TAG | security
I Have A Free Range Kid
May. 25, 2009 · 5 Comments

Skye Danler
Each week Skye has Math Team one day after school. I usually leave the other two at home and drive to Skye’s school to pick her up. A few weeks ago I was stuck in Portland and unable to make it in time. I called Skye and told her she could either wait for me to arrive or just walk home.
Her excitement was palpable. “Really?”, she asked. We went over a few ground rules and basic pedestrian safety. I told her she had to call me when she left and again when she arrived home. She did, and has been walking ever since. A few times I’ve biked her scooter to her so she could scoot home instead of walking. Once she met Kirsten and I at the Dyer Library and gave to us her backpack so she wouldn’t have to carry it. (more…)
free range · freerangekids · independent · parenting · safety · security · skye · society · trust
The Farce That Is TSA
Nov. 26, 2008 · 3 Comments
A few short days after terrorists flew jets into the World Trade Center I went through the TSA checkpoint at Mid-Continent Airport in Wichita, Kansas with a box cutter in plain sight. It was an accident; I had forgotten it was clipped in my laptop case. The TSA agent searched the case and made me turn on my laptop so she could be assured it wasn’t a disguised bomb. She missed the razor blade and passed me through without question.
Sometime later I passed through another TSA checkpoint with Kirsten. They confiscated a tiny bottle of lotion from Kirsten and completely missed the folded-up scissors in her purse.
The Transportation Security Administration (TSA) is a joke. In an article published in the November 2008 issue of The Atlantic magazine, Jeffrey Goldberg calls it security theater.
The Things He Carried
Jeffrey Goldberg, The Atlantic, November 2008
In this interesting essay Goldberg not only describes how to foil the TSA security measures, he tells how he did it, over and over again. What is more interesting than evading security is whether or not any of that theater makes us any safer. Why wouldn’t a terrorist simply detonate their bomb in the totally unsecure TSA checkpoint where people are congregated in the interior of the busy airport? Or perhaps they’d just walk into the airport through the back door.
government · richard reid · safety · security · terrorism · travel · tsa
