...@AlohaSteven: well said, that bit about keeping rage alive!
Thanks, yet lest an important distinction become collapsed I went back to check on that which was actually written:
I'd like to focus on having a nice day but I honestly do not think losing our sense of outrage and --stemming directly from this sense of outrage-- speaking up, making a fuss, and demanding huge changes (actual effective security instead of security theater) is going to accomplish that end. Feel the outrage! Give it voice! Take effective action! Outraged action is the only way, realistically, this venal grab for money and control can be stopped and corrected. If anyone knows how else this situation can be improved more effectively then please do speak up and educate me. I am glad to be wrong if a better alternative is presented.
There is a big difference between "outrage" (resentment aroused by injury or insult an act that violates accepted standards of behavior or taste) and "rage" (violent and uncontrolled anger). The former I see as constructive when it leads to rational action. The latter, though, has severely limited positive application.
Personally, while very much outraged about the situation I'd like to leave raw rage itself behind altogether and be all about enjoying the aloha and pineapples -which would be infinitely easier if my elderly friends would come and visit while they still have the health to make the trip, if other potential tourists like my friends who are not flying to Hawaii --or spending their money here-- were not lost to the local economy because of TSA, and if I myself did not ever run afoul of the TSA at the local airports.
In my experience one's treatment at the hands of the TSA, even here in Hawaii, can be biased. If he is at the checkpoint then a specific TSA screener at the HNL inter-island gate (a fellow in his late 50s or early 60's with salt and pepper hair, wears glasses, sedentary physique)
always singles me out for a pat-down and having my bags gone through ...though I have noticed he never once has tagged anyone ahead or behind me who is a member of his own racial group for such treatment. I do not get The Treatment very often anywhere else in the USA, just in HNL
every single time this same TSA guy is there, so there has to be something causing him to behave in a biased manner relative to all the other TSA agents nationwide the vast majority of whom yawn and wave me past. In the absence of anything else I can figure as a trigger for him --versus all other TSA screeners when they look at me-- he may not like the demographic he identifies me with based on my race, sex, & age. The first couple times I did not particularly notice or connect the dots but after the tenth time or so this sort of petty passive-aggressive biased behavior becomes irksome. He knows perfectly well I do not fit any sort of terrorist profile whatsoever and that the result of the pat-down and pawing through my carry-on will turn up nothing, just like the last dozen times, yet there is just the barest hint of a subtle gloating expression on his face every time. I wonder if this is his little sip of revenge for having a $17,000 per year job, or an expression of racial bias, or what? The story linked here (
http://www.menwithfoilhats.com/2010/11/x...east-milk/) documents biased treatment and TSA reprisals against passengers who make reports about inappropriate behavior or otherwise annoy the TSA agents, though honestly I have never done or said anything to this guy which could be taken as a reasonable excuse for annoyance.
Maybe someday I will be authentically compassionate, like Yoda, and just feel genuinely sorry for this biased TSA screener in Honolulu, but I think I'd have to live 900+ years or so (like Yoda) in order to get there.
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