http://www.lessig.org/blog/archives/cat_heroes.shtml

>From John Gilmore: 

It's been interesting reading. I'd like to respond. I suppose the obvious
place to start is with Seth Finkelstein's trolls. (Of course he is doing
what he accuses me of � making outrageous statements and then chuckling
when people take them seriously).

I flew to London on Virgin Atlantic two days after the BA incident. I am
happy to report that I wore the button, and that neither their
passengers, cabin stewards, nor pilots were hysterical. I wore the button
in London. I crossed the Channel where the crew gave the shorted possible
glance at my passport. I wore it yesterday in Paris.

The button is not a joke. It's a serious statement which one may agree or
disagree with. The point that people seem to be missing is that a
�suspected terrorist� is not the same as a �terrorist�. Yet, that's
exactly the conflation that has occurred: treat every citizen like a
suspect, and every suspect like a terrorist.

In London and Paris the newspapers are taking Guantanamo seriously �
because their own citizens are imprisoned there without trials. The
corrupt US government was careful to remove the one US citizen they found
� but the citizens of other sovereign countries, even those of very close
war allies, are in prison. Without trial and without lawyers, and with
intent to try them in front of judges sworn to take orders from the
President. I have no doubt that American citizens, such as myself, would
be treated in the same way if the public and the courts would let our
fascist leader get away with it.

On the BA flight, in my carry-on bag, I had brought the current issue of
Reason magazine, which has a cover story with my picture and the label
�Suspected Terrorist�. (It didn't even occur to me to censor my reading
material on the flight; I must need political retraining. I hadn't read
most of the issue, including Declan's piece in it, plus I wanted to show
it to Europeans I met on my vacation.) During the British Airways
incident I never removed the magazine from my bag, but supposing I had
done so, and merely sat in my seat and read it, would that have been
grounds to remove me from the flight (button or no button)?

I am not a lawyer (lucky me!) but I do follow legal issues. The carriage
of passengers by common carriers is governed by their tariffs, filed with
the government. Common carriers are NOT permitted to refuse service to
anybody for any reason. In return they are not held liable for the acts
of their customers (e.g. transporting dangerous substances, purloined
intellectual property, etc). BA's �Conditions of Carriage� are part of
their tariffs (other parts include their prices, etc). You will note
paragraph 7: they can refuse passage�7) If you have not obeyed the
instructions of our ground staff or a member of the crew of the aircraft
relating to safety or security. The crew ONLY has the authority to order
passengers around when the orders relate to safety or security. An order
to cease reading a book would not qualify.

Some people here (including Mr. Troll) think that the minor risk that
someone on the plane will have a panic attack after reading a tiny
button, makes the button a �safety� issue, as if I had falsely cried
�fire� and risked starting a stampede. Such people seem to be holding me
responsible for the actions of others. Were I on such a plane, whether or
not I was wearing a button, the person I'd ask them to remove is the one
having a panic attack, not the one sitting quietly in their seat.

(Similarly, some people hold me responsible for the inconvenience to
passengers. As Virgin Atlantic demonstrated, the airline were in complete
control of whether or not to inconvenience the passengers.)

Let me also say in my defense that I seldom fly these days, so I am not
used to life in a gulag. I had zero expectation that my refusal to doff a
button would result in the captain returning the plane to the gate. But
even if I did fly often, my response would be the same: to constantly
push back against the rules that turn a free people into the slaves of a
totalitarian regime. I push back using the rights granted me by the
constitutional structure of the country, plus my own intelligence and
resources. Way too many of you readers are like the Poles who, under
orders from swaggering bullies, built the brick wall around their own
ghetto, as shown in the award-winning movie �The Pianist� (which I
watched on the Virgin Atlantic flight). The US is currently filling the
swaggering bully role at home, in Iraq, and in the rest of the world.
(Come out to free countries and ask around, if you disagree.)

Here are some interesting incidents relating to these issues:

Dr. Bob Rajcoomar gets a settlement and formal apology from TSA � only
after suing with help from ACLU. Dr. Rajcoomar, a U.S. citizen and Lt.
Colonel in the United States Army Reserve, is of Indian descent. After an
in-flight incident involving an unruly passenger, Air marshals handcuffed
Dr. Rajcoomar without explanation and took him into the custody of
Philadelphia police. His wife Dorothy, who was also on the flight, was
given no information on what had happened to her husband. Because the
authorities confiscated Dr. Rajcoomar's cellular phone, she had no way to
contact him. After four hours of detention, TSA personnel told him that
he had been detained because air marshals on board the flight did not
�like the way he looked.� The agency's official explanation for Dr.
Rajcoomar's treatment is that while on board, Dr. Rajcoomar had been
observing the actions of the air marshals �too closely�! 

ACLU sues four airlines over ejecting passengers because of their race.
Subsequent news in these lawsuits is that at least three of them have
survived the airlines' �motion to dismiss�, i.e. the court thinks there
is a real injury to these peoples' rights.


Passenger detained for speaking with journalist about a NASA nuclear
rocket project, while waiting for his airplane.

TSA's CAPPS 2 will track every passenger by their date of birth, home
address, home phone, and full name � and stop or search anyone based on
secret criteria. The TSA's August 1 announcement makes every airport a
�law enforcement checkpoint� which you cannot pass through without having
your �papers in order�.


TSA publishes rules demanding ID on passenger boats. (TSA and cruise
lines have already been requiring these IDs, but under unpublished
regulations. Ditto for Amtrak trains and long-haul bus lines.)

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