doubt, many Germans felt the same way under the Weimar Republic.  But Justice Jackson’s warnings must not go unheeded.

The U.S. Supreme Court has already taken a first step on the road back to liberty by its ruling in Jones that the Fourth Amendment protects the right of the American people to possess their private property to the exclusion of the federal government.  The next step would be for the Court to recognize that the People have the same property right to exclude the government from seizing their private communications, however transmitted.  In order for the Court to do that, it must recognize that the lawyer and journalist plaintiffs in Clapper have standing to seek judicial protection of their proprietary interests in their private communications with their clients and their information sources.

If the Supreme Court denies the Clapper plaintiffs legal standing, then there will be no judicial check upon the federal government’s voracious appetite to devour the Fourth Amendment protection of our property interests in our “persons, houses, papers, and effects.”  If, on the other hand, the Court grants legal standing, then the Clapper plaintiffs will have a singular opportunity to urge the justices to heed Justice Jackson’s warning that a government possessing the uncontrolled power to search and seize the people’s property “cows” the people, “crushes” the individual spirit, and “terrorizes” even the most stout-hearted amongst us.

Bill Olson has practiced law in the Washington, DC area for 36 years, and served in three positions in the Reagan administration.  Herb Titus taught constitutional law for 26 years, concluding his academic career as founding dean of Regent Law School.  They now practice constitutional law together, defending against government excess, at William J. Olson, P.C.  They can be reached at wjo@mindspring.com or followed on Twitter @Olsonlaw.

44 TSA Workers At Newark Face Firing Or Suspension

TSA employees 2 SC 44 TSA Workers At Newark Face Firing Or Suspension

NEWARK, N.J. (OfficialWire) — The Transportation Security Administration is proposing to fire 25 employees at Newark Liberty International Airport in New Jersey and to suspend 19 others as a result of an investigation into improper screening of checked luggage.

The TSA says the alleged screening failures were uncovered last year after surveillance cameras were installed in a screening room to check for possible thefts.

Eight employees were immediately fired in June.

Read More at OfficialWire .

Photo Credit: steuben (Creative Commons)

Two Big Government Guys Debate

Romney Obama 2 SC Two Big Government Guys Debate

(Editor’s note: The opinions presented here are strictly those of the author alone.)

Watching the second Obama-Romney debate Tuesday night was like taking a trip back in political time.

Obama calling for more government jobs and cheaper education loans to lift us out of the recession.

Romney threatening to use tariffs against the Chinese if they don’t jack up their currency’s value so America can regain the manufacturing prowess we really haven’t lost.

Was I back in the recession of ’49 or ’53? What’s a “tariff” anyway?

And haven’t we heard that tough talk from Republicans about smaller government, fiscal responsibility, lower and simpler taxes, and less regulations before? Like for the last five decades? Like $16 trillion ago?

Foreign policy sounded just as familiar.

The two men out-neo-conned each other on our interventionist Middle East policy, which has been a tragic and bloody bipartisan failure for 60 years.

Instead of questioning our aggressive presence in that backward region, they wasted their time arguing over whose fault it was our Libyan ambassador didn’t have the protection he needed, or who said the stupidest thing in the wake of that fiasco.

Their boasting and strutting and interrupting about who was going to do more to assure America’s energy independence sounded familiar too, only this time I think I heard one of them call it “energy security.”

Total energy independence for America — like bringing peace and civilized behavior to the Middle East — is an impossible and stupid promise that only the politicians who say it every four years think is not impossible and stupid.

In a global marketplace, worrying about energy independence is about as silly as saying we’ve got to achieve steel independence or chocolate independence. If the federal government got out of the business of limiting oil and gas production on the land it owns (which it shouldn’t own anyway), we’d have all the energy we need.

The longer the “debate” went on, the weirder it got. Obamney and Romma were dancing around on the stage so much I lost track of who was the Big Government guy and who was the Bigger Government guy.

Both swore allegiance to the Second Amendment. But neither said a peep about actually shrinking the welfare/warfare beast in Washington. They just tried to come up with cleverer ways to tax people they don’t like so they can keep spending more on their pet expenditures — college loans and more union teachers for Obama, more aircraft carriers for Romney.

There was no talk from either man about slashing federal spending. No talk about making income taxes flatter or fairer or nonexistent. No talk about getting the federal government totally out of education, health care, energy, and 99 percent of all the other things it does to make our lives less free, more expensive, and more annoying.

And how about those questions Candy Crowley chose from our fellow citizens, whose participation in the democratic process is so vital to our choosing the president who’s going to mess up the next four years? One word comes to mind — pathetic.

Of course they’re undecided voters. Not one had a clue about what’s wrong or right about the country or what role government should or should not play in the lives of an allegedly free people.

Didn’t one Long Islander wonder what Romney or Obama thinks about the horrible damage done to America by the bipartisan drug war? Or domestic drones? Or the TSA? Their questions could have come from a bunch of third graders — or the White House press pool.

After enduring Wednesday night’s duet in big-government bipartisanship, the average Ron Paul libertarian was, as usual, left somewhere between depressed and suicidal.

There was no choice, not even a lesser evil. Obama’s been a disaster with his warmed up New Deal ideas. Romney sounds like Nelson Rockefeller with better family values. Either way, it’s four more years.

People wonder why libertarians say they can’t tell the difference between Republicans and Democrats. It’s because there really isn’t any.

Photo credit: Cory M. Grenier (Creative Commons)