The Republicans control the House of Representatives and are bracing for a long battle over the Presidents health care proposal. In the spirit of bipartisanship and sanity, I propose that the first thing on the chopping block should be an ineffective organization that wastes money, violates our rights, and encourages us to make decisions that imperil our safety. Im talking about the Transportation Security Administration. Bipartisan support should be immediate. For fiscal conservatives, its hard to come up with a more wasteful agency than the TSA. For privacy advocates, eliminating an organization that requires you to choose between a nude body scan or genital groping in order to board a plane should be a no-brainer.
But wont that compromise safety? I doubt it. The airlines have enormous sums of money riding on passenger safety, and the notion that a government bureaucracy has better incentives to provide safe travels than airlines with billions of dollars worth of capital and goodwill on the line strains credibility. This might be beside the point: in 2003, William Anderson incisively argued that some of the steps that airlines (and passengers) would have needed to take to prevent the 9/11 disaster probably would have been illegal.
The odds of dying from a terrorist attack are much lower than the odds of dying from doing any of a number of incredibly mundane things we do every day. You are almost certainly more likely to die or be injured driving to the airport than you are to be injured by a terrorist once youre in the air, even without a TSA. Indeed, once you have successfully made it to the airport, the most dangerous part of your trip is over. Until its time to drive home, that is.
Last week, I picked up a TSA Customer Comment Card. First, its important that we get one thing straight: I am not the TSAs customer. The term customer denotes an honorable relationship in which I and a seller voluntarily trade value for value. Theres nothing voluntary about my relationship with the TSA.
A much more appropriate term for our relationship is subject. The TSA stands between me and those with whom I would like to trade, and I am not allowed to without their blessing.
Second, the TSA doesnt provide security. It provides security theater, as Jeffrey Goldberg argues. The kid with the slushie in Tucson before the three-ounce-rule? The little girl in the princess costume at an airport I dont remember? The countless grandmothers? Im more likely to be killed tripping over my own two feet while Im distracted by the lunacy of it all than I am to be killed by one of them in a terrorist attack. The moral cost of all this is considerable, as James Otteson and Bradley Birzer argue.
For even more theater of the absurd, consider that the TSA screens pilots. If a pilot wants to bring a plane down, he or she can probably do it with bare hands, and certainly without weapons. Its also not entirely crazy to think that an airline will take measures to keep their pilots from turning their multi-million dollar planes into flying bombs. Through the index funds in my retirement portfolio, Im pretty sure I own stock in at least one airline, and Im pretty sure airline managers know that cutting corners on security isnt in my best interests as a shareholder.
And the items being confiscated? Are nailclippers and aftershave the tools of terrorists? What about the plastic cup of water I was told to dispose of because it could be acid (I quote the TSA screener) in New Orleans before the three-ounce rule? What about the can of Coke I was relieved of after a flight from Copenhagen to Atlanta a few months ago? I would be more scared of someone giving a can of Coke to a child and contributing to the onset of juvenile diabetes than of using it to hide something that could compromise the safety of an aircraft.
And finally, most screening devices are ineffective because anyone who is serious about getting contraband on an airplane can smuggle it in a body cavity or a surgical implant. The scanners the TSA uses arent going to stop them.
Over the next few years, were headed for a bitter, partisan clash over legislative priorities. Before the battle starts, lets reach for that low-hanging, bipartisan fruit. Lets abolish the TSA.