Invasion of the Body Scanners

by: Randall Amster J.D., Ph.D., t r u t h o u t | News Analysis

Invasion of the Body Scanners
(Photo: publik16; Edited: Jared Rodriguez / t r u t h o u t)

The concept of "stimulus" may soon take on new connotations in the days ahead. The federal government is poised to emplace full-body scanners at airports across the nation, capable of peering under a person's garments. As noted by a former Cabinet member, this new technology "will give us the ability to see what someone has concealed underneath their clothing." The prurient implications of this startling revelation are obvious, and one can only marvel at the full cultural import of widely available "x-ray vision" technology being deployed. Indeed, for those who remember the old X-ray Specs advertised on the back of comic books to see through women's clothes, it is apparently a longstanding boyhood fantasy now set to become national policy. This is essentially a form of high-tech voyeurism masking as security, and it portends more such incursions into liberty and privacy. How did it come to this, and so suddenly at that?

Contracting for Success

At the outset, someone is profiting from these scanners. In recent years, the company Rapiscan (a wholly-owned subsidiary of OSI Systems, Inc., which focuses on "healthcare, security, and defense") has made quite a name for itself. In January 2007, an article documenting its rising profile noted that "Rapiscan's presence on Capitol Hill pays off," with the company having opened a new Washington office and hiring a number of outside lobbyists. As this piece details:

"The results have been apparent. Last year the company did $17 million to $20 million in contracts. Over the past six months, the company has had $40 million in sales to the US government, compared with $8 million in 2004. 'We plan to dramatically expand in the next few years well above the multimillion-dollar [mark],' says Peter Kant, vice president of government affairs for Rapiscan…. Rapiscan also decided last year to join the political money game in a more coordinated effort, by creating a political action committee. Kant says he expects the PAC to raise $50,000 to $75,000 a year and donate equally to both parties. Previously, about 60 percent of the political donations from the firm's executives went to Republicans…. How Rapiscan and other homeland-security companies will fare in the new political climate is still unclear. Lawmakers are expected to increase oversight and investigation of homeland-security issues such as government contracts."

Rapiscan is a global security company that has systems being utilized, according to its web site, "at airports, government and corporate buildings, correctional and prison facilities, postal facilities, military zones, sea ports and border crossings." Their products are deployed in locations including Pakistan (where mobile units are used in combat zones) and airports around the world. As reported on CNN, Rapiscan received $25.4 million from the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) by way of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (i.e., the Stimulus Bill), to produce 150 new full-body scanners to be used at airports across the United States. Peter Kant, a vice president at Rapiscan, said that the government has given the TSA the green light to spend up to $173 million on new scanners, which could lead to the emplacement of hundreds of such devices in the near future. Interestingly, the $25.4 million tendered to Rapiscan for the first 150 scanners was formally awarded in September 2009, well ahead of the Christmas Day bombing attempt that has set off the recent flurry of scanner demands. According to recovery.gov, Rapiscan also received $2.9 million in stimulus monies in May 2009. The total number of jobs created by these millions in stimulus funds is estimated at 40.

In addition to the stimulus money recently administered, the US Army just announced an award of a no-bid contract to Rapiscan for 12 scanners to be used at military bases in Iraq and Kuwait. Previously, in December 2009, Rapiscan received a $5 million contract from NATO to provide screening devices for use in Afghanistan, as noted by WorldSecurity-index.com: "The award by NATO is the latest in a number of recent awards to Rapiscan Systems for integrated security systems that combine cargo, vehicle and personnel screening. Within the past twelve months, Rapiscan has also received contracts from the US government, UK Customs, the European Union and multiple customers in Asia and the Middle East." This is, in short, a company with strong and steadily increasing ties to the US military and the international defense industry.

Conflicts and Shortcomings

Following the Christmas Day incident, a particularly vocal proponent of full-body scanners has been former Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff, who, as reported by the Washington Post, has given "dozens of media interviews touting the need for the federal government to buy more full-body scanners for airports." As it turns out, Chertoff has a direct stake in the issue:

"What he has made little mention of is that the Chertoff Group, his security consulting agency, includes a client [Rapiscan] that manufactures the machines. The relationship drew attention after Chertoff disclosed it on a CNN program…. Chertoff's advocacy for the technology dates back to his time in the Bush administration. In 2005, Homeland Security ordered the government's first batch of the scanners - five from California-based Rapiscan Systems."

This new paradigm of high-tech security by way of scanning devices has become lucrative in recent years, and promises to become even more so in the near future. However, as Mother Jones Senior Washington correspondent James Ridgeway noted in his blog Unsilent Generation, "the TSA has a dismal record of enriching private corporations with failed technologies, and there are signs that the latest miracle device may just bring more of the same." Citing an article from the Washington Examiner that details some of the major players in what is being called the "full-body scanner lobby," and that warns of the dangers of a rising "Homeland Security-industrial complex," Ridgeway observes that the new technologies are hardly foolproof:

"Known by their critics as 'digital strip search' machines, the devices use one of two technologies … to see through clothing, producing ghostly images of naked passengers. Yet critics say that these, too, are highly fallible, and are incapable of revealing explosives hidden in body cavities - an age-old method for smuggling contraband. If that's the case, a terrorist could hide the entire bomb works within his or her body, and breeze through the virtual strip search undetected. Yesterday, the London Independent reported on 'authoritative claims that officials at the [UK] Department for Transport and the Home Office have already tested the scanners and were not persuaded that they would work comprehensively against terrorist threats to aviation.' A British defense research firm reportedly found the machines unreliable in detecting 'low-density' materials like plastics, chemicals, and liquids - precisely what the underwear bomber had stuffed in his briefs."

Still, despite these noted limitations, cheerleaders such as Chertoff continue to unabashedly assert that incidents of the sort that occurred on Christmas Day - which has fanned the flames of public fear and ushered in calls for the widespread use of full-body scans - could have been averted, thus providing "a very vivid lesson in the value of that machinery." Even more disconcerting is the statement of Rapiscan Vice President Peter Kant, who told CNN that this technology could be effective in detecting explosives such as those that were allegedly hidden in the underwear of the Christmas Day bomber. "If Rapiscan's scanners had been in place, according to Kant, the incident could have been averted. 'We do believe, from what we know from published reports, that we would have detected it,' he said." Considering that we are poised to fundamentally alter the balance of privacy in America (yet again) based on the fear-inducing qualities of the recent botched bombing attempt, it would seem that something more than a "belief" based merely on "published reports" is warranted under the circumstances.

Is the Technology Safe?

Beyond the lack of guaranteed functionality, a number of additional critiques have appeared questioning the untested nature of these technologies and whether they are in fact safe for widespread use. As an article from NaturalNews (recently reprinted by Truthout) observed:

"In researching the biological effects of the millimeter wave scanners used for whole body imaging at airports, NaturalNews has learned that the energy emitted by the machines may damage human DNA . Millimeter wave machines represent one of two primary technologies currently being used for the 'digital strip searches' being conducted at airports around the world. 'The Transportation Security Administration utilizes two technologies to capture naked images of air travelers - backscatter x-ray technology and millimeter wave technology,' reports the Electronic Privacy Information Center, a non-profit currently suing the US government to stop these electronic strip searches. In order to generate the nude image of the human body, these machines emit terahertz photons - high-frequency energy 'particles' that can pass through clothing and body tissue. The manufacturers of such machines claim they are perfectly safe and present no health risks, but a study conducted by Boian S. Alexandrov (and colleagues) at the Center for Nonlinear Studies at Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico showed that these terahertz waves could 'unzip double-stranded DNA, creating bubbles in the double strand that could significantly interfere with processes such as gene expression and DNA replication.'"

The Los Alamos study, which can be found in an online physics journal and is further analyzed in MIT's Technology Review (TR), opens the door for more in-depth investigations of this technology that is about to become pervasive, since, as TR noted, "a new generation of cameras are set to appear that not only record terahertz waves but also bombard us with them. And if our exposure is set to increase, the question that urgently needs answering is what level of terahertz exposure is safe." And yet, as NaturalNews indicated, "no such long-term safety testing has ever been conducted by a third party. There have been no clinical trials indicating that multiple exposures to such terahertz waves, accumulated over a long period of time, are safe for humans." Given what we already know about the effects of radiation, as well as the initial report from Los Alamos, this would seem at a minimum to be a circumstance requiring greater study before mass deployment. It is more likely, however, that these untested devices will be in place long before adequate testing is done, suggesting that any such safety analysis will simply be undertaken as the devices are being used on human subjects at airports across the US and around the world.

Private Matters

And then there are the obvious matters of privacy and dignity. One need not be a constitutional scholar or privacy-rights advocate to appreciate the implications of conducting such invasive de facto "strip searches" on a widespread scale. While there may be humor to be found in this situation - my contribution is "Bon Voyeur and Have a Nice Strip" - the import of intruding on personal privacy and conducting warrantless full-body searches is potentially staggering. Moreover, the capacity of modern technology to record and/or disseminate such images serves to further complicate the use and ethicality of body scanners, as noted in a recent CNN report:

"A privacy group says the Transportation Security Administration is misleading the public with claims that full-body scanners at airports cannot store or send their graphic images. The TSA specified in 2008 documents that the machines must have image storage and sending abilities, the Washington-based Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC) said. In the documents, obtained by the privacy group and provided to CNN, the TSA specifies that the body scanners it purchases must have the ability to store and send images when in 'test mode.' That requirement leaves open the possibility [that] the machines - which can see beneath people's clothing - can be abused by TSA insiders and hacked by outsiders, said EPIC Executive Director Marc Rotenberg…. The written requirements also appear to contradict numerous assurances the TSA has given the public about the machines' privacy protections."

As a subsequent report in The Raw Story indicated, the TSA's assertions of privacy protection are unpersuasive and potentially misleading:

"On its website, the TSA explains that 'this state-of-the-art technology cannot store, print, transmit or save the image. In fact, all machines are delivered to airports with these functions disabled.' The last part of the quote here is key - the machines will be delivered with those functions disabled, not without those functions at all. The TSA 's procurement guidelines (PDF) for the body scanners state that the machines will have two modes, a 'test mode' and a 'screening mode.' The machines will not be able to store and transmit images when in 'screening mode,' but will be able to do so in 'test mode.' 'When not being used for normal screening operations, the capability to capture images of non-passengers for training and evaluation purposes is needed,' the TSA document states. It was not immediately clear from those documents how easy it is to switch a machine from 'screening mode' to 'test mode,' or who would have the authority or ability to do so."

The New York Times further noted that "others say that the technology is no security panacea, and that its use should be carefully controlled because of the risks to privacy, including the potential for its ghostly naked images to show up on the Internet." Indeed, as Baltimore Sun columnist Susan Reimer intoned: "They say these full-body screening images - in which I am pretty sure we are naked - are immediately erased, but I don't believe them for a minute. Either somebody is keeping them on the hard drive to protect himself in case some terrorist gets by on his watch, or some enterprising guy is going to be selling Britney Spears' body scan to TMZ for a hundred thousand bucks. I mean this is America, land of the irrepressible entrepreneurial spirit." Absent clear and enforceable limitations, it seems likely that such scenarios will ensue.

Due to these privacy concerns, Rep. Jason Chaffetz (R-Utah) introduced an amendment blocking the use of full-body scanners as the main way of screening passengers who don't fit risk profiles, and, furthermore, creating penalties for government employees who copy or share body-scan images. The House of Representatives passed the amendment in June 2009, but the Senate has yet to take it up. Still, despite the myriad concerns and unresolved issues of safety and privacy, recent events have fueled the drive by the TSA to emplace this technology. As the Wall Street Journal concluded, "political pressure on the agency since the alleged failed plot is likely to push officials to move fast." Disturbingly, and perhaps due to the effectiveness of media saturation and the impetus of fear, recent polling suggested that Americans support the new technologies:

"Almost three quarters of the American public are in favor of full body x-ray scanners at airports, according to the findings of a new CBS News poll conducted in the wake of the failed Christmas Day bombing attempt on a flight from Amsterdam to Detroit . Of those questioned, 74 percent said airports should use the controversial machines because they provide a detailed check for hidden weapons and explosives and reduce the need for physical searches. Just 20 percent said the machines should not be used because they see through a passenger's clothing and thus constitute an invasion of privacy."

Despite being known as a fairly Puritanical people in many respects - at least in terms of what constitutes "public decency" and the like - it seems that Americans perhaps are more permissive in their sense of decorum than we have been led to believe. Is it still voyeurism when the subject willingly desires to be watched? Must security and privacy exist in tension, or can they be fruitfully reconciled? Is constant surveillance becoming the baseline of our lives, and if so, who is watching the watchers? With the proliferation of public cameras, digital recorders, webcams, cellphone cameras and, now, terahertz scanners, we will be confronted with the implications of these technologies for the foreseeable future. The fact that our collective fears seem to be the leading edge of the debate doesn't bode particularly well for reasoned decision-making and the eventual utilization of new technologies for emancipation rather than subjugation.

And in the End …

The matter of full-body scanners presents a critical cultural referendum on basic questions of freedom and autonomy. The circumstances under which the issue is being presented - a climate of fear instilled by a well-hyped reminder of the shared trauma of 9/11 - make it almost impossible to have confidence in a sound and sober resolution. Moreover, the primary players behind the use of these technologies are imbricated within the workings of a growing military-industrial complex that continues to pervade more aspects of our lives. This watershed moment in the public dialogue about security and privacy is framed by an increasing militarization of everyday life in America, as indicated by a recollection of the loci in which companies like Rapiscan operate - namely, "at airports, government and corporate buildings, correctional and prison facilities, postal facilities, military zones, sea ports and border crossings." This list could easily expand to include schools, hospitals, malls, arenas, banks, stores, and more. Now is the moment to rein it in while we still have a window of self-determination in which to do so.
 

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This work by Truthout is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 United States License.





     

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Randall Amster J.D., Ph.D., teaches peace studies at Prescott College and serves as the executive director of the Peace & Justice Studies Association. His most recent book is the co-edited volume "Building Cultures of Peace: Transdisciplinary Voices of Hope and Action" (Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2009).

 

 


Comments

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In the asymmetrical conflict

In the asymmetrical conflict in which we're engaged, those who wish to board an airplane with intent to cause harm will be stuffing anything anywhere. As a fairly frequent flyer, I fully encourage the government to use any scanning that will locate any devices or explosive materials. Yes, they should be tested to prove they work. And as soon as a system is in place, an asymmetrical alternative will be sought by those who are trying to inflict the damage. But no one tool, or scanner, is likely to find everything. Multiple scanning strategies will always be necessary.

As to the issue of modesty: this is just medieval. Is there any rational balance between someone glancing at your reproductive organs, and falling out of the sky? Just who is this argument written for?



Contemporaries can rarely

Contemporaries can rarely appreciate the grotesqueries they
concoct in their own time - look at the witch hunts, the Inquisition, Eichmann and the banality of evil, Mao Tse-Dong trying to kill all the sparrows in China. Andy Warhol is spinning with delight in his heaven. The Invasion of the Bodyscanners is just the beginning - a brave new world of technomania is developing in the name of reason and security. Maybe it will all vanish like a dream when the latest gadget introduced allows us to see that we've all gone bonkers and have nothing to fear but ourselves. Pete Edler, Stockholm.



My primary concern reading

My primary concern reading this - aside from this obvious violation of my own personal privacy - is for my children.

Will they have to face these full-body scans as well? And who will be looking at that screen? And how can we be sure THOSE images will be deleted immediately?

There are so many things wrong with this.



How can we be so casual

How can we be so casual about the safety of these things? I'm not too upset about having ghostly images of our bodies appear on a screen (though the inability to see contraband in body cavities makes the whole enterprise pretty silly), but where is the solid evidence that we're not damaging DNA to the point of causing cancer and birth defects?



this is absolutely

this is absolutely disgusting. a new level of 'sheephood' for all the 'frightened' sheeple. amazing that most don't even question the actions, and agendas that have led us into a world where these types of technologies can be argued to be necessary. are we all so blind as to not see the hell-on-earth type of world we've created and are still creating? so THIS is 'progress'? THIS is 'civilization'? for humanities sake: wake-up!



So far, no one has commented

So far, no one has commented on the negative health implications of these new devices mentioned in the article. Am I the only one alarmed by that subject? I hope not. I am really tired of the 'masses' being used as guinea pigs to test out glitzy corporate 'toys'. You can be sure no one high up in the military or civilian government is going to be going through the body scanners when boarding a plane. To the frequent flier commentator, Robert Edgar - I suggest instead of your whole heartedly embracing this new technology outright, you do some research.



Would someone with

Would someone with statistical skills and data access please tabulate the number of airline flights that have taken place in the world since 9/11 and then tabulate the percentage of those flights that were attacked by terrorists? Life is always a bit risky. Do we need to be so obsessive about flying on airplanes? Just how likely do you think it is you will be killed by a terrorist? How much damage have we done to American life with these obsessions? "Home Security Theatre" is not a misnomer. And that is not even counting the economic parasites profiting obscenely from all this.



fascist amerika and science-

fascist amerika and science- bad combo- it will only get worse !



Go to You Tube and watch the

Go to You Tube and watch the american salesman of these scanners being made a complete fool of in Germany. It is in German but you don't need translation to get the point. The very plump guy goes through the scanner, nothing shows up, he then shows one by one 8 separate hidden containers the scanner missed. The salesman embarested tries to explain why the scanner missed all 8 items. Not only don't they work but they are not safe and will only enrich the well connected corporate whores like Chertof.



Wait till the HOT nightclubs

Wait till the HOT nightclubs get there hand on one of these scanners. I can see it now on the giant screen.



Robert Edgar is proof that

Robert Edgar is proof that fear is driving these decisions. Sir, do you hide in your home for fear of being killed in an auto accident? No, you say? Why not, because you are far more likely to die in a car than on a plane.

Let's not even think about the fact that the scanners don't work, or that the Christmas Day bomber could never have ignited his explosives with fire as we have been led to believe.

Let's not even think about the fact that all of this invasion of privacy and techo-control will end up infecting the rest of our world.

Ben Franklin was right: Those who would give up libery for security deserve neither.

Orwell is laughing somewhere, yelling, "Toldja! Toldja!"



Rapiscan? Rape - iscan?

Rapiscan? Rape - iscan? Jeez, what an appropriate moniker. I am not modest with regard to nudity, but I sure don't want to be subjected to unnecessary radiation. Passing through security is an exercise in obedience training. Dealing with the airlines is just as bad -- they nick you for everything that used to be free: checked luggage, lousy airline food, seats with 3 inches of extra legroom, etc. The flight attendants are a lot grumpier and the pilots forced to work longer hours and get less sleep. Unless you're a big shot flying first class, the whole experience is humiliating. I'd prefer to spend spend two days on the road or taking Amtrak rather than half a day getting to the airport, going through security, and actually flying.



The underwear 'bomber' was

The underwear 'bomber' was another false flag. Designed to once again scare the people in being compliant. How on earth do you account for the 'early' purchase of these machines, already installed in less than a month in some airports, and the enormous money being made off these, all so quickly and no input from the people of the United States. 'Roll Over American people' take another hit. This fear flag they fly has got to stop.



1984, here we come. The

1984, here we come. The danger of all these so-called security measures is that they are capable of turning this world into a living nightmare where we are under constant surveillance and control. Read Aldous Huxley's book, 1984 if you want to know what is possible when the wrong people get control of all this new surveillance equipment. Can you imagine what life would be like if our every move, say, making love, were being watched?



We must protect Americans

We must protect Americans when they fly in commercial flights no matter the invasion of privacy or inconvenience. For those who want more privacy than commercial flights - please consider taking a more costly private flight; or other means of transportation.



Still, despite these noted

Still, despite these noted limitations, cheerleaders such as Chertoff continue to unabashedly assert that incidents of the sort that occurred on Christmas Day - which has fanned the flames of public fear and ushered in calls for the widespread use of full-body scans FLASH This just in: Lurch Chertoffs RAP-is-SCAN corp. stocks took a deep plunge today on the New York Exchange, as inside groupers exposed the scanners inability too do no more than see body rolls. Lurch Chertoff promised a rebound for investors, with tomorrows unveiling of Rap-is-scans subsidiary, BooBomba Exploding Head chewing gum. The new product line comes in two sizes, five stick personal pack and the Super 50 slick stick size, good enough to cover every false flag event you might have planned. Boobomba corp says that this new product has ten times the "fear factor" of Boobomba's Undie Bombletts.



Rumsfeld's corp. swine flu

Rumsfeld's corp. swine flu vaccine scam, and now Chertoff's scanner scam...lots of money, huh boys? Just keep 'em afraid, and load up on the stocks before the event. Anybody see a pattern here?



Boy, fear is a real

Boy, fear is a real money-maker. Just like Wang-Lung in _The Good Earth_, rich Americans when confronted by a member of the 3rd world poor will hand over whatever wealth they've got to save their own skins.

So this is really an advertisement for buying Rapiscan shares, or maybe it's OSI Systems, Inc. shares. We investors must be at least a little careful.

Who bears the liability for radiation exposure? What about suits for publishing naked pics of my beautiful body without my permission? What does Michelle really look like?

No Fear. We Americans have got to get control of our irrational fears and stop this madness.



This should have been titled

This should have been titled "Invasion of the body scammers". What 9/11 is all about: a gigantic scam to make megatrillions for the wealthy.



Actually, Shana, "nineteen

Actually, Shana, "nineteen eighty-four" was George Orwell's book. Aldous Huxley wrote "Brave New World". And the real horror of "1984" was not that the Party were watching all the time, but that one never knew when They might be watching, so one had not only to keep up the false front all the time, but to keep up a genuine feeling of love for Ingsoc and Big Brother behind the facade, lest They happen to be looking at the exact moment when one relaxed.



Great title for this

Great title for this article. 20:46, some other people are really concerned about the health effects of these things. The privacy invasion speaks for itself-outrageous and disgusting. It's no surprise someone will profit from this crap either. A toxic combination: "true believer" bureaucrats who want to know everything about you; greedy business types: and cowardly politicians.



I will NEVER FLY AGAIN! That

I will NEVER FLY AGAIN! That is disgusting and perverted! I would rather drive or take a boat!



Here's a vicious cycle for

Here's a vicious cycle for you:

Americans fear the intrusiveness of the full body scans, so they start driving instead of taking airlines.

Airlines complain to their lobbyists, who call on the U.S. Government to bail out the airline industry like they did Wall Street and the automotive industry. More money out of our pockets.

Americans wanting to drive must now purchase cars that will make the trip to their intended destination. As a result, the cost of gasoline (and fuel-efficient cars) goes up because of the increased demand. Oil and auto companies profits rise.

With the ever increasing divide between the rich and poor, less and less people can afford to travel, which means they stay home. The travel industry asks for bailouts.

Long-distance communications becomes the main way that people talk to one another. The profits of the media companies that control the communications goes up. The cost to the average consumer goes up, because demand is so high.

Any way you look at it, we're screwed.



Consider van Eck reception

Consider van Eck reception and decoding
of body scan images FROM OUTSIDE THE
BOOTH. "van Eck" reception is a form
of electronic interception of signals, in
this case from video monitors.

Britney should be very, very worried,
because you don't even have to bribe
a TSA goon.



You're never going to stop

You're never going to stop them, do yourself and leave the U.S. forever. Just like your ancestors left due to trouble back home, it's time to move on.



Harry Thomas’ comments hit

Harry Thomas’ comments hit the mark. Sorry, but the system is designed to cut off all exits. Close one loophole and another opens. What formerly made America the "new world" escape for the oppressed in Europe was that in America land was either free or cheap. That meant that a share-cropping peasant or rent-paying urban prole from Europe could become a lord of his own domain and retain the entire fruit of his labor in the USA. A free man was and is the result of free land, of not having to pay an "owner" of Mother Earth for the privilege of living or working on and with her freely offered resources. Santa’s comments are also right. The USA is now becoming completely Europified and 3rd worldified. Land, being private property, is completely monopolized and speculatively over-valued, effectively cutting labor off from its only alternative to slavery. All the economy and now the political system is on the terms of the owner class, the “rentiers” or collectors of the economic rent, which is the price of access to land and its resources. The solution is to invert this system by way of a simple reform which would transfer the tax burden off of labor and productive capital and onto land values. Search "Henry George" for more info.



One needs only to state that

One needs only to state that body scanners cause infertility ands cancer, and leave it to the technical community that dreamed these monstrosities to prove that they don't. That is the successful MO of the climate change deniers.

The protections that the people in the US need are not useless scanners, killer drones, and errant missile interceptors, they need competent personnel capable of identifying and tracking criminal elements, including "terrorist" criminals. When the national gets that down right, let them then go for the unaffordable wiz-bang machines.



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