An American standing up to the government’s ever-growing need to encroach on civil liberties is always a heart-warming experience. So John Tyner joins William Kostric in the ranks of American heroes canonized by this blog.
Tyner, while trying to board an airplane, was faced with the choice between submitting to a full-body scan, revealing the entire outline of his body, testicles, buttocks, and all, or submitting to an open-palm rubdown beginning in his groin area. After refusing both, and after more than twenty minutes of deliberation on the part of airport security staff, Tyner was escorted from the airport.
The reaction of most Americans has been as slack-jawed as Chris Matthews’ reaction to William Kostric’s audacity. People can’t understand why anyone would refuse a full-body scan or an invasive pat-down. “What’s the big deal?” says one Albany resident.
Indeed, while “What’s the big deal?” is an excellent argument for nudism – after all, I’m not concealing illegal drugs in my underwear, so why should I wear any? – it suffers the same blindness that Kostric’s opponents suffered. They did not realize that sometimes we must exercise our rights just so that they are not forgotten. An unexercised right is a right soon forgotten. Invite your friend into your house once, and he is grateful. Do it ten times, and soon he drops by unannounced. If your friend is Uncle Sam, after a couple years, he’s taken over the master bedroom. In just the same way, in the years since September 11th, our right against unreasonable search and seizure has eroded, bit by bit, year by year.
Another argument frequently made in defense of these searches – several times during Tyner’s encounter (videos available on his blog), as well as numerous times by lawyer apologists later on – is that “everyone else is submitting peacefully, so why can’t you?” I fondly recall using this argument to my mother when I was six years old, and sought an allowance as large as my friends had. This argument is easily answered by Tyner’s own words: “If I don’t object, nobody else will.”
It is high time that somebody objected to the cattle-herding-like experience of airport security, and high time other people followed suit. Apologists for Uncle Sam – mostly lawyers – are already all over the airwaves explaining to us why our rights don’t, technically, apply. The fact is, they don’t apply because we choose not to apply them. Some citizen, wanting to get somewhere in a hurry, was the first to waive his right against unreasonable search and seizure for the sake of convenience. Soon, others followed suit. All we have to do is stop waiving our rights, stop flying until this atrocious violation of our privacy and our Fourth Amendment right is ended. Uncle Sam, faced with torpedoing the airline industry, or taking a step back from the brink of Big Brother, might, just might do the right thing.
What I’m suggesting is a complete boycott of the airline industry. This is not realistic. But what is realistic is the National Opt-Out Day being promoted by Brian Sodergren. I heartily endorse this idea, in which passengers insist on the more labor-intensive pat-down as opposed to the nude body scan. However, an even better idea might be for every passenger waiting in the airport security lines to write down or memorize this passage, and recite it aloud while undergoing their searches:
“The right of the people to be secure in their persons, house, papers, and effects against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the places to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.”
The romance of hearing this passage, the highest law of our land, echoing through the airport corridors that Big Brother has taken over, gives me goosebumps. Imagine a thousand passengers chanting in unison this passage from our Constitution. Imagine their voices drowning out the Big Brother pronouncements echoed over the airport speakers that “security is our number one concern”. For indeed security is not our first concern. Freedom is our first concern. Freedom from oppression, freedom from tyranny, freedom from unreasonable and arbitrary search and seizure. Imagine the patriotism and courage of even a single passenger reciting this passage as some disinterested Gestapo watch his nude body marching past the scanner.
This idea, to say these words, the words of our Constitution, is not easy. Watching John Tyner’s videos of his security encounter, there are times when you can hear the fear in his voice. He is dealing with a bunch of callous uniforms who don’t give a crap about him, and would like to see him arrested for messing up their day. To himself, he’s a law-abiding citizen who has done nothing wrong; to them, he is less than an insect. The outrageous coup de grâce is the security officer at the end who tells Tyner that the TSA is going to “bring a case against him” and “he had better make it easier on himself”.
The government can take our freedom. They can drown it out in technicalities, surround us with complaisant sheep, and browbeat us with pushy security personnel. But they can’t make us forget that sacred text, and those visionary Founding Fathers who dreamed that our right “shall not be violated.”
Posted by Catiline 

