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Creating a Market for Security
By Paul Craig Roberts
04/12/07 "ICH"
-- -- The War on Terror is a marketing campaign for security
industries and terrorism experts. The latter are pulling in the
consulting fees, and the former are rapidly inventing new
products that enable “our” government to watch our every move
and to know our location at every moment.
Although it should be working on its corporate ethics (see:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/6182137.stm
), BAE Systems is working on an “Onboard
Threat Detection System.” The system consists of tiny cameras
and microphones implanted in airline seats. The Onboard Threat
Detection System records every facial expression and every
whisper of every passenger, allowing watchful eyes and ears to
detect terrorists before they can strike. BAE says its system
is so sophisticated that it can differentiate between nervous
flyers and real terrorists.
Think about this for a moment. Aside from the Big Brother
aspect, the Onboard Threat Detection System is either redundant
or the security authorities have no confidence in the expensive
and intrusive airport security through which passengers are
herded.
We have reached the point where we can no longer fly with more
than three ounces of lotions, shampoo, toothpaste, and
deodorants, because the government pretends that we might
concoct a bomb out of the ingredients. Three ounces of shampoo
is safe, but three and one-half ounces blows the airliner to
smitherins.
We must shed coats, shoes, and belts to pass through airport
security. We are wanded and patted down. Luggage is X-rayed
and searched. IDs and boarding passes are endlessly checked as
we proceed from check-in to gate. And we still need an Onboard
Threat Detection System to monitor our expressions and words.
Other firms are developing chip implants that identify a person
to scanning machines and allow our movements to be monitored by
GPS systems. Still others are developing ID cards that have
retina scans and our DNA. No doubt we will be required to have
both.
All of this is to protect us from terrorists.
No thought is given to whether the intrusion from the protection
is a greater threat than possible terrorist acts by foreigners
protesting American hegemony over their own lives. If American
hegemony has this big a price, I can do without it.
Some of us remember when it was possible to read a book in an
airport while waiting on a flight. Today it can’t be done
without ear plugs. TVs blaring the latest propaganda compete
with incessant repetitive terrorist warnings interrupted by
announcements of flight cancellations and gate changes. The
cacophony of sound is maddening. If only we could go back to
the days of crying babies and screaming children.
Once a terrorist warning is produced, it lives forever. Every
US airport endlessly plays the same ancient warning from decades
ago instructing passengers to carefully watch their luggage and
not to accept items from other people to carry aboard flights.
This warning dates from pre-security days when the explosion of
an airliner in flight was blamed on a passenger accepting a
parcel from a stranger to carry to a person waiting at the
flight’s destination. Allegedly, the parcel was a bomb.
To hear this warning today thirty or forty times after passing
through security makes a person wonder about the efficiency of
airport security. Were all those warrantless searches pointless?
The greatest problem confronted by marketers of anti-terrorist
products is the shortage of terrorist attacks. The only
terrorist events Americans have experienced are the attacks on
the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. As for 9/11, we still
don’t have a good explanation of how so much security failed in
one morning.
To prime the market for anti-terrorism products, the Bush
administration used 9/11 to invade Afghanistan and Iraq. The
Bush administration has been attempting to occupy both countries
for several years at a cost to taxpayers estimated at 1,000
billion dollars.
The main result of the military action has been to stir up
resentment among Muslims in the hopes that the resentment will
find expression in terrorist acts in the US. We have been made
less safe in order that entrepreneurs can make big bucks
protecting us with new security products. It would have been
much better just to give the 1,000 billion dollars to the
security firms and not invaded the two countries.
Keep that in mind when you are being monitored in your airliner
seat and are blinking too much because you still wear the old
hard contact lenses or are suffering from allergies. Excessive
blinking is a telltale sign of stress and means that the blinker
is about to commit a terrorist act. When you are arrested don’t
bother arguing with the foolproof Onboard Threat Detection
System. Just be thankful that your senators and representative
received enough campaign donations from security firms to be
concerned with your security.
Paul Craig Roberts was Assistant Secretary of the Treasury in
the Reagan administration. He was Associate Editor of the Wall
Street Journal editorial page and Contributing Editor of
National Review. He is coauthor of The Tyranny of Good
Intentions.Click here
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