Much has been written about how insulting and depressing it is, more  than a decade after the events of 9/11, to be met by “security theater”  at our nation’s airports. The current system appears so inane that one  hopes it really is a sham, concealing more-ingenious intrusions into our  privacy. The spirit of political correctness hangs over the whole  enterprise like the Angel of Death—indeed, more closely than death, or  than the actual fear of terrorism. And political correctness requires  that TSA employees direct the spotlight of their attention at random—or  appear to do so—while making rote use of irrational procedures and  dubious technology.
    						Although I don’t think I look like a jihadi, or like a man  pretending not to be one, I do not mean to suggest that a person like me  should be exempt from scrutiny. But other travelers fit the profile far  less than I do. One glance at these innocents reveals that they are no  more likely to be terrorists than walruses in disguise. I make it a  point to notice such people while queuing for security at the airport,  just to see what sort of treatment they receive at the hands of the TSA.  
  While leaving JFK last week, I found myself standing in line behind  an elderly couple who couldn’t have been less threatening had they been  already dead and boarding in their coffins. I would have bet my life  that they were not waging jihad. Both appeared to be in their  mid-eighties and infirm. The woman rode in a wheelchair attended by an  airport employee as her husband struggled to comply with TSA  regulations—removing various items from their luggage, arranging them in  separate bins, and loading the bins and bags onto the conveyor belt  bound for x-ray. 
  After much preparation, the couple proceeded toward the body scanner,  only to encounter resistance. It seems that they had neglected to take  off their shoes. A pair of TSA screeners stepped forward to prevent this  dangerous breach of security—removing what appeared to be orthopedic  footwear from both the woman in the wheelchair and the man now  staggering at her side. This imposed obvious stress on two harmless and  bewildered people and caused considerable delay for everyone in my line.  I turned to see if anyone else was amazed by such a perversion of  vigilance. The man behind me, who could have played the villain in a  Bollywood film, looked unconcerned. 
  I have noticed such incongruities before. In fact, my wife and I once  accidentally used a bag for carry-on in which I had once stored a  handgun—and passed through three airport checkpoints with nearly 75  rounds of 9 mm ammunition. While we were inadvertently smuggling  bullets, one TSA screener had the presence of mind to escort a terrified  three-year-old away from her parents so that he could remove her  sandals (
sandals!). Presumably, a scanner that had just missed  2.5 pounds of ammunition would determine whether these objects were the  most clever bombs ever wrought. Needless to say, a glance at the girl’s  family was all one needed to know that they hadn’t rigged her to  explode. (The infuriating scene played out very much like 
this one.) 
  Is there nothing we can do to stop this tyranny of fairness? Some  semblance of fairness makes sense—and, needless to say, everyone’s bags  should be screened, if only because it is possible to put a bomb in  someone else’s luggage. But the TSA has a finite amount of attention:  Every moment spent frisking the Mormon Tabernacle Choir subtracts from  the scrutiny paid to more likely threats. Who could fail to understand  this? 
  Imagine how fatuous it would be to fight a war against the IRA and  yet refuse to profile the Irish? And yet this is how we seem to be  fighting our war against Islamic terrorism.
  Granted, I haven’t had to endure the experience of being continually  profiled. No doubt it would be frustrating. But if someone who looked  vaguely like Ben Stiller were wanted for crimes against humanity, I  would understand if I turned a few heads at the airport. However, if I  were forced to wait in line behind a sham search of everyone else, I  would surely resent this additional theft of my time.
  We should profile Muslims, or anyone who looks like he or she could  conceivably be Muslim, and we should be honest about it. And, again, I  wouldn’t put someone who looks like me entirely outside the bull’s-eye  (after all, what would 
Adam Gadahn  look like if he cleaned himself up?) But there are people who do not  stand a chance of being jihadists, and TSA screeners can know this at a  glance.
  Needless to say, a devout Muslim should be free to show up at the  airport dressed like Osama bin Laden, and his wives should be free to  wear burqas. But if their goal is simply to travel safely and  efficiently, wouldn’t they, too, want a system that notices people like  themselves? At a minimum, wouldn’t they want a system that 
anti-profiles—applying the minimum of attention to people who obviously pose no threat?   
  Watch some of the TSA screening videos on YouTube—like 
this one—and then imagine how this infernal stupidity will appear if we ever suffer another terrorist incident involving an airplane. 
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