Thanks, Peter. 

 

I think you are right about this. 

 

N

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of 
[email protected]
Sent: Sunday, November 21, 2010 1:34 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [FRIAM] More Light, Less Touchy-Feely

 

I have followed the correspondence on enhanced scanning with usual mixture of 
shock and incredulity.  Do people object because it’s offensive or because it’s 
ineffective?  It would be unpleasant but, for me, unpleasanter to be blown up 
by a device that had avoided the enhanced scanner.  But I haven’t enough info 
to make any definitive judgment.  In particular on two matters.  It seems that 
new bomb compounds can be concealed by flesh masses in exotic parts of the body 
without detection by the old scanners.  I thought that the Xmas underwear 
bomber had proved this. It seems that old folk, handicapped people, children 
and infants are ideal subjects for planted bombs, with no adverse fall-out for 
the Bad Hats if detected. In this wicked world the innocent are always punished.

If correct this is pretty awful news.

The strategy is for a bomber to finesse that he’d be directed through the old 
system, pass and end up undetected on his planned flight.  If an enhanced scan 
is required, then he should avoid this by all means while offering to take the 
old, ineffectual scan, and withdraw, undetected, unidentified and with his 
powder dry, to try again another day.

In such circumstances he should behave like a gullible but superior person 
(e.g. a Friamer) and behave with all the histrionics necessary for the 
exasperated TSA to simply tell him to get lost.  So this dramatic response, 
that some objectors seem to have chosen, and others to approve of, would make 
the objector highly suspect, and rightly so.



Peter Lissaman, Da Vinci Ventures

Expertise is not knowing everything, but knowing what to look for.

1454 Miracerros Loop South, Santa Fe, New Mexico 87505,USA
tel:(505)983-7728 

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