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#1
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![]() The "Saw John Trovolta's Plane" thread got me thinking about inaccessibility of celebs but nothing compares to the way Bush is protected from us normal folk! I'm an A&P student here at Texas State Technical College and our campus is the old James Connally Air Force Base (Waco, TX.). When Bush goes to & from Crawford, Air Force One lands & parks here as Waco Regional's runways are too short for a 747. He then takes Air Force 2 (big helicopter) out to or from his ranch, flanked by several other mean looking choppers as well as identical decoys, I assume. Within several hours of Bush's arrival or departure this college begins to metamorphasize into a place of high tension. There's a bright orange, fast helicopter that flies a long grid pattern over & around the campus and this part of Waco. I assume it has much high- tech gadgetry which can detect anything or anyone potentially threatening to Bush's safety. Nobody (not even ATC) knows exactly when AFO is supposed to arrive or depart but you know it's soon when the area 1/4 to 1/2 mile surrounding the TSTC control tower building is ridden of all humanity except lots of dark-windowed cars & SUVs & dark-suited, tense people with dark glasses. Oh, yeah, and there's lots of german shepherds, too. If you happen to have class or lab within the sterile zone you are out of luck for the next hour or two. I have personally missed several labs & classes because the A&P hangar is well within the sterile zone (as is pilot training, dental assistant tech. and sub-sea robotics). Immediately after 9/11 the entire campus shut down for Bush's arrivals & departures. You could not go out of or into any building, you were literally stuck. Before 9/11 one could stand out on the tarmac and watch AFO taxi up while Bush deplaned or boarded. Recently I was driving home for lunch and noticed AFO entering the pattern at TSTC. I reversed my direction and sped through the edge of the campus to get right under the 747 during it's final. It was quite a thrill to be directly underneath this rather beautiful jet. I have heard of dark-suited men in dark SUVs ordering people to put their cameras away at the arrival or departure ends of Rwy 17 or 35. I guess one could hide a rocket launcher in your digital if you knew how. If Bush is not on the plane one can hang out at the tower building on the tarmac while AFO taxis up directly in front, which is where Bush boards and deplanes. It then parks across the airport at L3 Communications while Bush enjoys his Western White House. It is also fortunate that the general public can walk up to AFO while it's parked at the tower and get just about right under the wingtip, outside of the rope which surrounds it. This truly is one beauty of a 747. Photos are welcomed as well during this time. I have heard stories of student pilots trapped out in the TSTC practice areas in the 95-100 degree Tx. sun in their 152s or Katanas while Bush comes & goes, even having to divert to Hillsboro or Mexia due to fuel concerns. I earned my Commercial/Instrument here but do not currently fly in Waco so I can't comment on the frustrations generated by the TFR. I think pilots around here have learned to live with it for the most part. A few times a year the Waco paper will be headlined with the hapless pilot who strayed into the TFR only to be quickly escorted to McGregor by a pair of F-16s or F-18s. I do count myself fortunate to experience the comings & goings of AFO and the C-5 which arrives a day or so prior to Bush, these are amazing aircraft for neophyte mechanic and pilot students to watch land, take off & taxi. Our classes usually are interuptted by the C-5's arrival. It's just too cool to watch this huge aircraft land, taxi up just outside our hangar, raise it's entire nose section and unload the multitude of vehicles and "stuff" that heralds Bush's arrival. Handshakes & autographs? Out of the question. All human beings are ordered away. The consequnce will not be an FBO denied business, however, it will likely be a high-powered rifle bullet to the head! Ricky |
#2
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Ricky wrote:
The "Saw John Trovolta's Plane" thread got me thinking about inaccessibility of celebs but nothing compares to the way Bush is protected from us normal folk! I'm an A&P student here at Texas State Technical College and our campus is the old James Connally Air Force Base (Waco, TX.). When Bush goes to & from Crawford, Air Force One lands & parks here as Waco Regional's runways are too short for a 747. He then takes Air Force 2 (big helicopter) out to or from his ranch, flanked by several other mean looking choppers as well as identical decoys, I assume. Within several hours of Bush's arrival or departure this college begins to metamorphasize into a place of high tension. There's a bright orange, fast helicopter that flies a long grid pattern over & around the campus and this part of Waco. I assume it has much high- tech gadgetry which can detect anything or anyone potentially threatening to Bush's safety. Nobody (not even ATC) knows exactly when AFO is supposed to arrive or depart but you know it's soon when the area 1/4 to 1/2 mile surrounding the TSTC control tower building is ridden of all humanity except lots of dark-windowed cars & SUVs & dark-suited, tense people with dark glasses. Oh, yeah, and there's lots of german shepherds, too. If you happen to have class or lab within the sterile zone you are out of luck for the next hour or two. I have personally missed several labs & classes because the A&P hangar is well within the sterile zone (as is pilot training, dental assistant tech. and sub-sea robotics). Immediately after 9/11 the entire campus shut down for Bush's arrivals & departures. You could not go out of or into any building, you were literally stuck. Before 9/11 one could stand out on the tarmac and watch AFO taxi up while Bush deplaned or boarded. Recently I was driving home for lunch and noticed AFO entering the pattern at TSTC. I reversed my direction and sped through the edge of the campus to get right under the 747 during it's final. It was quite a thrill to be directly underneath this rather beautiful jet. I have heard of dark-suited men in dark SUVs ordering people to put their cameras away at the arrival or departure ends of Rwy 17 or 35. I guess one could hide a rocket launcher in your digital if you knew how. If Bush is not on the plane one can hang out at the tower building on the tarmac while AFO taxis up directly in front, which is where Bush boards and deplanes. It then parks across the airport at L3 Communications while Bush enjoys his Western White House. It is also fortunate that the general public can walk up to AFO while it's parked at the tower and get just about right under the wingtip, outside of the rope which surrounds it. This truly is one beauty of a 747. Photos are welcomed as well during this time. I have heard stories of student pilots trapped out in the TSTC practice areas in the 95-100 degree Tx. sun in their 152s or Katanas while Bush comes & goes, even having to divert to Hillsboro or Mexia due to fuel concerns. I earned my Commercial/Instrument here but do not currently fly in Waco so I can't comment on the frustrations generated by the TFR. I think pilots around here have learned to live with it for the most part. A few times a year the Waco paper will be headlined with the hapless pilot who strayed into the TFR only to be quickly escorted to McGregor by a pair of F-16s or F-18s. I do count myself fortunate to experience the comings & goings of AFO and the C-5 which arrives a day or so prior to Bush, these are amazing aircraft for neophyte mechanic and pilot students to watch land, take off & taxi. Our classes usually are interuptted by the C-5's arrival. It's just too cool to watch this huge aircraft land, taxi up just outside our hangar, raise it's entire nose section and unload the multitude of vehicles and "stuff" that heralds Bush's arrival. Handshakes & autographs? Out of the question. All human beings are ordered away. The consequnce will not be an FBO denied business, however, it will likely be a high-powered rifle bullet to the head! Ricky Give me a break. Has anyone been shot attempting to greet the president? The answer is no, you might get arrested but your not going to get shot for trying to get close to him. Presidents are at more risk of getting shot then people approaching him. You most certainly will get a gun pointed at you but it won't be fired. |
#3
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The other issue is the presidents movements usurping public spaces and
disrupting commerce and blocking the public's constitutionally protected freedom of movement (and the VP, and the Speaker, ad nauseum)... The day will come when someone will lose a contract, or some such event, because the unannounced movements of the president and men in dark suits blocking off public spaces. A lawsuit will result and the government will lose - as it is a clear issue that no one has the constitutional right to interrupt the citizenry's access to public spaces, roads, parks, the airspace, etc... We already tossed one King off the continent over these types of issues... I have no desire to see the president injured, or even threatened, but when it comes to violating my rights versus his 'possible' injury because he has chosen to go out in public, he will have to take his chances just like I do when I step off my porch every morning... denny |
#4
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Denny wrote:
The other issue is the presidents movements usurping public spaces and disrupting commerce and blocking the public's constitutionally protected freedom of movement (and the VP, and the Speaker, ad nauseum)... The day will come when someone will lose a contract, or some such event, because the unannounced movements of the president and men in dark suits blocking off public spaces. A lawsuit will result and the government will lose - as it is a clear issue that no one has the constitutional right to interrupt the citizenry's access to public spaces, roads, parks, the airspace, etc... We already tossed one King off the continent over these types of issues... I have no desire to see the president injured, or even threatened, but when it comes to violating my rights versus his 'possible' injury because he has chosen to go out in public, he will have to take his chances just like I do when I step off my porch every morning... denny Security around the President is hardly a new thing. But while sovereign immunity has been reduced much over the years national security issues is one place where it still carries some weight and I see no court deciding that protection of the President should be secondary to some commercial loss. |
#5
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Gig 601XL Builder writes:
But while sovereign immunity has been reduced much over the years national security issues is one place where it still carries some weight and I see no court deciding that protection of the President should be secondary to some commercial loss. Why not? The USA is a democracy, and the President is only one part of a government that employs a balance of powers. This being so, there's a limit to the President's importance to the nation, and therefore a limit to the measures that can reasonably be justified to protect him. The constant inflationary spiral of these measures has to stop somewhere. Bringing a city to a halt is not really justified, not even for the President. |
#6
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Mxsmanic wrote:
Gig 601XL Builder writes: But while sovereign immunity has been reduced much over the years national security issues is one place where it still carries some weight and I see no court deciding that protection of the President should be secondary to some commercial loss. Why not? The USA is a democracy, and the President is only one part of a government that employs a balance of powers. This being so, there's a limit to the President's importance to the nation, and therefore a limit to the measures that can reasonably be justified to protect him. The constant inflationary spiral of these measures has to stop somewhere. Bringing a city to a halt is not really justified, not even for the President. First off no, the USA isn't and never was. It is a representative republic. The President and Vice President are the only two representatives who are elected by the entire electorate. That does give them a certain higher standing than the other members of our government. But that aside the majority of the citizens of the US feel that the POTUS is of significant enough importance to allow those who are charged with his well being a certain latitude in his protection. While a individual or even many individulas might have in the past or in the future suffer some financial loss due to the steps required to protect the POTUS it pales in comparison to the loss that would be suffered by many, many people should he be killed, especially should that attack be part of a larger attack on our country. The loss may well be caused by purely emotional reactions but that doesn't make the loss any less. Bringing a city to a halt is, to say the least, a little overstated. Bush was here in little old El Dorado Arkansas (pop. ~20k) before the last election. The town didn't come to a halt. A matter of fact if you weren't in a 4 block radius of where he was speaking you wouldn't have known he was in town. As a matter of fact I went to the airport where AF1 was sitting (though it wasn't the 747 it was a 757)and was allowed inside the fence and allowed to go to my hanger. There was a police officer there who asked why I was there. When I pointed to the airplane tires in the back of my truck and to my hanger he said, "Have a nice day and please leave via this exit." This was mainly because AF1 was parked 50 yards from the other exit and I would have had to drive past it. As far as the limit to the POTUS's importance to the US, yes there is a limit as there is a limit to what can be done to protect him. But, at least at this point the general public doesn't think that limit has been exceeded. Keep in mind that even though you are making great headway in the competition there are still a lot more people that would want to do harm to the POTUS than there are that want to do so to the average citizen. |
#7
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![]() "Gig 601XL Builder" wrDOTgiaconaATsuddenlink.net wrote in message ... Security around the President is hardly a new thing. It's weird, though. When Bush comes to town his appearance location is secret, private or surrounded by cyclone fences. My ex-girlfriend got to shake Clinton's hand in the Portland State University park blocks. (That was before the Lewinski thing.) Security everywhere, but he could still get out there and meet the general public. Maybe it's 'cause we're at war now, but, the change hasn't exactly gone over well here. -c |
#8
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Gattman wrote:
"Gig 601XL Builder" wrDOTgiaconaATsuddenlink.net wrote in message ... Security around the President is hardly a new thing. It's weird, though. When Bush comes to town his appearance location is secret, private or surrounded by cyclone fences. My ex-girlfriend got to shake Clinton's hand in the Portland State University park blocks. (That was before the Lewinski thing.) Security everywhere, but he could still get out there and meet the general public. Maybe it's 'cause we're at war now, but, the change hasn't exactly gone over well here. -c I know several people that got to shake Bush's hand when he was here before the last election. As a matter of fact his motorcade came within a block of my house well within shooting distance and though I was at work when he actually drove by there was no visible security on the route 30 minutes before. I think the level of security changes with possible threats. Obviously his security felt safer when he was in South Arkansas. |
#9
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Gattman writes:
Maybe it's 'cause we're at war now, but, the change hasn't exactly gone over well here. The U.S. is not at war. The current President seems to be much more fearful than most of his predecessors. |
#10
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On Aug 30, 5:30 am, Denny wrote:
The other issue is the presidents movements usurping public spaces and disrupting commerce and blocking the public's constitutionally protected freedom of movement (and the VP, and the Speaker, ad nauseum)... The day will come when someone will lose a contract, or some such event, because the unannounced movements of the president and men in dark suits blocking off public spaces. A lawsuit will result and the government will lose - as it is a clear issue that no one has the constitutional right to interrupt the citizenry's access to public spaces, roads, parks, the airspace, etc... We already tossed one King off the continent over these types of issues... I have no desire to see the president injured, or even threatened, but when it comes to violating my rights versus his 'possible' injury because he has chosen to go out in public, he will have to take his chances just like I do when I step off my porch every morning... denny Funny you should mention that. President Bush's recent visit to Seattle delayed me over an hour while I was on my way to the pharmacist. What if it had been an emergency and I had died? There were no alternative routes due to the constrictions of lots of water and narrow bits of land in the Seattle area. The Southcenter Mall was virtually shut down for hours. The entire mall! Because the police had blocked off *every* road that led to it. You probably could have fired a cannon through there and not hit anyone. Bush was not anywhere near the mall except for two periods of less than five minutes as he traveled the freeway nearby. In fact, people have been killed by Presidential motorcades, some recently. These things are dangerous. The Secret Service really needs to work on the disruption and hazards to safety caused by their security. Just because the SS guys are willing to take a bullet for the President does not meant that everyone else in the country feels the same way. |
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