| AIRPORT SEARCHES WITH FULL BODY SCANNERS |
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| Written by Don B. Kates | |||
| Monday, 08 March 2010 13:58 | |||
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Is all the concern about these things just paranoia? Well, it may be instructive to recall something that occurred in N CA a couple of decades ago. Pac Tel employees carrying out routine service checks on phone lines overheard a very intimate conversation. So they recorded it and played it for fellow employees’ amusement. Eventually they were "disciplined" for this but not until the matter became public and recordings had been played numerous times in PacTel offices all over the state. Is there any reason to think that TSA employees are above recording photos of full body searches of statuesque women? Or that when they have these photos they will not distribute them to all their buddies? Or that they will not sell them to girlie magazines, the National Inquirer etc. to reprint – perhaps w/ the names and addresses of the women involved? Note that once it buys them, the National Inquirer has a constitutional right to print the photos and the names and addresses of the naked women. The fact that the women were unaware of being photographed and didnt consent to having their names, addresses and naked photos published is irrelevant. That was held in the Pentagon Papers case. Also in cases where newspapers published gun registration lists and lists of concealed weapons permit holders.
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| Last Updated ( Monday, 08 March 2010 14:00 ) |