the dollar vigilante blog

TSA's Grip on Internal Travel is Tightening

[Editor’s Note: The following post is by TDV contributor, Wendy McElroy]

The Transportation Security Administration (TSA) is tightening its grip on domestic travcel. I don't mean the random, unpredictable security checks at bus, subway and train stations which already exist. I mean a coordinated and systematic police control of internal travel within America. Groundwork is being laid.

APPLICATION TO MAKE U.S. INTO AN AIRPORT SCREENING ZONE 

The application was tucked away on page 71431 of Volume 77, Number 231 of the Federal Register (November 30). It was surrounded by soporific references to forwarding “the new Information Collection Request (ICR) abstracted below to the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) for review and approval under the Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA).”

The application for funding from the TSA constitutes a preliminary step toward systematically expanding TSA's authority from airports to highways and almost every other means of public travel. The expansion would erase one of the last remaining differences between the US and a total police state; namely, the ability to travel internally without being under police surveillance. The total police state you experience at airports wants to spill into roads and bus stops, to  subways and trains. Or, rather, the TSA wants to solidify and spread the fledgling and erratic presence it already has.

The official request reads, “TSA's Highway BASE program [Baseline Assessment for Security Enhancement] seeks to establish the current state of security gaps and implemented countermeasures throughout the highway mode of transportation by posing questions to major transportation asset owners and operators.” An example would be an owner and the employees of a long-haul truck company. The application continues, “Data and results collected through the Highway BASE program will inform TSA's policy and program initiatives and allow TSA to provide focused resources and tools to enhance the overall security posture within the surface transportation community.”

Meanwhile, the Government Security News Service provides additional details on TSA's plans. TSA wants funding to conduct “security-related assessments” on about 750  “transportation assets” including “140 public transportation agencies.” An example would be bus depots or train stations.

Security Magazine (May 30th) offered a sense of how sweeping the definition of “assets” might be, including “trucking, school bus, and motor coach industries, privately-owned highway assets that may include bridges and tunnels, and other related systems and assets owned and operated by state departments of education and transportation.”

At this point, the goal is merely “an assessment.” But when did a government agency ever conclude that it didn't need funding, expansion and more power? This is especially true of the militarized TSA that treats the public as “hostiles.”

The fact that the agency lamented the lack of a “single database” on public transportation is not reassuring. (Federal Register, Vol.77, No.104, pg. 31867, May 30.) The entire push seems aimed at not merely expanding but also centralizing information, efforts and authority, with BASE itself being a consolidation of several other TSA programs.

TRAVEL AUTHORITIES WILL COMPLY

Private companies and public travel authorities will co-operate with this “voluntary” program of assessment and with whatever policies result. They will co-operate for two reasons: the stick and the carrot.

The stick: The BASE program is voluntary in the same sense that compliance with TSA demands at airport screening are voluntary – which is to say, not at all. A company that refuses to comply is likely to receive the same harassment and extra scrutiny as passengers who refuse to be screened.

The carrot: the May 30th Federal Register report listed one use to which data from the TSA assessments would be put. It would “inform...the most effective application of available resources, including funds distributed under the Transit Security Grant Program.” In short, government money will flow to the compliant.

The case of Amtrak is instructive.

On March 3rd, 2011, Trains: The Magazine of Railroading ran the headline: “TRAINS Exclusive: Amtrak police chief bars Transportation Security Administration from some security operations.” The article went on to describe how TSA personnel “took over” an Amtrak station on their own authority and “thoroughly searched every person who entered.” When Amtrak Police Chief John O’Connor found out, he was reportedly “livid” and insisted on restricting the TSA's authority before he would consider “allowing them back on Amtrak property.”

On October 9th, 2012, Homeland Security Today – the official magazine of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) – announced that DHS had forged a partnership Amtrak by which  “over 8,000 frontline transportation employees and Amtrak Police Department officers” will be trained.

How did Amtrak go from threatening to evict the TSA (an agency within DHS) to joining enthusiastically in the harassment of passengers? What happened in a year-and-a-half?

Money happened. In 2011, Amtrak received $1.5 billion in federal funds and broke records with 30 million  passengers; it still lost money. Amtrak's losses were so huge and persistent that one of Mitt Romney’s campaign promises was to privatize the behemoth. By partnering with national security in October, however, Amtrak guaranteed both funding and survival no matter who won the election.

No wonder so many transit authorities are scrambling to be “golden.” The Gold Award is the highest score a transportation provider can receive from the TSA. It is achieved by obtaining high ratings in 17 categories in Security and Emergency Preparedness. Who do you think will be first in line for federal hand-outs? Compliance with the TSA will be high.

The Amtrak dynamic also points to how the TSA will solve a major problem in monitoring internal travel; namely, it doesn't have enough personnel to cover the vast stretches and variety of internal transportation. The TSA doesn't need them. All it needs to do is co-opt the existing personnel of railroads and buses, of trucking and subways. If it does so, then the TSA will acquire 100,000s of de facto agents who are trained to report back on any suspicious activity or people. 

Airport-style control of travel within America is coming. Some would argue it has been here for decades in the form of speed limits. But what's coming is different in kind. The unmarked police cars hiding in bushes are after your money; the uniformed TSA agents and their “partners” want your freedom, your obedience, and control of your life.

CONCLUSION

The Constitution will not protect the right to travel. Although many legal scholars consider it to be a Constitutional right akin to freedom of association, the word “travel” or its equivalent does not appear in the document except to guarantee the right of Congress members to travel back and forth from 'work'. The Supreme Court case Sáenz v. Roe (1999) rejected the Constitutional basis of free travel and rooted it instead within judicial precedent. These are weak roots and shallow soil.

Those who fret over their continued ability to travel abroad should glance over their shoulders to glimpse what is happening to travel within America. The two are politically connected, intimately so. Many of the same methods that now restrict foreign travel will be used within America because the same agency will handle both: the TSA in its many manifestations. They might be called BASE agents or VIPRs (Visible Intermodal Prevention and Response), like the ones who partnered with law enforcement in 2011 in Tennessee to conduct random “terrorist” checkpoints on highways. They may be the specially trained clerks who sell you a ticket . But TSA agents in whatever guise are coming to the highway, bus stop and train station you frequent.

 

Wendy McElroy is a renowned individualist anarchist and individualist feminist. She was a co-founder along with Carl Watner and George H. Smith of The Voluntaryist in 1982, and is the author/editor of twelve books, the latest of which is "The Art of Being Free". Follow her work at http://www.wendymcelroy.com.

 

Oy vey. Just this past Sunday your editor poured his little black heart out about how painful it is to watch his country of residence devolve so rapidly into a police state. Yesterday I wrote specifically about the expansion of drone policing in America's skies and on its roads. And now today my dear friend and colleague Wendy eloquently reminds me about the TSA's cancer-like spread through the homeland that replaced America after 9/11.

This goes beyond the invasive groping that degrades both perpertator and victim. This is the rapid blossoming of these buffoonish blue shirts into something that a police state worthy of the name can be proud of.  

This is no joke. Amerika is steadily becoming a more difficult and dangerous place to live, at least if you're the kind of person who likes the freedom to do things like have private conversations or drive around without having to go through checkpoints full of machine gun-wielding, armored state thugs. If you're going to stay (and believe me, I understand if you can't or simply don't want to leave), you should use every available tool easily in your reach to make sure your stay is a safe, productive and non-lethal one. 

Regards, 


Gary Gibson
Editor, The Dollar Vigilante

Comments (12)

Shelly's picture

America as it is, don't forget we the people, by the people, for the people.  I had my run around with TSA.  Nobody in the government has ever given them permission to do what they do.  I understand that a police officer has 20 some feet around him that I can not enter without his permission.  I also understand that I have a 3-foot circle around me only people in authority has the right to step into, and this is not Homeland Security or TSA.  The USA has around 314 million people.  This means we outnumber the government and all its people, so we should not go to any wars for I do not believe in that.  We just need to stand up and say "NO" to our employees, the United States Government, and ignore the TSA and Homeland Security since the United States people did not hire them, just walk on by them, for they shouldn't be there.

internal @'s picture

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AnonMark Raymondymous's picture

Well folks You  want to complain about this?, Why havent you stood up and put a stop to it? Were Americans arent we? Heres the deal, Untill Americansgrow a backbone, all this bandering on social media dont mean shit. Some of us have satood up and resisted, but alot of you just run hide and act like whipped pups. Its time for the revolution to start but wheres the patriots? Wheres the real men and women that say theyll fight? Is it going to be just a few of us that tries to turn the tide around?,or will america rise up and stop this tyranny? I seriously doubt theres enough men and women in america with enough backbone to do anything but whine on social net. SMH Sheeple is what they are.
 

Another Joe's picture

Or, we could just exercise one of the remaining freedoms that our forefathers fought for - the right to leave.

Anonymous's picture

Several years ago I stopped flying because of the TSA and also stopped travelling to the USA.  I will not set foot in that country again and it is really too bad as there are so many amazing places to see.  I will stay in Canada, will walk, ride my bike and occasionally my car and camp for vacations.  I also don't spend any more money than absolutely necessary, which means organic healthy food and anything else I need I find in second hand stores.  If everyone would just STOP spending money on useless stuff and stop travelling there would be no money to fund the police state of the USSA.

Anonymous's picture

Wrong,they will just print more money.

omniv0r's picture

The more one understands Americans the better the reasons for this crackdown are understood!

Anonymous's picture

look - it's all a scam. They let you know, in bits and pieces, all about the 911 attacks years beforehand through their collusively-produced films, like the 1998 "Enemy Of The State", where evil NSA official Jon Voight was born on which of the 365 days of the year?  September 11th (1940), of course.  It's sp much more extensive than this.  Oh, the things you haven't been told.   When they ran out of excuses from the Vietnam war era to abuse us, they brought about 911, and profited before and afterwards through the films and attempt at stock manipulation.  The trillions Dov Zackheim at the Pentagon disappeared were not enough, so along came the $15 trillion bailout and Ben Bernanke's disappearing of $9 trillion .  Follow the yellow brick road, and it will lead you to the Wizard, hiding behind doeble entendres to protect you and all that sewage.

Gwyn's picture

I stop flying now it clear I will have to stop travel at all.  If a cell is what my home is being coming at least the loss of my spending I hope make a some impact on TPTB.  I said if we change our laws after 9/11 that we had let them win.  

Denton's picture

It's a good thing the TSA is there to keep the terrorists out of our planes, trains and automobiles, huh?  After all, they must be everywhere, if you consider the amount of money and individual invasion with which the American citizens must contend.
Allow me to get all this straight in my head so that I can keep up.  We create the enemy so that it can fight the other enemy.  Later, we tell a friend he can attack a neighbor, and then the friend is an enemy when he does.  The first enemy is mad at us because we attacked the friend/enemy from his homeland, and now is mad at us, his creator.  Later, we try and pursuade another country to be our friend so that we can run gas and oil pipelines through it, but they do not want to have anything to do with it.  So, after the first enemy is blamed for planes striking us, that country is immediately labeled the hiding place of  the enemy, and we go to war.  On a side note, we again attack the friend/enemy, finishing him off, leaving the country hostile to non-friend/enemy religion and open to the influences of the next Great Enemy. OK, so, later, we miraculously find the leader of the enemy living in the neighboring country, a country that has never liked us and only became a friend after it was threatened with a stomping to not be our enemy.  That enemy-leader was found living in a compound with his wife, goat, some buds and satelite TV (one has to keep up with CNN, ya know), right next to a military post.  That country is still our friend and the original country attacked because it was allegedly harboring the leader of the enemy is still being occupied by us.
Do I have all that right?  
Yup, they are mad at us because they hate all our freedoms and liberties.  Of course.  And, we are in danger in this country because there is no possible way a nation can control immigration, and everyone knows camels can fly long distances.
Trying to make sense of the logic given to us by those who control our government can really make a fellow dizzy.

Sebastian's picture

That TSA policy is keeping tourists out of the country too. I used to be a more or less frequent visitor but decided to stop travelling to the USSA because of all the new laws and rules against visitors (pre boarding authorization, new visas, etc.). And it's not only me.
Over here in the EUSSR this hasn't happened, at least not yet. But the power hungry creeps in Brussels would love to do something similar. The "right opportunity" just hasn't come yet.
Back to the checkpoints. The hallmark of the police state is of course domestic travel visas. Bureaucratic permission you'll need to travel from NY to NJ. I heared stories about the original Soviet Union having those and even today Russia still has those for foreigners visiting some cities.

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