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#1
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http://www.womenswallstreet.com/WWS/...&articleid=711
In this article, the writer describes her husband as "anxious"...that would NOT have properly described me. |
#2
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In this article, the writer describes her husband as "anxious"...that
would NOT have properly described me. I would have loudly and openly began organizing the passengers to deal with the situation. Hello Mr Reasonably Young and Fit Male Passenger #1 ? Do you see the raghead sitting in the row in front of you ? He is your responsibility. If he makes any threatening moves, it is your job to restrain him. #2, you are to assist #1, got it ? Mr. Raghead, you're making everybody uncomfortable with your movement. Don't get up from your seat again. If you do, it will be the last time. At this point the Air Marshals if they really were on the plane will step in, tell me to sit down and shut up, and take control of the aircraft, which is what they should have done to begin with. To hell with being culturally sensitive. When seven of them stood up in unison, that's when the closest one to me is getting challenged and possibly getting his ticket punched. |
#3
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You're right, it IS scary such an ignorant person managed to get published.
Here's the letter I wrote to them: ---------------- Living is dangerous. If you want to be sure you're not going to be killed by a terrorist, build a bomb shelter and stay in there. Do not EVER leave it. And definitely don't open the door for a terrorist, including the white ones. The more sensible of us will recognize that we can choose either to live in a totalitarian police state, in which case the terrorists will have at least a slightly lower chance of success (but still well above non-zero), or we can choose to live in a traditional American-style free country, in which terrorists and law abiding citizens alike have the freedom to move about the country and do whatever they like as long as they are not hurting anyone. Maybe the guys on the airplane were terrorists. Maybe they weren't. But as near as I can tell, they didn't actually hurt anyone, nor did they commit any crime. Keeping in mind that terrorist attacks almost always are preceded by some other illegal activity (usually involving the acquisition of firearms, explosives, or the like), it is perfectly reasonable to limit our law enforcement activity to focusing on ACTUAL illegal activities, rather than stirring everyone into a paranoid frenzy. Personally, I wonder if Annie Jacobsen isn't a white supremacist, involved in her own secret terrorist activities. Perhaps her article was completely fictional, written for the sole purpose of distracting law enforcement organizations so that they don't notice her and her friends scheming to blow something up. Or perhaps it did happen, and she's just taking advantage of the situation to hide her illegal activities. Either way, maybe it would be a good idea if WomensWallStreet.com passed along this critical information to the FBI, CIA, and HSD so that their agents can more closely monitor her actions. They should exercise the Patriot Act to its fullest extent, making sure to secretly eavesdrop on her communications, as well as searching her entire house and any other property, with no public record to alert her to the fact that they did. When she's comfortable with that idea, then she and the others on that flight can go around scaring themselves and trying to scare others into a mob hysteria just because they see someone not like them doing something not like what they would do. Until then, they need to keep their sticky, ignorant fingers off of my Constitution. Thank you, Peter Duniho |
#4
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"Peter Duniho" wrote in message
... You're right, it IS scary such an ignorant person managed to get published. Here's the letter I wrote to them: ---------------- Living is dangerous. If you want to be sure you're not going to be killed by a terrorist, build a bomb shelter and stay in there. Do not EVER leave it. And definitely don't open the door for a terrorist, including the white ones. The more sensible of us will recognize that we can choose either to live in a totalitarian police state, in which case the terrorists will have at least a slightly lower chance of success (but still well above non-zero), or we can choose to live in a traditional American-style free country, in which terrorists and law abiding citizens alike have the freedom to move about the country and do whatever they like as long as they are not hurting anyone. Maybe the guys on the airplane were terrorists. Maybe they weren't. But as near as I can tell, they didn't actually hurt anyone, nor did they commit any crime. Keeping in mind that terrorist attacks almost always are preceded by some other illegal activity (usually involving the acquisition of firearms, explosives, or the like), it is perfectly reasonable to limit our law enforcement activity to focusing on ACTUAL illegal activities, rather than stirring everyone into a paranoid frenzy. snip The Sept 11 hijackers didn't break any law until they started slicing passengers with box cutters, spraying mace, and rushing the cockpit. Everyone on an aircraft after Sept 11 has to act in a way to not provoke reasonable suspicion by all others. After Sept 11, what is reasonable suspicion has changed. Just as after you slip and fall on particular set of stairs you are reasonable in a more careful examination of them or the next set of stairs you approach. Suspicions must be investigated. I don't wish to impress the world with my ability to rationalize away suspicious behavior. Suspicious behavior must be investigated promptly and anyone taking offense can speak to a lawyer afterwards. Back to the original story, a passenger should have complained to the flight crew, or a passenger should have attempted to get in the the line to use the forward lav while the suspicious men were playing musical johns. That would have either interrupted the trial run or provoked a discussion which could be used as a pretext for any flight crew to close the lav or further investigate. I see no value in going to my grave to make some historian happy. Permanent critics will never accept any action we take to defend ourselves so I couldn't give a rip about trying to make them happy. I'm over it and don't much care if anyone else likes it. Any apparent coordinated acitvitiy by a group of passengers near the cockpit should be promptly investigated and stopped unless proven to be innocent. And yes it is reasonable to notice that people of any description are involved. You can call me a name, I don't care. But if I can notice if that object swimming besides my surfboard is a shark or a dolphin I can notice a person's description and activity. It's not racist for a crew member to break line to investigate the lav if someone complains. Nobody was being denied anything and answering a question is not a civil rights violation. Any item brought onboard should be subject to scrutiny by a crew member if suspicion is raised. Any area of the aircraft must be investigated if suspicion is raised. Being cautions might hurt someone's feelings, but it shouldn't. Being lax could kill thousands. -- Scott |
#5
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Well, since this is the second time this article has been mentioned, I
should point out that the story is unverified. Snopes reports that the article has been blogged to death. WWS has promised a follow-up article, but that has not yet been printed. http://www.snopes.com/politics/crime/skyterror.asp |
#6
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"tscottme" wrote in message
... The Sept 11 hijackers didn't break any law until they started slicing passengers with box cutters, spraying mace, and rushing the cockpit. You mean other than bringing box cutters and mace onto an airplane, right? Oh yeah, and entering the US illegally (for several of them, anyway). Right? Other than THOSE illegal acts, you mean. Right? In any case, it's clear that you miss the point. We will never be perfectly safe. Why should our lives suck in the meantime? We all die eventually anyway. I'd rather not get killed by a terrorist, but if I'm basically living my life in fear and suspicion, that's not much of a life at all. I'd rather live a free life and enjoy myself, and accept the risk that I might die earlier than I thought I would. I'm not against security in general, but when we start suspecting people just because they look different (without an overt illegal act), we lose what makes us American. Do you really think anyone on the airplane would've noticed how those men behaved, if they had been white? It wasn't their behavior that drew suspicion...it was their race. And that's racist. Pete |
#7
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"C J Campbell" wrote in message
... Well, since this is the second time this article has been mentioned, I should point out that the story is unverified. See? I knew it was just a distraction for the author's own illicit activities! String her up! |
#8
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![]() "Peter Duniho" wrote in message ... "tscottme" wrote in message ... The Sept 11 hijackers didn't break any law until they started slicing passengers with box cutters, spraying mace, and rushing the cockpit. You mean other than bringing box cutters and mace onto an airplane, right? Actually, before 9/11 it was not illegal to bring box cutters onto an airplane. I don't know about mace. Anyway, didn't I hear somewhere that the box cutters were planted on the planes before the hijackings? Oh yeah, and entering the US illegally (for several of them, anyway). Right? Other than THOSE illegal acts, you mean. Right? In any case, it's clear that you miss the point. We will never be perfectly safe. Why should our lives suck in the meantime? We all die eventually anyway. I'd rather not get killed by a terrorist, but if I'm basically living my life in fear and suspicion, that's not much of a life at all. I'd rather live a free life and enjoy myself, and accept the risk that I might die earlier than I thought I would. I like that sentiment, but our lives would suck even worse if we made no effort at all to protect and defend ourselves. We would all just end up as slaves. The key is striking a proper balance between freedom and safety. Just where that balance lies differs widely among the population and even among each individual from day to day. Doing nothing and allowing terrorists to destroy commercial air travel is not an acceptable option. Neither is doing ineffective stupid things, which seems to be the primary focus now. I'm not against security in general, but when we start suspecting people just because they look different (without an overt illegal act), we lose what makes us American. Do you really think anyone on the airplane would've noticed how those men behaved, if they had been white? It wasn't their behavior that drew suspicion...it was their race. And that's racist. Actually, I would have noticed their behavior. There are many terrorist groups out there, and even al Qaeda has members of many different nationalities. We still have people like Timothy McVeigh, the ELF, and other terrorist organizations that have nothing to do with the Middle East. I forget where the car bomb was invented (Ireland?), but it is fairly stock in trade for every terrorist group in the world, now. No doubt hijackings will continue to be popular, not only with Middle Eastern terror groups, but Croatian and Basque extremists, the Red Brigades, Cuban nationalists, and other groups that have used hijackings in the past. |
#9
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"C J Campbell" wrote in message
... Actually, before 9/11 it was not illegal to bring box cutters onto an airplane. I don't know about mace. Anyway, didn't I hear somewhere that the box cutters were planted on the planes before the hijackings? Mace has always been. More than once (prior to 9/11), my wife has forgotten she was carrying and was forced to leave it behind as she went through airport security. I'm surprised box cutters weren't illegal, but now that you mention it, that sounds right. However, planting box cutters ahead of time spells conspiracy, which is illegal. That said, I don't know for a fact that the box cutters were planted. If they weren't illegal, why would they need to be planted? And if they were planted, who planted them, and why haven't they been arrested (or have they and I just didn't notice)? Anyway, my point is that most or all of the people involved in the 9/11 attacks were NOT squeaky clean. I like that sentiment, but our lives would suck even worse if we made no effort at all to protect and defend ourselves. We would all just end up as slaves. The key is striking a proper balance between freedom and safety. Just where that balance lies differs widely among the population and even among each individual from day to day. I agree and said as much. But the balance surely falls well beyond suspecting people just because of how they look. We had a recent event here in the Seattle area, in which a dark-skinned (not even Middle-Eastern) person was questioned by several different law enforcement personnel after he took pictures at the Ballard locks. They even visited him at his home. The people described on the plane did sound a little weird to me. However, I wasn't there, and don't know for a fact that they were indeed acting exactly as described. Prejudiced people "see" all sorts of things that didn't actually happen. Furthermore, for all the author knows, they were passing the time on the plane by playing some sort of game ("hide something in the lavatory, or elsewhere on the plane, someone else find it", I dunno...something like that), or were involved in some project unrelated to terrorist activity. But in any case, other than inspecting the areas of the airplane that appeared to be of interest to the oddly behaving men, the authorities had no reason to detain the men any further, without any concrete evidence. Actually, I would have noticed their behavior. For better or for worse, you are a unique individual. ![]() a more typical person would have. There are many terrorist groups out there Indeed there are. And as long as people continue to be scared half to death every time they see an Arab board their airplane, they are going to have too much tunnel vision to notice the real threats around them. Pete |
#10
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![]() "Peter Duniho" wrote in message ... Until then, they need to keep their sticky, ignorant fingers off of my Constitution. Thank you, Peter Duniho Our constitution |
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