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RANDOM IDIOCY
By MICHELLE MALKIN

July 22, 2005 -- WHAT'S the point? In the wake of the latest terrorist attacks in London, Mayor Bloomberg and the NYPD announced plans to conduct random searches of packages and backpacks carried by subway riders.

"Random," of course, is a synonym for blind. And we all know what it means when you put blind bureaucrats in charge of homeland security: Grannies and toddlers, prepare to be on heightened grope alert.

Reassuring al Qaeda operatives everywhere, Police Commissioner Ray Kelly pledged that his officers would not engage in "racial profiling." He also emphasized that passengers would be free to "turn around and leave" instead of consenting to a search.

Combined with New York City's inane sanctuary policy, which provides safe haven for illegal aliens, these new security-in-name-only measures prove that political correctness still trumps public safety.

A few weeks ago, I noted the vapidity of the trite phrase "heightened alert." New York's response yesterday underscores the point. It is madness to pretend that no profile exists of possible Islamist bomb plotters. It is reckless to prevent law-enforcement authorities from taking obvious national-security profiling factors (racial, ethnic, religious, nationality, behavioral or otherwise) into account. And it is deadly to refuse to enforce immigration laws in a manner that results in, yes, profiling.

"Look for things that are unusual," Commissioner Kelly implored. "Look at things through the prism of 9/11." Uh-huh. But don't dare note the obvious:

* The 7/7 London terrorist bombers were young Muslim men — all but one of them of Pakistani origin.

* All of the 1993 landmark-bombing conspirators were Muslim men from the Middle East or Sudan.

* All of the '93 World Trade Center terrorist bomb plotters were young Middle Eastern Muslim men — five of them, illegal aliens.

* The '97 New York subway-bomb plotters were also young, Middle Eastern Muslim illegals.

The terror-plotters' ability to take shelter in the city's non-profiling, non-immigration-enforcement sanctuary bears repeating: One of the '97 plotters, Gazi Ibrahim Abu Mezer, a Palestinian bomb-builder, entered the U.S. illegally through Canada in 1996 and '97. He claimed political asylum based on alleged persecution by Israelis, was released on a reduced $5,000 bond (posted by a man who was himself an illegal alien) then skipped his asylum hearing after calling his attorney and lying about his whereabouts.

In June 1997, after his lawyer withdrew Mezer's asylum claim, a federal immigration judge ordered Mezer to leave the country on a "voluntary departure order." Mezer ignored the useless piece of paper and disappeared into New York City's illegal-alien safe haven. He joined the N.Y.C. bombing plot before being arrested in July 1997 after a roommate tipped off police. His co-conspirator was another untouched illegal alien, Palestinian Lafi Khalil.

More:

* All three of the Millenium bomb plotters were young Muslim male illegal aliens from Algeria.

* Four of the U.S. Embassy bombings in Africa were Middle Eastern Muslim men.

* Look, too, at the Islamist subway bomb plotters arrested last summer in a conspiracy to attack the Herald Square subway, three police stations on Staten Island, a prison, and the Verrazano Bridge. One of the men in the August 2004 plot, Shahawar Matin Siraj, was a 22-year-old illegal alien from Pakistan based in Jackson Heights. The other, James Elshafay, was a young, Jew-hating American man of Egyptian descent.

The usual civil-liberties absolutists are already complaining about the city's non-crackdown crackdown and warning of unconstitutional racial discrimination. Minority set-asides for public construction projects to ensure "diversity" in Brooklyn? No problem. Common-sense profiling to stop Islamist terrorists? Call in Amnesty International.

Yesterday's attacks in London, however inept, show that Islamists and their sympathizers aren't playing games. Meanwhile, we're playing eeny-meeny-miney-mo on New York's subways, buses, and trains.

Remind me: What's the point?

http://www.nypost.com/postopinion/opedcolumnists/50165.htm
 
-Cp said:
RANDOM IDIOCY
By MICHELLE MALKIN

July 22, 2005 -- WHAT'S the point? In the wake of the latest terrorist attacks in London, Mayor Bloomberg and the NYPD announced plans to conduct random searches of packages and backpacks carried by subway riders.

"Random," of course, is a synonym for blind. And we all know what it means when you put blind bureaucrats in charge of homeland security: Grannies and toddlers, prepare to be on heightened grope alert.

Reassuring al Qaeda operatives everywhere, Police Commissioner Ray Kelly pledged that his officers would not engage in "racial profiling." He also emphasized that passengers would be free to "turn around and leave" instead of consenting to a search.

Combined with New York City's inane sanctuary policy, which provides safe haven for illegal aliens, these new security-in-name-only measures prove that political correctness still trumps public safety.

A few weeks ago, I noted the vapidity of the trite phrase "heightened alert." New York's response yesterday underscores the point. It is madness to pretend that no profile exists of possible Islamist bomb plotters. It is reckless to prevent law-enforcement authorities from taking obvious national-security profiling factors (racial, ethnic, religious, nationality, behavioral or otherwise) into account. And it is deadly to refuse to enforce immigration laws in a manner that results in, yes, profiling.

"Look for things that are unusual," Commissioner Kelly implored. "Look at things through the prism of 9/11." Uh-huh. But don't dare note the obvious:

* The 7/7 London terrorist bombers were young Muslim men — all but one of them of Pakistani origin.

* All of the 1993 landmark-bombing conspirators were Muslim men from the Middle East or Sudan.

* All of the '93 World Trade Center terrorist bomb plotters were young Middle Eastern Muslim men — five of them, illegal aliens.

* The '97 New York subway-bomb plotters were also young, Middle Eastern Muslim illegals.

The terror-plotters' ability to take shelter in the city's non-profiling, non-immigration-enforcement sanctuary bears repeating: One of the '97 plotters, Gazi Ibrahim Abu Mezer, a Palestinian bomb-builder, entered the U.S. illegally through Canada in 1996 and '97. He claimed political asylum based on alleged persecution by Israelis, was released on a reduced $5,000 bond (posted by a man who was himself an illegal alien) then skipped his asylum hearing after calling his attorney and lying about his whereabouts.

In June 1997, after his lawyer withdrew Mezer's asylum claim, a federal immigration judge ordered Mezer to leave the country on a "voluntary departure order." Mezer ignored the useless piece of paper and disappeared into New York City's illegal-alien safe haven. He joined the N.Y.C. bombing plot before being arrested in July 1997 after a roommate tipped off police. His co-conspirator was another untouched illegal alien, Palestinian Lafi Khalil.

More:

* All three of the Millenium bomb plotters were young Muslim male illegal aliens from Algeria.

* Four of the U.S. Embassy bombings in Africa were Middle Eastern Muslim men.

* Look, too, at the Islamist subway bomb plotters arrested last summer in a conspiracy to attack the Herald Square subway, three police stations on Staten Island, a prison, and the Verrazano Bridge. One of the men in the August 2004 plot, Shahawar Matin Siraj, was a 22-year-old illegal alien from Pakistan based in Jackson Heights. The other, James Elshafay, was a young, Jew-hating American man of Egyptian descent.

The usual civil-liberties absolutists are already complaining about the city's non-crackdown crackdown and warning of unconstitutional racial discrimination. Minority set-asides for public construction projects to ensure "diversity" in Brooklyn? No problem. Common-sense profiling to stop Islamist terrorists? Call in Amnesty International.

Yesterday's attacks in London, however inept, show that Islamists and their sympathizers aren't playing games. Meanwhile, we're playing eeny-meeny-miney-mo on New York's subways, buses, and trains.

Remind me: What's the point?

http://www.nypost.com/postopinion/opedcolumnists/50165.htm

I think the point is that there are laws against profiling and to do so would meet with TREMENDOUS opposition. With random searches at least SOMEBODY will be searched. Opponents to random searches need to address thier concerns to the ACLU.
 
Dillo is wrong on this, opposition needs to be addressed to your lawmakers, state and national-it's time to stop this idiocy. Laws have to be rewritten, now.
 
Kathianne said:
Dillo is wrong on this, opposition needs to be addressed to your lawmakers, state and national-it's time to stop this idiocy. Laws have to be rewritten, now.

LOL Something wrong with thousands of complaints pouring into the ACLU?

Sure--lets try to change the laws but you know who's gonna oppose that attempt?

The ACLU !

and you know who has been backing up the ACLU? SCOTUS !
 
dilloduck said:
LOL Something wrong with thousands of complaints pouring into the ACLU?

Sure--lets try to change the laws but you know who's gonna oppose that attempt?

The ACLU !

and you know who has been backing up the ACLU? SCOTUS !

Exactly the point. The ACLU is not going to change, so perhaps you have time to waste, but many do not. The laws are what is going to have to change. :beer:
 
Kathianne said:
Exactly the point. The ACLU is not going to change, so perhaps you have time to waste, but many do not. The laws are what is going to have to change. :beer:

The ACLU effectivley changes, abolishes an alters the purpose of laws that have been passed by our legislature and signed by our president. Any law that is passed that they don't like will be challenged legally by attorneys with millions of dollars to back them up. We can pass all the laws we want but when local communities cannot afford to fight the ACLU, they cave. Thier legal power is so strong that they have succeeded in even convincing SCOTUS to find in thier favor.
The only "law" that has a chance of succeeding would be one that abolishes them.
 
dilloduck said:
The ACLU effectivley changes, abolishes an alters the purpose of laws that have been passed by our legislature and signed by our president. Any law that is passed that they don't like will be challenged legally by attorneys with millions of dollars to back them up. We can pass all the laws we want but when local communities cannot afford to fight the ACLU, they cave. Thier legal power is so strong that they have succeeded in even convincing SCOTUS to find in thier favor.
The only "law" that has a chance of succeeding would be one that abolishes them.

I dislike much of what the ACLU has done, but this is incoherent and :tinfoil:
 
Kathianne said:
I dislike much of what the ACLU has done, but this is incoherent and :tinfoil:

Incoherent and :tinfoil:? What part of the Soros legal revolutionaries don't you understand ?

The conservatives came out to vote and spoke rather loudly as to the direction they want this country to take. The ACLU continues to subvert this mandate with lawsuits-and they WIN. The future of our country is being decided in our courts, not in the ballot box where it belongs.
 
dilloduck said:
Incoherent and :tinfoil:? What part of the Soros legal revolutionaries don't you understand ?

The conservatives came out to vote and spoke rather loudly as to the direction they want this country to take. The ACLU continues to subvert this mandate with lawsuits-and they WIN. The future of our country is being decided in our courts, not in the ballot box where it belongs.

Elections, no matter how great a landslide, do not make law or change the constitution.
 
Kathianne said:
Elections, no matter how great a landslide, do not make law or change the constitution.

My point exactly. Too bad the folks that claim to represent us aren't getting the message. Conservatives would be wise to use the legal loophole in the judicial system like the ACLU has.
 
After watching you two go back and forth..........
violent-smiley-027.gif
violent-smiley-041.gif
I can only conclude that both of you are correct. The ACLU stands for the American Criminals Liberation Unit and will oppose profiling. IF enough people contact the ACLU, they might just be able to blunt them, but I doubt it. It is worth a try. Getting ahold of your lawmakers is going to be futile as well. Any law they pass will be deemed unconstitutional. So you are both correct, in the opposite direction. It will be equally futile no matter which tack you take.

So, here is the better answer.

First: Remote Cameras all over the place. If it's public, then it's on film. They may not stop a crime, but they will help prosecute or investigate it.

Second: Instead of Random searching, do a 100% search. Will it backlog? Yes? Will the citizens be pissed. Hail Yeah. Do I care? Nope. The backlogged pissed off late for work commuter will call his/her lawmaker and then maybe we will get permission to profile people and aggressively investigate to the limits of technology, motivation, and intuition.

IF nothing else the fight will force lawmakers to take a side instead of waffling.
 

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