[Mb-civic] Why Profiling Won't Work - William Raspberry -
Washington Post
William Swiggard
swiggard at comcast.net
Mon Aug 22 04:19:39 PDT 2005
Why Profiling Won't Work
By William Raspberry
Monday, August 22, 2005; Page A17
The Transportation Security Administration, having rendered cockpit
crews less vulnerable to hijackers by strengthening the cockpit doors,
is now (1) reviewing its list of items passengers may not bring aboard,
(2) proposing to minimize the number of passengers who have to be patted
down at checkpoints and (3) taking another look at the rule that
requires most passengers to remove their shoes.
These are encouraging moves toward common sense.
This isn't: A gaggle of voices is proposing -- almost as though
responding to the same memo from some malign Mr. Big -- that the TSA
replace its present policy of random searches with massive racial and
ethnic profiling.
After all, they argue, weren't the Sept. 11 terrorists all young Muslim
men? Isn't it likely that the next terrorist attack will be carried out
by young Muslim men? So why waste time screening white-haired
grandmothers and blue-suited white guys? Much more efficient to tap the
shoulder of any young man who looks Muslim -- a category that covers not
just Arabs but also Asians, Africans and, increasingly, African Americans.
It must have been just such sweet reason that led to the internment of
thousands of Japanese Americans during World War II. Even Andrew C.
McCarthy of the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies -- and one of
the advocates of profiling -- acknowledges that the Japanese internments
were excessive. But only, he says in the current issue of National
Review, because "they included American citizens of Japanese descent;
there was nothing objectionable in principle about holding Japanese,
German, or Italian nationals."
That distinction doesn't hold up in the case of airport profiling, since
there's no way visually to distinguish between a Saudi citizen and an
Arab American. The profilers wouldn't even try.
Actually, anyone who's ever been inconvenienced by security checks --
whether as trivial as having to give up a fingernail clipper or as
serious as having to take a later flight -- will see some merit in the
case for profiling. Can't they see that I'm just a guy trying to get
from here to there, while that fellow over there looks like he could be
a hijacker?
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/08/21/AR2005082100974.html?nav=hcmodule
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