Spreading Safety or Fear

Didn\\\'t Like ItLiked It (No Ratings Yet)
Loading ... Loading ...

Scott Greenfield, in Simple Justice, writes here about the TB-infected man who, despite being on the watch list, made it through customs and into the U.S. Scott suggests this theory of airport security:

Why is it they check the bottoms of my shoes, and won’t let me go through the magnetometer, because I have a fourth ounce of shampoo in my possession, but TB Andy breezes through? If you ever needed proof that this whole border crossing nonsense is a palliative to make the public believe they are safe from terrorists, here ya go. It’s designed to make average, ordinary and utterly non-threatening Americans (of whatever race, color, national background, etc.) feel better through harassment. That’s right, safety by annoyance. The more they annoy, the safer we feel. God bless America and Homeland Security.

I think Scott has it backwards. All of the ineffectual and silly airport “security” measures are not intended to make us believe that we are safe. When has a government ever benefited from its citizens thinking that they are safe? People who feel safe start looking critically at how free they are.

Rather, the shoe-x-raying and fluid-confiscating are intended to remind us that we are in danger, and that we need the government’s protection. They are intended to convince us that the government is doing all it can to keep us safe, but that we aren’t entirely safe. The government holds out the enticing possibility that if we give it a little more power we’ll be safer.

The problem is that governmental power and individual freedom are the two variables in a zero-sum equation. We can’t give the government more power without giving up more freedom.

2 Responses to “Spreading Safety or Fear”

  1. on 02 Jun 2007 at 1:33 amScott Greenfield

    If I had a nickle for every time I was called backwards, I’d have $1.13.

    SHG

  2. on 23 Aug 2007 at 4:06 pmBen Zyl

    Such mindless ’security’ procedures do not, in fact make me feel safer. They make me think that the ringmaster is showing me the hoop that I have to jump through and will sooner rather than later have as an unavoidable part of my new and more secure life. It predisposes me to render unto them no obediant act or information unless absolutely unavoidable, and reluctantly at best. Maybe it’s just me but I am unconvinced I am alone in this.

Trackback URI | Comments RSS

Leave a Reply

By submitting a comment here you give me permission to use your words in any way I like, including editing them for clarity, brevity, or content, as well as rearranging the words or the letters within them to change their very meaning. Those who engage in anonymous ad hominem attacks are the car-keyers of the internet, and will not be tolerated. If you engage in such attacks, I may edit the post to show your name or to make it appear that you are attacking yourself. Or both. I don't have to let you comment here. Don't do so for blatant marketing purposes; do so only to add to the discussion. Once you click "submit comment" you have given up all interest in your words to me, and have no further interest in your words. You agree never to sue, grieve, or complain to anyone about the use that I make of the letters you have typed. If you even threaten to do so, you agree that you will be held up to eternal public ridicule.