BradG wrote:I respect that crack at it AnsettA330, you have at least given me a direct answer. I think it's a touch vague though.
As for why I defend privacy; I believe in freedom. Freedom of speech, association, privacy and the press. I believe in today's world, it is important to defend your freedoms against governments that seem intent on taking away more and more of it each day. Remember, once a civil liberty is lost, it is very rarely gained back without armed revolution.
Of course criminality is much more than terrorists, but do you want to be searched and ID checked randomly, just on the off chance the police might catch a few criminals here and there they otherwise might not have? You'd also only be catching people with outstanding warrants. Laws already exist that allow police to do such things if they have at least reasonable suspicion that you have or you are about to commit a crime. Just randomly checking people is invasive of their privacy and probably a huge waste of time and resources.
I have no issues with real security measures that achieve something; metal detectors will pick up a weapon, body scanners would see a weapon or drugs, sniffer dogs can identify explosives or drugs, but randomly asking for someones ID at an airport will do what? I dunno..., that's my question.
No Brad, I'm not taking up your university challenge of 20 words or less. I don't think you're considering our rights to live in as safe and orderly environment as possible. For this to happen, then some "freedoms" have to be infringed upon. This is why none of us for example can go down to our local gun store and purchase a $200 Chinese SKS assault rifle and a truck load of ammo. You indeed have freedom of speech, so use it. If you feel so strongly about this, contact the media, write to your local MP as I have suggested.
The whole idea of ID checks is it adds another layer/skin to the security "onion". The check in area of Australian airports I think lacks a visible security presence. Visit other airports around the world and they have much greater and heavily armed security often sporting MP5s or whatever they are. Visit Paris, London, Istanbul, Singapore to name a few to see this. Of course our airports do have security hopefully close at hand, but to me it is not remotely as visible as I've seen at other airports around the world. I see your example of security at Ben Gurion airport was torpedoed well and truly!
I'm no security expert at all and neither are you. I'd suggest though that I am more travelled than you. I've been to some real shitholes on this globe as part of my work, saw the Religious Police confront a mate's wife in Dhahran when they zoomed over in a Humvee c/w M-60 to ask where her husband was (was 200 metres away at the time showing me the blown up remains of Khobar Towers apartment building), had a PLA soldier point a SKS/AK-47 towards my taxi because I was stupid enough to point my camera at some PLA building on way to Shanghai airport, so I've had some experience seeing how one's "freedoms" evaporate in other countries all in the name of "security". Our freedoms are immensely greater here than in many other countries I've visited. There is a fine balance our government must make to uphold freedoms and yet protect us all from those that would do us harm. Security personnel are trained to look for certain types of behavior. Allowing a ID check is one more tool that could in fact help identify would be crims or terrorists. What if security personnel have a name of a would be perp, but no photo? Or the reverse, they have a grainy security camera image of a suspected villian, but no ID? All this is adding to the DETERRENCE effect - making it that much harder for would be perp's - another layer to the "onion". I am no security expert, but these are just a couple of ideas I've plucked out of my brain. Your notion this is a step towards some kind of police state I think is ludicrous. What do you think will happen if someone at the airport feels that security personnel went too far with infringing their rights and privacy? They will be speed dialling Slater & Gordon or Shine Lawyers, etc. There will be compaints to airport and airline management (with feedback from them to government authorities), perhaps a law suit, a spot on the 7:30 Report or A Current Affair. You are taking one security measure and extrapolating it as a start of some police state. Sorry Brad, just can't see this happening. Apol's for taking more than 20 words.