Does the TSA make you feel warm and fuzzy?

i dont feel safer in the slightest...
 
only if they wear warm fuzzy gloves
 
Napolitano wants to unionize TSA employees despite safety concerns

By: Mark Hemingway 12/28/09 4:00 AM

Department of Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano hasn't exactly inspired confidence after proclaiming "the system worked" in response to the recent thwarted terrorist attack. A radical Islamic terrorist -- whose father had warned the U.S. embassy of his dangerous intentions -- smuggled explosives on board a flight into the U.S. and nearly detonated them. It was hardly a victory for Homeland Security. In fact, this paper called for her resignation this morning.

Well, as if that weren't bad enough, Napolitano was already at work undermining security measures long before the most recent terrorist attacks. Over the weekend, Senator Jim DeMint, R-S.C., sounded the alarm about the Obama administration's attempts unionize Transportation Safety Administration (TSA) employees:

"The administration is intent in on unionizing and submitting our airport security to union bosses [and] collective bargaining, and this is at a time, as Senator Lieberman says, we've got to use our imagination we've got to be constantly flexible. We have to out think the terrorists. When we formed the airport security system we realize we could not use collective bargaining and unionization because of that need to be flexible. Yet that appears to be the top priority of the administration."

The flexibility that DeMint speaks of is crucial. After a British airliner bombing plot was uncovered in 2006, the TSA overhauled security procedures in a matter of 12 hours to deal with the threat of liquid explosives. It's difficult to imagine that kind of flexibility under ossified union rules.

The reason why DeMint is concerned about unionizing TSA is twofold. One, the President's nominee to head up the TSA, Eroll Southers, refuses to say whether he would allow collective bargaining. And two, this exchange between Demint and Napolitano earlier this month probably did not reassure the Senator from South Carolina:

Sen. DeMint: "My question to you is not whether or not you've seen it work at a state or local level, but the whole point of homeland security and particularly TSA is the security of our -- of the passengers, and if -- in the beginning -- and our debate -- and every previous administrator at TSA has said that collective bargaining is not consistent with the flexibility and the need to change. You were telling us that you're going to collectively bargain, even though there's apparently no reason to protect workers. There's not any reason to standardize various work requirements. Why do we need to bring collective bargaining into this process when we see TSA making the improvements that it needs to make our passengers more secure?"

Sec. Napolitano: "Well, thank you, senator, for noting the improvements of our -- of TSA and the employee workforce we have there, but again, I go back to the basic point that I do not think security and collective bargaining are mutually exclusive, nor do I think that collective bargaining cannot be accomplished by an agency, such as TSA, should the workers desire to be organized in such a fashion."

Sen. DeMint: "Okay. Thank you for answering my question."

To sum up, DeMint asks Napolitano what reason there is for collective baragaining in light of security concerns. Despite the pleasantries, it's clear Napolitano won't or can't answer the question, even though the safety of American travelers depends on her answer.

http://washingtonexaminer.com/blogs...loyees-despite-safety-concerns##ixzz1DZWBQuAZ
 
She is by far one of the worst obama appointments
 
I love that the head of the organization wants it's workers to unionize so they can increase their financial demands of said organization.

that's not self serving or anything is it?

I still say that the TSA is worthless as tits on a boar and needs to be axed.
 
Smart move on her part for preservation of her dysfunctional department. Once TSA is unionized it will be harder to dismantle or eliminate. It does not matter whether they are union or not as far as security is concerned, because, well they don't provide any real security just a comfort level to naive travelers.

We need a leader like Alexander Hamilton who told the Revenure Cutter Service Captains,,"It was specifically directed in Alexander Hamilton's first letter of instruction that captains "...will always keep in mind that their countrymen are freemen, and, as such, are impatient of everything that bears the least mark of a domineering spirit... They will endeavor to overcome difficulties, if any are experienced, by a cool and temperate perseverance in their duty – by address and moderation, rather than by vehemence or violence."

Sadly today's security forces and americans through public support for the Patriot Act forgot this. We are Freemen.
 
By: Mark Hemingway 12/28/09 4:00 AM

The flexibility that DeMint speaks of is crucial.
I have no doubt that unionizing TSA will cause serious problems. While a few minor arguments can be made in favor of unions within the federal government, too often it's about protecting deadweight workers or just holding up needed change. The union comes across as a self-serving entity.

With employees under collective bargaining, nothing gets approved until the union evaluates it. Even the silliest of things must be evaluated and approved by the union before they can be implemented. It impedes any ability to adapt to needed changes, which is critical with regard to security.

Napolitano is another example of someone appointed to a position for which she is grossly unqualified.
 
Napolitano wants to unionize TSA employees despite safety concerns

By: Mark Hemingway 12/28/09 4:00 AM

Department of Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano hasn't exactly inspired confidence after proclaiming "the system worked" in response to the recent thwarted terrorist attack. A radical Islamic terrorist -- whose father had warned the U.S. embassy of his dangerous intentions -- smuggled explosives on board a flight into the U.S. and nearly detonated them. It was hardly a victory for Homeland Security. In fact, this paper called for her resignation this morning.

Well, as if that weren't bad enough, Napolitano was already at work undermining security measures long before the most recent terrorist attacks. Over the weekend, Senator Jim DeMint, R-S.C., sounded the alarm about the Obama administration's attempts unionize Transportation Safety Administration (TSA) employees:

"The administration is intent in on unionizing and submitting our airport security to union bosses [and] collective bargaining, and this is at a time, as Senator Lieberman says, we've got to use our imagination we've got to be constantly flexible. We have to out think the terrorists. When we formed the airport security system we realize we could not use collective bargaining and unionization because of that need to be flexible. Yet that appears to be the top priority of the administration."

The flexibility that DeMint speaks of is crucial. After a British airliner bombing plot was uncovered in 2006, the TSA overhauled security procedures in a matter of 12 hours to deal with the threat of liquid explosives. It's difficult to imagine that kind of flexibility under ossified union rules.

The reason why DeMint is concerned about unionizing TSA is twofold. One, the President's nominee to head up the TSA, Eroll Southers, refuses to say whether he would allow collective bargaining. And two, this exchange between Demint and Napolitano earlier this month probably did not reassure the Senator from South Carolina:

Sen. DeMint: "My question to you is not whether or not you've seen it work at a state or local level, but the whole point of homeland security and particularly TSA is the security of our -- of the passengers, and if -- in the beginning -- and our debate -- and every previous administrator at TSA has said that collective bargaining is not consistent with the flexibility and the need to change. You were telling us that you're going to collectively bargain, even though there's apparently no reason to protect workers. There's not any reason to standardize various work requirements. Why do we need to bring collective bargaining into this process when we see TSA making the improvements that it needs to make our passengers more secure?"

Sec. Napolitano: "Well, thank you, senator, for noting the improvements of our -- of TSA and the employee workforce we have there, but again, I go back to the basic point that I do not think security and collective bargaining are mutually exclusive, nor do I think that collective bargaining cannot be accomplished by an agency, such as TSA, should the workers desire to be organized in such a fashion."

Sen. DeMint: "Okay. Thank you for answering my question."

To sum up, DeMint asks Napolitano what reason there is for collective baragaining in light of security concerns. Despite the pleasantries, it's clear Napolitano won't or can't answer the question, even though the safety of American travelers depends on her answer.

http://washingtonexaminer.com/blogs...loyees-despite-safety-concerns##ixzz1DZWBQuAZ

I'm not gonna read all that. Gotta go on my union-mandated 15 minute coffee break.
 
Many liberals also forget this.

Correction - many liberals are keenly aware of this, which is why they're constantly trying to revise history (after all, if it gets taken out of the educational texts on American history, it won't be studied anymore.)

We should make a concerted effort to have as many of the current and prior texts on American history in private hands (not in libraries - where they can be purged. Not in schools, where they will be purged. I don't even trust the Library of Congress at this point - since Congress can always go and change the rules...) to preserve as much of our actual history as possible, and be able to combat the revisionists.

I am already accepting of the fact that I will have to "compleat" the education of my grandchildren, since I am finding the current output of the "Publik Eddicashun Sisstm" woefully lacking.
 
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