Gotta love scubaboard At least we both like to dive, thats something we have in common.
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Gotta love scubaboard At least we both like to dive, thats something we have in common.
I am done arguing with anyone on the basis of demographics, I can live knowing we dont agree on that. I would like to return to the original point of this thread, if you would like to argue anything else start a post and have at it yourself.
I agree that you need to profile an individual to narrow the down the search for people looking to harm United States interests and citizens. However the bases of that search should not be race, ethnicity, religion, or nationality...
Hrmm so out of the 5,771,939,007 people on earth you saw the 1,482,596,925 Muslims all dancing in the street, 26% of the ENTIRE world population was celebrating this?
Stats obtained from here:...
An interesting statement that needs context to fully understand what he meant. If the statement stands on its own, it appears to me to be someone that has been asked similar questions many times and does not have a direct answer to them. The fall back position is that "we do what we do and you have to accept it." I cannot agree with this position. The TSA, or similar agency in other countries, provides a service to help maintain the security of air travel. They do not set policy, they should be following and consistently applying policy. A number of questions that were asked (those that were not facetious) seemed to be aimed at why the approach is significantly different across the whole TSA. I don't have any trouble with certain aspects, but when there is a different interpretation or understanding of the policy such that an item is acceptable in one location, but not acceptable in another, then it demonstrates a lack of consistency. This is troubling....One point that this gentleman made was that flying is not a right that you have it is a privilege and therefore by flying you accept the security screening and its procedures.
Wow, I didn't realize that every single muslim in the US was dancing in the street all at one time. I can't imagine how I missed that. Come to think of it...
The "its a privilege not a right" line just irkes me. I am sorry but its neither its a service I have paid for. and the screening is a service Americans pay for. a privilege means they are doing it out of the goodness of their heart, they are not. They are doing security because congress mandated it. and I am flying because I paid for it, and the company I paid is doing it to make a profit not to do me a favor.
Wow, I didn't realize that every single muslim in the US was dancing in the street all at one time. I can't imagine how I missed that. Come to think of it...
Where does anyone say this, I searched but haven't found the thread?
...it hasn't been one member of the muslim community, it's been muslims as a whole communities who have indicated by dancing in the street when it comes to killing Americans, who want you dead...
I think you made a mistake, as it hasn't been one member of the muslim community, it's been muslims as a whole communities who have indicated by dancing in the street when it comes to killing Americans, who want you dead because they don't believe in freedom of religion, freedom of speech, freedom of the press, ect., 911 was more than just a crime and an act.
Sorry, but I just had to point this out. Now as to the original point of the thread.
Thank you for posting some of the response that you received.
An interesting statement that needs context to fully understand what he meant. If the statement stands on its own, it appears to me to be someone that has been asked similar questions many times and does not have a direct answer to them. The fall back position is that "we do what we do and you have to accept it." I cannot agree with this position. The TSA, or similar agency in other countries, provides a service to help maintain the security of air travel. They do not set policy, they should be following and consistently applying policy. A number of questions that were asked (those that were not facetious) seemed to be aimed at why the approach is significantly different across the whole TSA. I don't have any trouble with certain aspects, but when there is a different interpretation or understanding of the policy such that an item is acceptable in one location, but not acceptable in another, then it demonstrates a lack of consistency. This is troubling.