These new machines see right through your clothing and probably soon to be at an airport near you

http://www.cnn.com/2008/TRAVEL/04/15/ai ... index.html
Whats next...turn your head and cough [smiley=door.gif]
Appears as though stripping down and bending over wasn't that far from being true...minus the whole stripping and the bending part :-/
These new machines see right through your clothing and probably soon to be at an airport near youI know security is tight...but come on. I don't care if the person looking is behind a screen and the passengers face is blurred or not...theres a fine line between "security" and "overkill". Its enough hassle as is, now they want to make it even worse. Shouldn't have to feel like a prisoner just to get on an aircraft :-/
http://www.cnn.com/2008/TRAVEL/04/15/ai ... index.html
Whats next...turn your head and cough [smiley=door.gif]
Appears as though stripping down and bending over wasn't that far from being true...minus the whole stripping and the bending part :-/
These new machines see right through your clothing and probably soon to be at an airport near youI know security is tight...but come on. I don't care if the person looking is behind a screen and the passengers face is blurred or not...theres a fine line between "security" and "overkill". Its enough hassle as is, now they want to make it even worse. Shouldn't have to feel like a prisoner just to get on an aircraft :-/
http://www.cnn.com/2008/TRAVEL/04/15/ai ... index.html
Whats next...turn your head and cough [smiley=door.gif]
It's important to remember that this is for secondary screening- in other words, if you set off the metal detector.
It's not like everyone will have to go through this.
It's also intended in lieu of a physical pat-down, which is actually a lot more intrusive and humiliating.
machines that see through clothing and provide a detailed image of a person's body
The most frustrating & time-consuming part of air travel has always been travelling to/from the airport & in the airport terminals at either end. They always used to say "If you have time to spare, go by air". Unfortunately it's ten times worse now & I don't see it improving.machines that see through clothing and provide a detailed image of a person's body
Perhaps I'm missing something but I don't see the point of this at all. Surely whatever they're searching for would be hidden in the person's clothing or internally in the body orifices.
I figure there are two ways to go with this stuff. One; we can just step, back and take a deap breath, and come to terms with the fact that a crowded skyscraper or major sporting event is just as ripe a target as an airplane.... and just assume the same risks for all of them. Short of strip searching and body-cavity searching everyone... and going through EVERY piece of baggage (carry-on and checked), there's no way for absolute security. It's just not possible. If the TSA was genuinely trying to achieve true security.. well.. have you looked into the eye of the average, airport security person ? Those aren't the people we'd be staffing this oh-so-important job, with... if we were serious about security. Sorry if this is snobbish, but these are not a bright lot... and it's obvious to anyone who travels that these people, as a group, shouldn't be trusted with much above lawn care.
OR... we can get serious about air-travel security and have a passport of sorts, for regular flyers. Deep background checks and biometric identity checks (retina or fingerprint scan) as they pass through security. Infrequent, first-time, or one-time flyers would either plan ahead and apply for this "passport"... or line up for the strip search.
Herding every single passenger through security lines is expensive, inconvenient, and time consuming.. and with these minimum wage geniuses in charge, it aint even effective.
I know this is an unpopular take on it, but I feel that considering how poorly paid they are and what they have to put up with, most airport screeners are very professional, and pretty sharp.
I know this is an unpopular take on it, but I feel that considering how poorly paid they are and what they have to put up with, most airport screeners are very professional, and pretty sharp.
If they were sharp.. they wouldn't put up with the conditions, or the pay.
I'm not indicting them, as much as the situation of which they're just a symptom.. Not everyone is an aspiring engineer or surgeon. If you offer 8 dollars an hour, to do a 15 dollar an hour job... this is what you end up with..
Soon it's going to the airport is going to be like a scene out of Total Recall!!
I know this is an unpopular take on it, but I feel that considering how poorly paid they are and what they have to put up with, most airport screeners are very professional, and pretty sharp.
If they were sharp.. they wouldn't put up with the conditions, or the pay.
I'm not indicting them, as much as the situation of which they're just a symptom.. Not everyone is an aspiring engineer or surgeon. If you offer 8 dollars an hour, to do a 15 dollar an hour job... this is what you end up with..
Good point, but it beats flipping burgers or handling baggage. All I know is: they're not all idiots... which is more than I can say for those who set the whole thing up (who make a lot more than the screeners!)
And again: although I initially was supremely annoyed with the post-9/11 system, after a few years of travelling pretty regularly, I've decided that is my fellow pax who are the biggest nuisance. They have every opportunity to learn how to make the whole process easier for all concerned, yet they consistently create problems by being unprepared or just plain uncooperative.
Reminds me of a great post I saw yesterday; not about security per se, but it gives you an idea of how amazingly clueless some travelers are... and they can all afford an airline ticket:
http://www.pilotsofamerica.com/forum/sh ... hp?t=20728
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