Big Man Stepping on Small Man By Selwyn Duke

With all the bad press the TSA has received recently, we can’t be sure if the acronym stands for Transportation Security Administration, Touches Sensitive Areas or Truly Scandalous Attention.  But, for sure, its pat downs and sci-fi radiation screeners give many of us another good reason to avoid the increasingly unfriendly skies.  Yet while the TSA right now has supplanted the IRS as the bureaucracy we most love to hate, its policies are merely part of a longstanding cultural trend: the failure to recognize that the good of the many outweighs the good of the few.

It’s the same reason why certain cities, most notably London, are now surveilling their residents with thousands of video cameras.  If you’re not willing to administer punishment sufficient to deter all the criminally inclined save a few intractable miscreants, some of whom you can catch, the only other solution is to have an all-seeing Big Brother that can catch all.  It’s much like treating a cancer: If you cannot target just the affected tissue, the only other solution is to treat the whole body. 

Because the former is preferable not just in medicine but also law enforcement, behavioral-sciences specialists long ago developed the method called “profiling.”  Unfortunately, social-engineering specialists soon after discredited the universal application of profiling with a method called propaganda.  Consequently, when we want to administer targeted treatment in the effort to thwart terrorism, we’re told that it’s “racial profiling” and beyond consideration.  This is utter nonsense. 

As I have said before, “racial profiling” is much like “assault weapon”: It’s an emotionally charged term designed to manipulate the public.  In reality, there are only two types of profiling: good profiling and bad profiling.  What’s the difference?  Good profiling is a method by which law enforcement can accurately determine the probability that an individual has committed a crime or has criminal intent; bad profiling makes that determination less accurate.  Good profiling considers all relevant factors — age, sex, dress, behavior and, yes, race, religion and ethnicity — without regard for political or social concerns.  Bad profiling subordinates common sense, criminological science and security to political correctness.

Good profiling is also fair.  That is to say, it discriminates on the correct basis: If a group — any group — commits an inordinate amount of a given crime, it receives greater scrutiny.  Period.  Bad profiling is invidiously discriminatory.  It says, “Hey, if you’re male, you’ll be viewed with a jaundiced eye.  If you’re young, then you, too, will be viewed more suspiciously.  Don’t like it?  Take it up with those in your group who commit crimes!”  There is no talk of stamping out “sex profiling” or “age profiling.”  But when we propose applying the same criteria to higher-crime-incidence groups sheltered by the thought police’s umbrella of protection, we hear shouts of “racial profiling!”  There then are news stories and Dept. of Injustice investigations, and people lose their jobs.  

Good profiling is also nothing unusual; it’s just the application of common sense within the sphere of law enforcement and something we all do continually.   If you cross the street upon seeing a bunch of rough-hewn young men walking your way, you’ve just engaged in profiling.  You’ve also done so if you cut a wide swath around a leashed dog; after all, he may be a very nice pooch, but, since canines are known to sometimes bite, your action is prudent.  And it doesn’t mean you’re hateful or bent on discriminating against rough young men and dogs but simply that you’re in a situation in which the cost of obtaining more information would be too great.  Consequently, as Professor Walter Williams wrote, “We can think of profiling in general as a practice where people use an observable or known physical attribute as a proxy or estimator of some other unobservable or unknown attribute.”  He then goes on to write:

Let's look at a few profiling examples to see which ones you'd like outlawed. …Some racial and ethnic groups have higher incidence and mortality from various diseases than the national average. The rates of death from cardiovascular diseases are about 30 percent higher among black adults than among white adults. Cervical cancer rates are five times higher among Vietnamese women in the U.S. than among white women. Pima Indians of Arizona have the highest known diabetes rates in the world. Prostate cancer is nearly twice as common among black men as white men.

Knowing patient race or ethnicity, what might be considered as racial profiling, can assist medical providers in the delivery of more effective medical services.

Now, should doctors be prosecuted for taking these statistics into consideration when delivering medical care?  If not, why would we prosecute law enforcement for considering racial and ethnic factors (along with sex, age and other characteristics) when tackling the moral disease known as criminality?

This brings us back to our current security concerns.  The profile here is very specific, as it’s a rare person who will sacrifice his life to destroy an airplane.  Protestants aren’t doing that.  Catholics aren’t doing it.  Nor are Buddhists, Taoists, Zoroastrians or Hare Krishna.  In our age, this is a method of people who 100 percent of the time are Muslim jihadists and 99 percent of the time are non-white.  And only the idiotic — or the suicidal — ignore such correlation.

Now, we all know what kind of suicidal idiocy engenders such blindness: a politically correct brand that panders to the sensitivities of vocal, politically favored minority groups such as Muslims.  But what about the sensitivities of millions of Americans who have to tolerate intrusive body scanning and pat-downs and watch their children subjected to same?  And the kicker is that when Janet Incompetano was asked if Muslim women sporting hijabs would have to go through the same full-body pat downs, she equivocated and said, “adjustments will be made where they need to be made” and “With respect to that particular issue, I think there will be more to come.”  Are you kidding me?  Is this Total Recall meets One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest?  Muslim women are the demographic second-most likely to commit Islamic terrorism.  If they aren’t subjected to scrutiny, what is the point (besides “security theater”)?

Moreover, why should Muslim’s imperative of modesty be respected but not others people’s?  Not only do devout Catholics place a premium on the quality as well, but millions of other individuals find it very offensive to be exposed in front of strangers and groped.  Yet we’re told that the very group criminological science dictates should receive more scrutiny may receive less due to political correctness. And if this actually happens, it will be yet another example of de facto Sharia law in deference to an alien culture and dhimmitude for us infidels.  

Of course, I realize that Incompetano’s equivocation doesn’t necessarily mean a Muslim dispensation is in the offing (although I put nothing past leftists), as she might simply have been overcome by the typical liberal reluctance to express unfashionable truths.  But is this an excuse?  If she expects Americans to tolerate the indignity of intrusive security screening and basically tells them it’s tough luck if they don’t like it, she has a duty to be just as firm with the over-coddled Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) and its minions.  And to not be so was a slap in the face to you, me and anyone who has ever fought for our freedoms.  How dare she?

To cement this point, I’ll say that this is not first and foremost about whether a given security measure is or isn’t prudent.  It’s also unrealistic to think that we can have satisfactory security without some inconvenience.  The point is that whatever methods are settled upon — screening devices, bomb-sniffing dogs, pat downs, etc. — political correctness must not factor into the decision.  But it does, and this robs the government of all credibility.  And I, for one, do not take its efforts seriously.

The truth is that we don’t just have security theater but, sadly, war-on-terrorism theater.  We launch foreign military campaigns while leaving our back door to Mexico — through which terrorists and WMDs can pass — unsecured.  We even announce the charade by calling the conflict “the war on terror.”  As Ann Coulter once pointed out, using this euphemism is much like having called the WWII conflict with Imperial Japan “the war on sneak attacks.”  Terrorism is a method, not an enemy —Islamists are the enemy.  And if we’re too effete to even name names, it’s no surprise that we won’t identify groups.

What I’ve expressed here is just common sense, but it will remain uncommon unless we experience a cultural transformation.  Until the politically correct must keep their death-cult ideology to themselves for fear of scorn, social ostracism and career destruction — the very tactics they’ve used to silence others — nothing will change.  We will continue to exhibit a lack of seriousness about what is a life-or-death issue, a failing that will lead to an inevitable outcome: a mushroom cloud over an American city.  When that happens, it will have been enabled by those who gave us our cultural mushroom cloud, ushering in a cold winter of lies and preventing people from seeing the light.  And come that time, I hope we remember to thank them appropriately.

      This article first appeared at American Thinker.

        © 2010 Selwyn Duke — All Rights Reserved

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4 responses to “Profile Muslims or Pat Down the Masses?”

  1. Walt Avatar
    Walt

    America is not about land, wealth or saftey. America is about the expression of the Unalienable Rights endowed by our creator; Life and Liberty. Me thinks the terrorists and/or the leftists that never let a good crisis go to waste have won the day. Mooooo

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  2. A high school student Avatar

    Mr. Duke has a good point about profiling. This reminds me of the immigration bill in Arizona. People thought this was ethically wrong due to “racial profiling”. I have one question, what is the major ethnic group that crosses the border from Mexico into America? Cha-ching! 200 points. Yes that would be Hispanics. Do not get me wrong, I am not trying to be hateful, but facts are facts. Has anyone actually read the bill? I mean I have news sources that tell me that it is bad, but it does not tell me what SPECIFICALLY (sorry about caps, I don’t have italics) what it is that is bad. From what I read , no body’s rights are being violated. The funny thing is that this bill is forcing federal law. What that means, is that this bill reiterates what the government should be doing in the first place. The federal government does not want to do anything on this issue because the influx of illegal immigrants help them to meet their agendas. What a messed up system

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  3. Escapis Avatar

    Hi Mr. Duke,
    Am a long-time reader of your blog, and think you make some great points on topics such as Islam, liberty and particularly the post back in 2008 with the analogy of voting for the most conservative candidate that can win being a method of taking the rightmost exit off the leftwing highway (that arrival on that highway was due to a number of minor left exits taken, and thus one needs to reverse the process). Anyway, I have respect for your views as a consistent/honest traditionalist and although we don’t agree on evertyhing (I’m more libertarian/moderate/even slightly liberal on social issues), have added a link to your site in my blogroll. Just a note to say your work is insightful and appreciated.
    Best,
    Escapist

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  4. Matt Avatar
    Matt

    More proof liberals are insane. They want to check all the people that DON’T commit these acts. While waving through the types that do. That’s how the crotch bomber got through, despite being on watch lists and his dad warning about him. All because they dont want to offend the poor widdle muslims. I mean, if anything proves that CAIR is a terrorist organization, or at least a supporter/approver of terrorism, its them saying women in burkas shouldn’t be patted down. And i assumed scanned since it makes them show up nude. I mean, all it would take for a terrorist to do now, is wear a burka. Even a male terrorist could do it. I mean, even if you could totally tell he was a man from his eyes, or a pathetic attempt at making a womans voice. Its not like CAIR or he wouldn’t make a stink about uncovering his head if asked to do so to prove who he was. He would totally be able to get through security. O wait, thats already happened at least once, and who knows how many other times!
    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-409376/Man-dons-burka-flee-anti-terror-police.html
    The same rules and standards should apply to everyone. If I was wearing a hockey mask, and asked to take it off for identification purposes, a Muslim in a burka should be expected to do the same. Don’t like it Muslims? Offends your sensibilities? THEN DON’T FLY. Wouldn’t your god expect that of you? Do without, rather than compromise your standards? Take the bus.
    Want a drivers license but don’t want to show your face for the picture? TOO BAD. Get your husband that has been sanctioned by your holy book to beat you if he feels like it to drive you around.

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