Time To Get Rid Of No Fly List Altogether?

from the from-the-mainstream-press? dept

We recently noted that some members of the “no fly” list are suing the US government, questioning why they’re “too scary to fly, but not scary enough to arrest,” and complaining that there’s simply no way for them to even find out why they’re on the list or to get off the list. That’s resulted in a Chicago Tribune editorial suggesting we dump the “no fly” list altogether. In fact, the editorial goes even further, saying we should go back to letting people fly without having to show a government-issued identity. The argument is that this is really security theater, and there are lots of other things in place that would likely stop a terrorist attack:

What no one seems to notice is that other improvements in security have made this one a needless burden.

The government required airlines to install reinforced cockpit doors to keep hijackers from taking the controls. It tightened security rules — banning penknives, lighters, ski poles, snow globes, and liquids except in tiny bottles.

It initiated random pat-downs of travelers and gave extra scrutiny to those who did suspicious things. It deployed thousands of armed air marshals.

Equally important, travelers changed their mindset, meaning that terrorists can no longer count on passive victims. On several occasions — starting with United Flight 93 on 9/11 — passengers have acted to foil attacks.

With all these layers of protection in place, the rationale for the no-fly list has crumbled. Even if someone on the list can get on a plane, his chance of taking it over or bringing it down is very close to zero. And you know the other good thing? The same holds for an aspiring terrorist who doesn’t make the list.

The government’s tedious insistence on identifying all travelers and grounding some may convey an illusion of security. But we could live — and I do mean live — without it.

I have to admit I’m surprised to see an editorial like this in a mainstream publication like the Chicago Tribune. And while I agree that the no fly list is a joke, it should be admitted that many of those other “improvements in security” are equally as ridiculous, so citing them as the argument alone isn’t very convincing.

Filed Under: ,

Rate this comment as insightful
Rate this comment as funny
You have rated this comment as insightful
You have rated this comment as funny
Flag this comment as abusive/trolling/spam
You have flagged this comment
The first word has already been claimed
The last word has already been claimed
Insightful Lightbulb icon Funny Laughing icon Abusive/trolling/spam Flag icon Insightful badge Lightbulb icon Funny badge Laughing icon Comments icon

Comments on “Time To Get Rid Of No Fly List Altogether?”

Subscribe: RSS Leave a comment
55 Comments
:Lobo Santo (profile) says:

True Security

You only get real security when every citizen takes his/her security personally. Arm the populace, and make sure they know how to use their guns.

This one action fundamentally changes the equation. The “terrorists” cannot possibly watch every American on the airplane at every moment–and it’ll be the one they don’t see which puts a bullet into them.

PaulT (profile) says:

Re: True Security

Yeah, herding hundreds of morons with guns into an enclosed space is a real way to safeguard security, especially when many of the are racist morons who consider anyone with brown skin to be a terrorist suspect :rolls eyes:

Besides, if you’re frightened enough of terrorists to make that kind of move, then they’ve already won. They’re not called terrorists because they blow things up, they’re called terrorists because their entire aim is to induce the constant state of fear Americans seem to have lived in every day since 9/11.

Dark Helmet (profile) says:

Re: Re: True Security

Yeah, sorry Lobo, but I kind of agree. I’m very pro gun rights and have no problem with general carry and conceal allowances, but there are some avenues in which restriction should be enforced, and on an airplane is one of them.

On the other hand, having folks who qualified for higher levels of carry and conceal (by passing marksmanship tests and background checks) would be okay in a limited fashion….

:Lobo Santo (profile) says:

Re: Re: True Security

Fear is when you’re a helpless sheep dependent upon your largely apathetic indecipherable government to safeguard your wretchedly pathetic existence.

And besides, if you were in that crowd of “hundreds of morons with guns in an enclosed space” (your fellow Americans) I’m betting you’d be all kinds of civil, polite, and well-mannered. How is that a bad thing?

TtfnJohn (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re: True Security

Without turning this into a pro or anti gun thing (in general) I’ll chime in that a pressurized air cabin and a gun is a really, really bad combination even should the gun discharge accidentally.

What you’re ignoring here is that “the terrorists” who acted on 9/11 weren’t the least bit interested in preserving their own lives so the idea that the plane he/she/them are getting on may have a few armed passengers isn’t likely to deter them at all. Nor was the shoe bomber deterred by the fact that he’d die along with everyone else and on and on and on.

Firearms aren’t magic for those that carry or anyone else.

And keep in mind that “the terrorists” are almost always highly trained and motivated which reduces even more the notion that a plane load of people carrying guns is likely to deter them.

Sadly, armed passengers blow up as well as unarmed passengers.

Nor, given everything Mike outlines since 9/11 make a aircraft hijacking far less likely as “the terrorist” like other military and paramilitary operatives prefer soft targets to hardened ones.

I’m sure that there are equally high value targets that can be attacked more easily and more successfully than a passenger aircraft these days. Far more easily and with as great or greater effect.

As has been pointed out, it appears that the terrorists have, in one case, already won.

PaulT (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:2 True Security

“”the terrorists” are almost always highly trained and motivated”

Fortunately for us, they’re actually not. There have been very few successful terrorist attacks in the Western world since 9/11, and most unsuccessful ones were pathetic attempts that wouldn’t have worked even if they weren’t uncovered before they could act. Motivated? Sure, but most of them are amateurs and incompetent – even the 9/11 guys left stupid and blatant clues that could have led to the act being prevented (learning to fly a plane but specifically refusing the landing portion, for example).

“I’m sure that there are equally high value targets that can be attacked more easily and more successfully than a passenger aircraft these days. Far more easily and with as great or greater effect.”

There are, which is why subways, buses, etc. have been targeted in other attacks around the world. It just happens that planes make more headlines when they’re targeted, and so the “keeping people afraid” aim of terrorism is easier to achieve.

Chronno S. Trigger (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:2 True Security

“he/she/them are getting on may have a few armed passengers isn’t likely to deter them at all”

Did anyone else see how silly this comment was? It doesn’t matter if the terrorist doesn’t care that people can shoot him, it only matters that people can shoot him. Fear doesn’t need to solve this particular problem.

And a hole in an airplane isn’t as bad as you think. The air will leak out slowly enough that they can land before it becomes a problem.

PaulT (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re: True Security

I’m not American, and while I find many individual Americans to be civil, polite and well-mannered, there’s always a lot of people who aren’t.

“Fear is when you’re a helpless sheep dependent upon your largely apathetic indecipherable government to safeguard your wretchedly pathetic existence.”

Funny thing about that. I’m not afraid – of terrorists, especially (more people die in road accidents every year than have *ever* been killed by terrorists). I would, however, be very afraid if I was surrounded by idiots with deadly weapons every time I flew.

I feel pretty sorry for your world view if you think that the only way for people to resolve their differences is under threat of random deadly force. Your world must be a very scary place, and I certainly wouldn’t want to live there.

:Lobo Santo (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:2 True Security

I feel pretty sorry for your world view if you think that the only way for people to resolve their differences is under threat of random deadly force. Your world must be a very scary place, and I certainly wouldn’t want to live there.

I believe in deadly force that is neither random nor required. I also believe violence is the last resort of the unimaginative, and lots of people have sadly atrophied imaginations. However, I don’t believe in terrorists (except the black flag government-sponsored kind). Never met one, never seen one. Have only heard about them from mass media.

PaulT (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:3 True Security

“However, I don’t believe in terrorists (except the black flag government-sponsored kind). Never met one, never seen one. Have only heard about them from mass media.”

So… you’re saying that you support the idea of allowing random people to carry deadly weapons in an enclosed, cramped, potentially volatile environment to address a danger you don’t even believe exists in the first place?

Wow.

I, on the other hand, have lived most of my life in countries (UK, Ireland, Spain – my whole life apart from approx. 1 year in the US) where actual terrorist attacks have taken place on a relatively regular basis (not just AQ but IRA, ETA, etc.). Again, if the population around me is armed, I think I’d be in far more danger from a random idiot having a bad day / mental issues than I am now from terrorists.

Jay (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re: True Security

“And besides, if you were in that crowd of “hundreds of morons with guns in an enclosed space” (your fellow Americans) I’m betting you’d be all kinds of civil, polite, and well-mannered. How is that a bad thing?”

Ben Franklin said it best:

“”Those who would give up Essential Liberty to purchase a little Temporary Safety deserve neither Liberty nor Safety”

First, there’s the problem of a pressurized cabin. Second is the fact that humans are irrational. This could lead to complications that you really, really, REALLY don’t need.

Jay (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:2 I mean... Really?

Only if you can put it out with Greek Oil. Can’t be too careful.

“What if the only way to carry a gun on board was to have rubber bullets?”

Why do you need so much security on an airplane? He can’t really do much and the passengers are already uberhyper about this. A gun only adds more problems than it solves. Even with rubber bullets, the fact remains that guns are still unsafe so high up.

Chris-Mouse (profile) says:

True Security

Have the passengers able to carry guns on board an aircraft? Let me know which flight that will be so I can take a different flight!

Two problems come to mind right off the top of my head.
One: passenger digs through carry-on bag looking for a snack, passenger in the next seat sees the gun in the carry-on and assumes terrorist.
Two: A terrorist does try to hijack the plane, A passenger pulls out a gun and starts shooting. Result, one dead hijacker, and half a dozen dead passengers hit by the bullets that missed.

There is NO need for anyone on board a plane to be armed. Even with a gun, the hijacker can’t harm the aircraft if he can’t get into the cockpit, and if he’s trapped in the cabin with a couple of hundred angry passengers, he’s not going to be a threat for long.

Richard (profile) says:

The key point

is

travelers changed their mindset, meaning that terrorists can no longer count on passive victims. On several occasions — starting with United Flight 93 on 9/11 — passengers have acted to foil attacks.

9/11, by its very nature could happen only once.

not much of the rest is of any use.

btw guns are not required for this. Allowing guns on aircraft would simply result in extra crashes.

Some AC says:

Re: Re: OHHH THE TERRRRRROORRRRRISSTS!!!!

Exactly. People seem to forget that in a pre-9/11 world, no one assumed a terrorist was hijacking a plane to fly it into a damn building. Most Likely the hijackers had some money demands, prisoners they wanted freed, etc. The people on the plane were hostages for their demands. As such, the best way to survive was to do nothing! Wait for the authorities! The first two 9/11 attacks succeeded because it preyed upon this assumption.

Now? There’s no way in hell it’d work. Three guys with box cutters would stand zero chance against a plane full of people thinking they are going to die if they don’t do something. And as Richard pointed out… that mindset changed within the hour… as evidenced by United 93

Anonymous Coward says:

“Even if someone on the list can get on a plane, his chance of taking it over or bringing it down is very close to zero.”

I would buy that line if the chance of someone getting contraband items on an airplane was actually very close to zero. It is not. TSA is a mixture of hardworking well trained people who care about security and idiots just like any other group/org/company out there.

PaulT (profile) says:

Re: Re:

The chance of bringing a plane down depends on more factors than just contraband items. The person would have to smuggle something in, overpower a couple of hundred fellow passengers who would be fighting quite hard not to become part of the next 9/11 and keep all of those people at bay while flying the plane accurately to a pre-chosen spot – all while authorities work to bring the plane down safely (or in extreme circumstances, not).

Factor all of this in, and the chances of a successful attack is pretty much zero. 9/11 worked mainly because of a lack of terrorism awareness among passengers and the trust that – as in every other plane hijack that had ever taken place – the terrorists’ intention was to land the plane. These factors will not exist in the next attempt.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:

Why on earth would I need to ‘overpower a couple of hundred passengers’ if I am detonating the bomb i smuggled onto the plane? I do not argue that the chance of someone taking control of an airplane is close to zero now. The chance of taking down a plane is a different story though.

PaulT (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re: Re:

If you manage to smuggle something onto the plane nowadays, it’s unlikely to be a complete device. It will almost certainly needs to be assembled (as per the attempted liquid bombs) or activated (as per the shoe bomber) while on the plane. It’s unlikely that in today’s heightened environment that such attempts will go unnoticed, and as soon as a terrorist is confronted, they’ll have every able bodied person on the plane to deal with.

It might be more likely to blow up a plane than take control of it with a box cutter in today’s environment, but you’re still more likely to die in a car accident on the way to the airport than in an actual terrorist attempt.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:3 Re:

I still agree it is unlikely though, though not because of the fact that the passengers are all terrorized now and they visibly have ramped up security at airports.

Most of the real security regarding terrorism should come from your intelligence agency before the plane is ever a factor. Making a political game out of something like a no-fly list is a huge mistake I think.

out_of_the_blue says:

The "no-fly list" is more dangerous than "terrorists".

It’s the beginning of gov’t *permission* to travel, and of all other sorts of permissions rather than liberties. The TSA has been putting people on it almost at random, and at last known point, was approaching a million names. — Senator Kennedy was on it! I know some find that amusing, but it *proves* that the purpose of the list is political intimidation, *not* anything to do with “security”.

Anyway, as in that piece linked to this week: Where *are* the terrorists? — The only possible reason for their *absence* is that they don’t *dare* stage another attack, and since “Al-Qaeda” is supposedly already being attacked as much as possible, that points most surely to gov’t STAGING.

Beta (profile) says:

Re: The "no-fly list" is more dangerous than "terrorists".

‘Senator Kennedy was on it! [That] *proves* that the purpose of the list is political intimidation, *not* anything to do with “security”.’

No, “T. Kennedy” was on the list. Remember, it is a list of names, and sometimes some other bits of information, not of people. (If that distinction doesn’t seem important, you don’t understand it.) The addition of that name to the list does not seem to have been politically motivated.

Jungle6 says:

Best Idea Yet

Give everyone in the US a gun then send out a news broadcast that everyone to your left is a Terrorist that needs to be taken care of.

US population drops to about 100m terrified morons who were alone at the time of the culling.

Over the next few days those brave survivors, carefully step out side and happily discover that they all have about 2 more guns each.

Bradley Stewart (profile) says:

Just The Other Day

I went clothes shopping. When I finished I stood in the check out line waiting to pay. As the sales girl was checking me out I noticed that there was something wrong with the pair of pants that I had picked out. I said to her just a minute. Where is the zipper? She responded to me. Oh sorry I just noticed on my computer that you are on the no fly list.

Beta (profile) says:

still has some catching up to do

This is a new idea? Bruce Schneier has been saying this for years (as have others *cough*).

This piece seemed like a sloppy argument for a good idea. This sentence in particular caught my eye:

“Even if someone on the list can get on a plane, his chance of taking it over or bringing it down is very close to zero.”

*sigh* If someone whose name is on the list gets on a plane, the likelihood of his wanting to take it over or crash it is very close to zero.

Leave a Reply to Anonymous Coward Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Have a Techdirt Account? Sign in now. Want one? Register here

Comment Options:

Make this the or (get credits or sign in to see balance) what's this?

What's this?

Techdirt community members with Techdirt Credits can spotlight a comment as either the "First Word" or "Last Word" on a particular comment thread. Credits can be purchased at the Techdirt Insider Shop »

Follow Techdirt

Techdirt Daily Newsletter

Ctrl-Alt-Speech

A weekly news podcast from
Mike Masnick & Ben Whitelaw

Subscribe now to Ctrl-Alt-Speech »
Techdirt Deals
Techdirt Insider Discord
The latest chatter on the Techdirt Insider Discord channel...
Loading...