firstthird
Well-known member
- Joined
- Nov 30, 2001
- Posts
- 687
originally posted by merikeyegro
sorry if you weren't talking about collecting data on people that fly, that is just the way I read your statement above.
Look, I'm with you that trading freedom for 'security' is not a good deal. My question is what part of the constitution prohibits airlines or the government profiling passengers or collecting some data? I don't think any part does. Just because the ACLU is hyperventilating doesn't mean that Mr. Ashcroft is taking a weed wacker to the constitution. The constitution is bigger than any one individual and does pretty well for itself. Obviously it needs to be protected but I think it is more under assualt from PC speech codes on college campuses that are criminalizing thought and speech (first amendment) and from control control nuts who think that the second amendment is talking about hunting and target guns (it is called a subordinate clause for a reason).
Anyway, I just don't think that because you are against something and claim the constitution / our freedoms are under assault means we should all abandon attempts to identify and stop terrorists before they strike. There is a balance to find and we're getting there.
About JB and the release of info, seems to me that it could have happened to any airline and I hope that it settles down before some lawyer gets a judge in Mississippi to certify it as a class action suit which would put about 5 bucks in each passenger's pocket and 20 million in the lawyers. At least we can all agree that we'd rather see that money go to JB employees and stockholders rather than some ambulance chasing litigator.
Merikeyegro,So, let's not start advocating mass profiling and building character files on everyone.
sorry if you weren't talking about collecting data on people that fly, that is just the way I read your statement above.
Look, I'm with you that trading freedom for 'security' is not a good deal. My question is what part of the constitution prohibits airlines or the government profiling passengers or collecting some data? I don't think any part does. Just because the ACLU is hyperventilating doesn't mean that Mr. Ashcroft is taking a weed wacker to the constitution. The constitution is bigger than any one individual and does pretty well for itself. Obviously it needs to be protected but I think it is more under assualt from PC speech codes on college campuses that are criminalizing thought and speech (first amendment) and from control control nuts who think that the second amendment is talking about hunting and target guns (it is called a subordinate clause for a reason).
Anyway, I just don't think that because you are against something and claim the constitution / our freedoms are under assault means we should all abandon attempts to identify and stop terrorists before they strike. There is a balance to find and we're getting there.
About JB and the release of info, seems to me that it could have happened to any airline and I hope that it settles down before some lawyer gets a judge in Mississippi to certify it as a class action suit which would put about 5 bucks in each passenger's pocket and 20 million in the lawyers. At least we can all agree that we'd rather see that money go to JB employees and stockholders rather than some ambulance chasing litigator.
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