The Transportation Security Administration is giving away hundreds of its full-body scanners to prisons across the country. The machines which produce ultra-revealing images of passengers to reveal hidden weapons and contraband have come under fire from researchers and doctors who are concerned with the potential health effects of radiation exposure. Because of their high price and potential for causing cancer and other illnesses, activists are raising questions as to whether prisons acquiring these scanners is worth the costs. RT's Lindsay France discusses the issue with Danny Panzella, a journalist at Truth Square TV.
Over 150 radiation spewing body scanners, previously used by the TSA in
the nation's airports, have been redeployed into environments much more
fitting of their use -- prisons.
The machines, previously used to
digitally strip search people who have had all their rights taken away
by the authorities, are now being used to... digitally strip search
people who have had all their rights taken away by the authorities.
However,
because the subjects of the radiation firing scanners are now hardened
criminals, it really doesn't matter that their slave masters can see
naked images of them and have a right old laugh about it. It's also a
fact that prisoners have absolutely zero right to be concerned about
their privacy, according to the TSA.
Also, who cares if prisoners
get cancer -- right? There'll be no more nagging requests from members
of Congress demanding that the National Academy of Sciences explore
whether people are exposed to unsafe levels of radiation during the
screening process.
The truth is that these machines would still
be in the airports had it not been for the surfacing of allegations that
the manufacturer, Rapiscan, manipulated operational tests on the
machines, and the fact that the company was too incompetent to develop
the "stick man" software that masks naked images produced by the
scanners.
It was only after years of relentless campaigning and
complaining to Congress by privacy advocates and everyday Americans
alike, that any action was taken with regards to the machines.
Last
year, the TSA came under strict scrutiny from Congress over the
mothballing of $14 million worth of body scanners. All in all, the 250
backscatter scanners the agency now has are worth a combined total of
$40 million.
A total of 154 of those machines have been
transferred to state and local prisons in Iowa, Virginia and Louisiana.
Sheriffs in Arkansas also received five of those machines this month.
The remaining 96 scanners are still gathering dust in a Rapiscan
warehouse.
"TSA and the vendor are working with other government
agencies interested in receiving the units for their security mission
needs and for use in a different environment," TSA spokesman Ross
Feinstein said.
Wonderful. The one remaining snag is that the
machines don't work. A TSA whistleblower revealed earlier this year
that even the trainers who taught screeners how to use the scanners knew
that they did not work.
"They're shit," he said, shrugging. He
said we wouldn't be able to distinguish plastic explosives from body fat
and that guns were practically invisible if they were turned sideways
in a pocket.
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flight security tsa prison jail states u.s. 2nd american
revolution missing flight mh370 We quickly found out the trainer was
not kidding: Officers discovered that the machines were good at
detecting just about everything besides cleverly hidden explosives and
guns. The only thing more absurd than how poorly the full-body scanners
performed was the incredible amount of time the machines wasted for
everyone.
Engineer John Corbett independently exposed the fact
that the scanners can be fooled by sewing a metallic object into the
side of one's clothing, rendering the entire fleet of machines virtually
useless.
A recently discovered Homeland Security report also
noted that federal investigators had "identified vulnerabilities in the
screening process" involving the scanners.
Multiple other security experts are on record saying that the scanners are ineffective.
Of
course, the fact that the machines have zero real security capabilities
is a side note. If $40 million of hardware was left to rot in
warehouses, the government would look slightly worse than if it were
deployed into prisons.
Health safety concerns raised during
congressional hearings about the radiation emitted by the scanners
haven't been resolved. But rumors that TSA agents were mocking
everyone's naked bodies turned out to be very, very true.
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