Slashdot Mirror


Unreasonable Searches When Going to Work?

Chico Science asks: "I'm a scientist, not a lawyer, so I'm a little beleaguered by the fact that since 2001-Sep-11, I have been forced to submit to searches on my campus as I enter buildings. I work at the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, MD, and have been shouldering the burden of increasingly draconian security measures. Most recently, they've instituted a policy of 100% bag/package searches on entering buildings. Initially it didn't bother me, but after having my bag searched on my way to my car (which was also thoroughly inspected) after work, I decided I'm not comfortable subjecting myself to searches of my personal belongings at every turn. I want to know if I have a right to refuse searches? And why should it be considered acceptable for me to relinquish my Fourth Ammendment rights so I can go work on in my lab?" In this climate of increasing security consciousness, how far can vigilance go before it becomes an invasion of our rights?

786 comments

  1. And you ask /. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You can't ask this on /., you'll never get an answer. You'll get 3,000 "IANAL but.." posts. Talk to an attorney. Then write a followup and post it here. You won't get the answer you seek from /.

    1. Re:And you ask /. by FortKnox · · Score: 1

      I entirely agree.

      I'm surprised this wasn't filtered out, Cliff.

      I understand its something that may happen to several slashdotters, but we can't answer the question as well as your lawyer can.

      --
      Good quote, too many chars. Seriously, the slashdot 120 char limit sucks!
    2. Re:And you ask /. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      IANAL, but...

      ...You can legally tell them to kiss your hairy butt. Granted, they can then tell you to take your hairy butt to the unemployment office.

    3. Re:And you ask /. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      UANAL
      heh...
      heh...

    4. Re:And you ask /. by fitsnips · · Score: 1

      Yea if you want to go on there property you play
      by there rules. Just like if they want to put
      cameras up and watch you, you may not like it but
      its the freedom you have to give up if you want
      there money(pay check). Maybe the real question
      is would you want 100 people a day walking in and
      out of your home every day who have not been
      checked? This is a fine line but one that will
      become more common in these times.

      --
      I am a republican not by choice, but rather by lack there of.
    5. Re:And you ask /. by exick · · Score: 1

      Why does everyone act like a company paying you for working entitles them to your first born child and anything else they desire. A paycheck is an exchange. You provide services, they provide compensation. Period. End of story. There are no other rights that an employer is entitled to simply because they pay you to do work. It's not as if you are just expected to walk into the building and prance around all day, and then go home at the end of the week with a paycheck. They expect productivity.

    6. Re:And you ask /. by chryptic · · Score: 1

      I agree that he will not get a usable answer but it has started some interesting threads. It is interesting to see how the /. community feels about this type of situation.

      --
      The two most common things in the Universe are hydrogen and stupidity. -- Harlan Ellison
    7. Re:And you ask /. by Meech · · Score: 1

      True, he is not going to get an answer or in fact anything useful from /., but I will get enjoyment from reading some of the ideas posted.

      slashdot is one of the funniest places on the internet sometimes, in fact they should have stupid news stories more often. Besides after the title and the first couple of sentences, you should know if this is really a story you should be reading.

    8. Re:And you ask /. by FFFish · · Score: 2

      But what you will get is an endless flood of apologies that excuse the company's behaviour.

      I find that quite remarkable: here is a country where the government would probably face an armed revolution if it were to attempt to take away Gun Rights...

      ...but where everyone rolls over and plays dead when their boss wants to perform a daily body cavity check just to make sure no one's stealing the little stubby pencils from the "How Are We Doing" customer feedback boxes.

      My god! What happened to America? It was founded on principles of freedom and democracy, and a shitload of people died to defend those ideals. A revolutionary constitution was drafted that was supposed to secure those rights for all eternity, and which has subsequently served as the finest model on which other nations have based their own constitutions.

      Over the past twenty years, America has become degenerate. The public has willfully bent over the barrel, all too eager to have their freedoms raped by big business, big government, and vocal minorities.

      Wake up, America! Wipe the sleep from your eyes and give your collective heads a shake: your nation is rapidly becoming a corporate regime that is every bit as repressed and evil as your greatest international enemies were during the peak of the Cold War!

      Demand better! Don't complacently accept the abuse you are taking. Demand change! Demand your rights! Stay alert and stay politically active!

      --

      --
      Don't like it? Respond with words, not karma.
    9. Re:And you ask /. by Unknown+Bovine+Group · · Score: 2

      you don't have to
      press enter every time you
      come to the
      end of the little box
      who do you
      think you
      are...
      e e cummings?

      --
      m00.
    10. Re:And you ask /. by jon787 · · Score: 1

      Beatifully said Fish!!

      Our country is becoming more and more like what our Founding Fathers where fighting against!

      --
      X(7): A program for managing terminal windows. See also screen(1).
    11. Re:And you ask /. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The poor guy just wants to read the Funny comments. Such as "hide all personal belongings inside any of the many security holes inside WinXP".

    12. Re:And you ask /. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >You can't ask this on /., you'll never get an answer. You'll get 3,000 "IANAL but.."

      URAANAL

      But you're right :)

    13. Re:And you ask /. by Bob+Uhl · · Score: 3, Insightful
      I find that quite remarkable: here is a country where the government would probably face an armed revolution if it were to attempt to take away Gun Rights...

      Hah--it's been going on since the after the Civil War, especially since the 1920s. No revolutions yet.

      My god! What happened to America?

      The Founders died. The revolutionaries died. Americans became like other people--small-minded and willing to compromise. This happened very early on--remember that even in the beginnings we had such atrocities as the Alien & Sedition Acts. The War Between the States was the death-blow for federalism and freedom, the beginning of the Imperial Presidency and the all-powerful national government.

      It's not the last twenty years--it's the last 150 years. We, like the Europeans before us, are willing to trade freedom for safety. What is unfortunate is that there is no New World for those of us who treasure our liberty to escape to--no safe haven from the ravages of our rapacious rulers.

      The sad fact of the matter is that most people don't care about their liberties. They don't want to own a weapon, they don't want to copy music, they don't want to do drugs. They're willing to let the police protect them (maybe, if they get around to it, perhaps); they're willing to buy 14 copies of the same song; they're content to drink themselves into oblivion rather than inject or toke their way there. They don't want to use Free Software; they're willing to use the software that came `free' with their computer.

      Everyone cares when he realises that his liberties are endangered. No-one cares when others' are endangered, or when liberties he doesn't use are endangered. Most people are sheep, with a very simple, straightforward and incorrect view of right and wrong.

      Is there hope? Nope, not really. C'est la vie.

    14. Re:And you ask /. by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 2
      What is unfortunate is that there is no New World for those of us who treasure our liberty to escape to--no safe haven from the ravages of our rapacious rulers.
      Yes, there is a New World to escape to. It's called "outer-space".

      Ever wonder why the States are doing their best to quash independent private efforts to go in Space? Because it knows very well that it will trigger an exodus of the best minds of the planet.

    15. Re:And you ask /. by 4of12 · · Score: 2

      Everyone cares when he realises that his liberties are endangered. No-one cares when others' are endangered, or when liberties he doesn't use are endangered. Most people are sheep, with a very simple, straightforward and incorrect view of right and wrong.

      I fear you are too right.

      The only hope is for people to be more vigilant and thoughtful than what history has proved them to be.

      Always ask yourself:

      1. Who is searching me?
      2. Why are they searching me?
      3. What are they looking for?
      4. If they do not search me, then what are the consequences?
      5. If suddenly the who, what, why or me (see above) is interchanged with something completely different, would that be a satisfactory society to live in?
      Providing good policy requires a lot more thoughtfulness, more than the majority of our citizens are willing to engage in.

      Unfortunately, in our representative government, those same lax attitudes are being made into poor policy these very days.

      --
      "Provided by the management for your protection."
    16. Re:And you ask /. by Gaijin42 · · Score: 1

      There are no other rights they have, however they are free to make whatever terms they want for you to be employed there (Always wear your badge, Dress Code, Drug Checks, and even bag searches and cavity searches).

      You are free to not work there. They are free to make whatever demeands they want. You can say no (and not work there).

      Incedentally, YOU are free to make whatever demands YOU want to. However they can say no. At which point you either cave in on your demand, or leave. The company is usually in a better position to say no than you are though, (especially in the current economy).

      But a year ago, IT workers could demand just about whatever they wanted to. And quite often got it.

    17. Re:And you ask /. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We should get together and buy a small island somewhere and setup a virtual country dedicated to going to space. We, the nerds, should be able to finance this and setup a country more to our liking.

    18. Re:And you ask /. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      KRS-One, is that you?

    19. Re:And you ask /. by sigwinch · · Score: 2
      Ever wonder why the States are doing their best to quash independent private efforts to go in Space? Because it knows very well that it will trigger an exodus of the best minds of the planet.
      Incidentally, a non-Terrestrial (say, Lunar) nation would be able to bombard Earth with kinetic energy weapons (i.e., rocks the size of buildings moving at 50 kilometers per second), and would also be fairly invulnerable to nuclear bombs (no air means no shock wave and no fallout). Not only would the best people leave, they'd have unilateral assured destruction capability. Yet another reason for groundhog politicos to squash private launch capability. Dammit.
      --

      --
      Kuro5hin.org: where the good times never end. ;-)

    20. Re:And you ask /. by orangesquid · · Score: 2

      Point in case, except... other than potential threat from other countries, why even bother with going to space?

      Just set up a country with very high expectations of not only its citizens but also of its government. Then, you can almost guarantee that freedom won't be abused, therefore you don't have to limit it.

      Or am I completely wrong here.. probably ;)

      --
      --TheOrangeSquid Is it any wonder things seem so awry? We swim in a sea of confusion and don't have to think to survive
    21. Re:And you ask /. by sminra · · Score: 1

      Reminds me of the book and video games, "Rebel Moon" and "Rebel Moon Rising".

      Still, it seems to me that starting a colony on the moon would be so expensive that no-one could afford the investment without some concrete payback. The colonization of the "new world" was motivated by real profit incentive for the countries/companies spawning the venture. Hard to see that kind of potential on the moon, or anywhere else in near-space.

      I think we'll be long dead before something like this comes to fruition. Too bad.

      OTOH, we have for the first time in human history the ability to play realistic 3D interactive games and simulations of space exploration/combat. That's cool enough for me to be happy to be alive.

      Oh, and for topicalness, the scientist in the article did not mention whether he worked in an area relevant to "national security". The NIH is a big institution that oversees all kinds of research projects. The justification for searching employees in this particular instance may be no more plausible than searching, say, schoolteachers or librarians.

      I think it's entirely proper to question and challenge the justification for such warrantless searches, just as it is for the USA's urine testing (faugh!), no-knock searches, and other abuses of state/corporate power that have infected the nation.

      The tree of liberty is indeed in need of watering...

      "Your heart is like a silken sponge." - Residents

  2. Searches by deanj · · Score: 1

    Many places do this already. The place you're working for is protecting themselves from some wacko carrying things in and out of work. And actually, more places should do it...it's surprising the number of things that get taken by people when they leave or are pissed off. If you're uncomfortable with it, tell management. If that doesn't do anything, quit.

    1. Re:Searches by deanj · · Score: 1

      Oh and one more thing...they'll probably be a lot of people saying "they have no right to do this"... If they institute a new policy and give fair warning they're going to do it, they have every right to do so...it's there business, not yours. I don't like getting searched anymore than the next guy. It's a pain the ass. If you don't like it, do what I did...quit and work for someone else.

    2. Re:Searches by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just cause your a crackwhore terrorist, thieving dangerous mofo, doesn't mean that I'm one!

      You need to be searched cause your dangerous, thats fine. Just don't put me in the same category.

    3. Re:Searches by geekoid · · Score: 4, Insightful

      not true. You cn't enfirce a policy that braks the law(or regulation, or...etc.)
      For example, If my company had a policy of not hiring minorities, doesn't make that policy enforcable by law.
      You quit and worked for someone else, gee what are you going to do when everybody is doing it? Take some time to change the law. Yes it CAN be done. I have changed laws. It difficult, a pain in the ass, take a lot of people, but it can be done.
      Change the world.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    4. Re:Searches by NecroPuppy · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Right, but unless the search is invasive (*snap of a rubber glove, and the words spread 'em*), it very likely isn't illegal.

      Heck for years, all the local libraries have had a policy of searching outgoing bags, briefcases, etc, as they don't want people walking off with the books.

      NecroPuppy

      --
      I like you, Stuart. You're not like everyone else, here, at Slashdot.
    5. Re:Searches by majestyk2000 · · Score: 0

      I did refuse just such a search at a library, because:

      1.) Their policy wasn't posted;

      2.) I'd had my bag on a tabletop in plain view for hours.

      I simply told the librarian that I wasn't going to let him search my bag, and asked what he was going to do about it. The answer was nothing.

      However, the environment the initial poster is in is a somewhat different situation, considering it is his jobplace. It would be hard to tell a security guard to shove it in that situation.

    6. Re:Searches by Spruitje · · Score: 2


      Many places do this already. The place you're working for is protecting themselves from some wacko carrying things in and out of work. And actually, more places should do it...it's surprising the number of things that get taken by people when they leave or are pissed off. If you're uncomfortable with it, tell management. If that doesn't do anything, quit.


      Wow, i'm glad I don't live in the US!!
      The paranoia is really hitting the fan over there.
      The only place that I know of where they do searches is at Schiphol airport.
      And then only when you board a plane.

    7. Re:Searches by homebru · · Score: 1
      The paranoia is really hitting the fan over there.

      It isn't paranoia when thay ARE out to get you. How many of YOUR skyscrapers are missing?

    8. Re:Searches by opkool · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It is paranoia and all this paranoia will not stop terrorists.

      This only jeopardize's the liberties and rights of US law-abiding citizens. While trying to protect our liberties, they cut the liberties and we have no protection.

      Think about it. Many countries, specially in Europe, have or have suffered in the recent past terrorist activity.

      The IRA blew up a hotel in London, expecting to kill Margaret Thacer and her cabinet. A PanAm airplane was blown up by terrorists ontop the Scotish town of Locherby.

      Car bombs, killings, shootings... by Unionists have been killing many in Northen Ireland.

      Still, British security is far much better than US security. And it is more polite.

      You do not need to search every single piece of luggage that boards an airplane... nor every single backpack that enters into a building.

      Place proper security (using underpaid untrained people does not count). Use experts in human emotions to detect suspects. Do not profile. Be smart. Invest in security.

      ELAL (known as Ever Landing, Always Late.... although it means Israelian Airlines) does this kind of things. Since they started doing that, not even a single hijaker has succeeded.

      Israelians are not smarter nor they have a sixth sense (no they do not see "dead people"). How they do that? They train their security people to identify treats, behaviours, patterns... on their passengers. If someone fits one of those patterns, even by a sligth margin, this person gets questioned aside, all this person's belongings are searched and, usually, this means a few minutes of delay.

      Nothing like the interminable, nonsese, automatic searches that happen in our Airports. Yes: the personnel will get tired after a few months, so we will be exposed again.

      And nothing as nonsense of pilots refusing to fly unless all middle-eastern-looking passengers and/or sikhs and/or hindustanis are deprived of their right to fly.

      This is insane.

    9. Re:Searches by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wish you didn't, you fucking numbnuts.

    10. Re:Searches by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Would both of you brainless twats shut the fuck up and die?

    11. Re:Searches by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Um, it's Israeli. Or Israelis. NOT Israelians...
      *sigh*

    12. Re:Searches by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Its is so dam easy for everyone to just say quit.
      TO give all the obvious answers.
      Sure quit that person doesnt care its not their job. Its not them getting harassed everday.
      Think about the story about the jew and WWII.
      They came for the jews but I wasnt jewish. They came for the blacks but I wasnt black. On and On till there was noone left but him then they came for him.
      Its too dam scary everyone is bending over and getting packed up the *** because everyone is so willing to let the rights this country was founded upon go away without a fight.
      Terrorism only works in a free society.
      So guess what. Uncle Sam wants?
      He wants to lock this country down and all of the peoples rights. Its easier to control people when they have no voice. When they have no rights.
      When there is no watchdog groups to keep this from happening.THis is 1984 happening begginning right now. Its been coming. Well here is the beginning. Some say its been happening slowly well this can truly be said "This is the beginning of the end"
      I dont have the answers yet I know this.
      While some countries fight to have what we have.
      We are freely giving it away.

    13. Re:Searches by deanj · · Score: 1

      What he should have done is call security, had your name taken, your bag searched, and you thrown out of the library, never to return. I hope he was instructed by his bosses to do just that.

    14. Re:Searches by Assistant+Madman · · Score: 1

      Three. And I swear I only turned my back for a minute!

    15. Re:Searches by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're only saying that because you're from germania!

    16. Re:Searches by bstrawse · · Score: 1

      OK.. which law prohibits an employer from doing this?

      Don't say the Bill of Rights - because it doesn't apply to private companies..

      Not sure how that may or may not apply in this case since his employer is NIH..

      B

    17. Re:Searches by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Shut up you flag-waving imperialist dog!

    18. Re:Searches by fklink · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I am not sure if I want to rant or be reasonable. If I were to rant, I might remind you that we are now in wartime and the battlefield includes civilian targets in the United States--including small children who in no way can be blamed for any foreign policy sins committed by the United States. They are not even guilty indirectly, as that medieval murderer currently based in Afghanistan would have us believe--little children don't pay taxes or voluntarily consent to the state.

      If I were to be reasonable, I might point out that you don't have an unrestricted right to privacy. For one thing, YOUR place of work is not really yours. Like most other places of employment in a market econonmy, your place of employment is privately owned by someone other than you. That entity has the right to regulate the conditions under which you have access to that entity's property. If you don't like the terms on offer, your option in a market is to withdraw your services from the transaction and move on to something you find preferrable. Or you could fight for socialism. I don't see much besides rhetorical obfuscation in between.

    19. Re:Searches by Grab · · Score: 1

      Shit, the IRA have been bombing ppl and places in NI, mainland Britain and Germany for years. ETA has been busy doing the same in Spain. In the 60s and 70s, Action Direct was doing it in France and Baader-Meinhof in Germany. Europe wised up ages back. It's only the US which didn't give a shit about airport security, and look where it got them. It was crap security in the US which allowed Libya to bomb the Pan-Am jet which crashed at Lockerbie in Scotland - but of course, that's not in America so it doesn't count, right? The words "stable door" and "horse" spring to mind...

      And the reason baggage wasn't 100% put through scanners? The "American People" wouldn't put up with it. The same "American People" who are now going hog-wild with paranoia. Good trick, eh?

      Grab.

    20. Re:Searches by majestyk2000 · · Score: 0

      I'm still trying to figure out how a pimply high-schooler would have searched my bag by force.

      As far as him being instructed by his bosses to do anything, I actually contacted the director of the library system and strongly advised that they post their 'personal belongings' policy on the door so I could decide whether to bring my bag into their libraries in the future unless they wanted a lawsuit, and I advised him to train his employees on how to conduct themselves better. He agreed with me, and I couldn't help but notice that the library assistant I complained about was never there when I went to that library afterwards.

  3. Hmm.. by eric434 · · Score: 1

    Well, you could try telecommuting.

    Only thing is how to bring the lab with you?

    However, since you do work at a public-health-related lab, searches are something to be expected, since your field possibly deals with biological attacks. But getting searched on the way to a car is, well, rediculous. IANAL, but unless it's a government agency you should be able to refuse being searched. Perhaps you and your fellow scientists should organize a strike or something, like they recently did at a TLA, although I'm not sure which one.

    --
    This .sig temporary until a better .sig can be constructed.
    1. Re:Hmm.. by Coz · · Score: 1

      Read the article - he works at the National Institutes of Health - a government agency.

      As for the search on the way to his car... look at where he works, and ask yourself, what kind of things could they possibly have at NIH that the government doesn't want escaping?

      --
      I love vegetarians - some of my favorite foods are vegetarians.
    2. Re:Hmm.. by wafath · · Score: 2, Insightful

      And a security guard can identify an anthrax sample how?

      The searches aren't designed to find such things. The seaches are designed to offer the illusion of security, so the the boss of NIH can say to his boss "I done real good, massah."

      It would take very long, very invasive, and very personal searches to top anything dangerous from getting out. But the vast majority of NIH deals with other things. It is, after all, a fully functional hospital.

      W

    3. Re:Hmm.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >you should be able to refuse being searched

      Absolutely. And they can refuse to employ you.

      You might be able to bring a wrongful dismissal suit against them if you can prove that your terms of employment did not include submitting to security searches, or that the searches were unreasonable. Good luck, though.

      My building has several tenants and my company is not the one doing the searches. The building management hires the security firm and they are the ones that (with the agreement of the tenants) have instituted the increased security measures.

      People who balk at having their bags searched as they arrive/leave are being told that their options are to not bring bags, or don't come to work. Employees have complained to HR, but the response has been 'this is now company policy to cooperate with building management and security. your signed employment agreement says that you will abide by all company policies of face termination. have a nice day.'

      My response is that I don't bring my laptop or lunch to work anymore. The net result is that I get less work done. I don't take stuff home at night, and I don't site at my desk and eat lunch. Actually, this has worked out in my favor since I get to enjoy my evenings/lunchours much more.

      If my company says that I have to just deal with the inevitable fact of searches if I'm going to stay employed, then my company has to just deal with the fact that they are going to get a little less work out of me as a result.

    4. Re:Hmm.. by Jburkholder · · Score: 3, Insightful

      >you should be able to refuse being searched

      Absolutely. And they can refuse to employ you.

      You might be able to bring a wrongful dismissal suit against them if you can prove that your terms of employment did not include submitting to security searches, or that the searches were unreasonable. Good luck, though.

      My building has several tenants and my company is not the one doing the searches. The building management hires the security firm and they are the ones that (with the agreement of the tenants) have instituted the increased security measures.

      People who balk at having their bags searched as they arrive/leave are being told that their options are to not bring bags, or don't come to work. Employees have complained to HR, but the response has been 'this is now company policy to cooperate with building management and security. your signed employment agreement says that you will abide by all company policies of face termination. have a nice day.'

      My response is that I don't bring my laptop or lunch to work anymore. The net result is that I get less work done. I don't take stuff home at night, and I don't site at my desk and eat lunch. Actually, this has worked out in my favor since I get to enjoy my evenings/lunchours much more.

      If my company says that I have to just deal with the inevitable fact of searches if I'm going to stay employed, then my company has to just deal with the fact that they are going to get a little less work out of me as a result.

      (reposting this as /. made the last one appear as AC)

    5. Re:Hmm.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, the US Constitution only protects us from privacy intrusion from the US govmt. I thought private industry could ask basically whatever they want because of the supremacy of property in the US

    6. Re:Hmm.. by onepoint · · Score: 1

      >> IANAL, but unless it's a government agency you should be able to refuse being searched.

      Nope, I consult a bit to a firm that has the following policy for the past 5 years.

      1) Everything and everyone (including the owners) inspected with a metal wand entering and leaving.

      2) then a pat down entering and leaving

      3) all jewlery must be removed, metal objects that are not a belt buckle or suspender or ( go figure ) a bic pen removed. all stored in a private locker. ( don't have a toe ring on. you'll have to remove it )

      4) purses and handbags - ( you'll love this ) all contents placed into clear bags and each item checked. What ever the guards deam hazardous to employees won't make it via the next door.

      The owners understand that this delays people a lot, so the time starts the moment you walk into the main door.

      This place is real tight, the reason that they follow these darconian(sp?) rules is to protect the employees. Something bad happened a few years back.

      -Onepoint

      --
      if you see me, smile and say hello.
    7. Re:Hmm.. by Coz · · Score: 2, Insightful

      A fully functional hospital - which means it has fully functional narcotics, fully functional labs where various things are grown, fully functional medical records... there are lots of things that a quick check of a person's bags will prevent from escaping. Like a big sealed envelope full of confidential medical records, or a few dozen vials of morphine, or a couple of pounds of powdered unicorn horn... c'mon, the fact of the search is itself a powerful disincentive. A security guard may not be able to identify an anthrax sample, but he/she/it has been briefed on who to call to check.

      --
      I love vegetarians - some of my favorite foods are vegetarians.
    8. Re:Hmm.. by stilwebm · · Score: 2

      Most hospitals have very careful systems to prevent people from walking off with things, especially narcotics. They use fine grained accounting, order limits, supervisor approvals, etc. Sure, some could still slip through, but you'd generally have to be either collaborating with the patient or a supervisor for a lab. Even then, frequent audits would turn up a problem. Usually only when a problem arises does someone have to submit to a search. It is probably a little harder to catch abuse in a lab. But frequent audits would quickly find that key supplies were missing, though at that point it could be too late.

    9. Re:Hmm.. by Crashin · · Score: 1

      Truthfully it is back to the age old "Don't inconvenience me or I will sue." routine, I think some parts of society need to get off their high horses and realise that everyone gives up a little convenience at times it is a part of life.

      --
      Crashin "There is no great genius without some touch of madness. " Seneca, Moral Essays
    10. Re:Hmm.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually company's can't simply make up policy's, yes if you signed something that says you have to fallow company policy's great, however, those policy's have to be in writing by law! And they have to give you notice.

    11. Re:Hmm.. by Jburkholder · · Score: 2

      >Actually company's can't simply make up [policies]

      Sure they can.

      >those policy's have to be in writing by law

      They are.

      >And they have to give you notice.

      They do.

      If the company institutes a new policy, they send an email to everyone, the internal website is updated, and a copy is posted in the kitchen areas for 60 days. If the policy is something you can't live with, you are free to quit.

      When you sign on, you agree to this. You are given a booklet with all of the current policies and the employment contract you sign says they are allowed to institute new policies as they see fit, they are obligated to notify you in a timely fashion and you are obligated to comply if you want to keep your job.

      Of course, if lots of people quit and gave the new policy as the reason, they might have to review their policies, but short of body-cavity searches this isn't likely to become a big enough deal among the average workers.

  4. Humm check your contract by haplo21112 · · Score: 2, Informative

    Check your contract, terms of employment, what have you...when you took the job, you may have agreed to such measures. Given your line of work, don't you feel a little more secure that things are being monitored after all. I do agree that the number and level of searches is a little extreme. however, I also feel that being checked in and out at the entrance is not a horrible thing.

    --
    Power Corrupts,Absolute Power Corrupts Absolutely, leaving one person(group)in charge is absolutely corrupt.
    1. Re:Humm check your contract by WebGuyCS · · Score: 1

      The places that I have worked for that were related to the government (USAF and TI, which used to do lots of defense contracting), you had to agree to such searches as part of the employment. I think you will pretty much have to learn to live with it.

      --

      WebGuyCS

  5. You have a right to refuse searches by wiredog · · Score: 5, Insightful

    and they have a right to fire you for doing so. You don't have to work there, so the searches can be considered voluntary, or a condition of employment. You're working for the Federal Government, which is definitely a target for attacks these days.

    1. Re:You have a right to refuse searches by Colz+Grigor · · Score: 2, Informative

      I'd like to use the right of your employer to have a mandatory drug testing policy as a parallel to this issue.

      As I was taught in my MBA Business Law class, private companies have the right to require drug tests if they choose, but governmental organizationas do not have the right to require drug testing.

      Because of this, I believe the person who asked this question, as a federal employee, has the right to refuse a search without being terminated as a direct result. Remember, they can always find another reason to remove you, so make sure you keep your nose clean in every other way.

      If the asker of this question worked for a private company, I would say the opposite.

      And remember, folks, surrendering to a search by a government representative without probable cause is a breach of the fourth amendment. Period. Even if you have nothing to hide. Times like these do not automatically allow for the universal interpretation of our constitution to change, but official interpretation of our constitution cannot change without someone fighting what they believe is a transgression of their rights. If you feel your rights are being ignored, take it up with a lawyer, not slashdot. Get the case escalated as high as possible to sustain your interpretation of the right. If the court disagrees with you, it's not because you're wrong, it's because times have changed. They'll probably change back some day.

      ::Colz Grigor

      --

    2. Re:You have a right to refuse searches by Kvasir · · Score: 1

      IANAL yet, but am studying law and will be in 2 years.

      Actual if it isn't in the terms of your contract that you will submit to such a breach of your personal liberties they would NOT have a right to fire you.

      --
      this signature is a virus, please make me your .sig so I can continue to spread :/
    3. Re:You have a right to refuse searches by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Voluntary" proceedures make me more nervous than mandatory ones. It ssems that more and more our rights are being invaded not by mandatory types of legeslation that could be deemed unconstitutional, but by these types of voluntary invasions. First, if you refuse to voluntarily submit you are automatically deemed suspicious, often opening you up to mandatory compliance. Second, the conquenses of not complying to voluntary requirements are often worse than those imposed by mandatory rules. Having a social security card in the US is technically voluntary (one must at least have a tax payer id though for the IRS). However, failure to have one effictively prevents you from working, having a place to live, or functioning in any meaningful way in society. People would be more likely to not get SS# if they were mandatory and failure to have one was punishable by fine or even some jail time. But finally, and most importantly, constitutional rights do not apply to these "voluntary" proceedures.

    4. Re:You have a right to refuse searches by Bren · · Score: 1

      What if this person has tenure? This isn't a corporate job. University professor's have protections from things like this. (although it may or may not apply to this situation, I have no idea.)

    5. Re:You have a right to refuse searches by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So what you're saying is that the US Navy doesn't have the right to require random piss tests for its sailors?

      Also, what if that requirement is put into the conditions of employment? Aren't you, by agreeing to take the job, even if it is for the government, agreeing to the drug testing?

      Would the difference be that if explicitly required, then drug tests are legal because you agreed to is as part of your employment contract (which would supercede the Bill of Rights), but such a condition can not be implied, or sprung on you without prior agreement?

    6. Re:You have a right to refuse searches by g8rh8r · · Score: 1

      Heavy equipment operators/truck drivers for the DOT are subject to random or "not-so" random drug tests as terms of their employment.

    7. Re:You have a right to refuse searches by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most likely they initiated searches well after he started working there so they changed the rules on him. Saying "you don't have to work there" is a lame response. You don't have to drive or own a phone either so don't complain if we record your calls or monitor your driving, right?

      By the way, the WTC towers were not federal gov facilities. Wonder if you'll feel the same when they tighten the screws where you work.

    8. Re:You have a right to refuse searches by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >As I was taught in my MBA Business Law class,
      >private companies have the right to require drug
      >tests if they choose, but governmental
      >organizationas do not have the right to require
      >drug testing.

      Uhm, no.
      Military & civil service employees are subject to random drug tests. I was in the military, and now work with a bunch of civil service guys.

    9. Re:You have a right to refuse searches by ZoobieWa · · Score: 1

      But what would happen if they tried to include body searches into this? Could they fire you because you refused those? Is searching 'harrassment'? There are laws that regulate employers that they have to abide by, and that is what he is asking. How far can they go, and what can they use by threatening your job as a weapon?

    10. Re:You have a right to refuse searches by Rogerborg · · Score: 2

      Would you support my right to hire my own rentacop (or lawyer) and demand a right to search or question your rentacop before he approaches me, to ensure my personal security?

      "Watching the watchers" in action. I'm happy with the necessity for this, but I can't help but feel that there will be one rule for "them" and another for "us", which rankles.

      In other words; who's searching George W. Bush before letting him enter a Federal building? If that sounds extreme, then you draw the cut off line. Who is lofty enough to be presumed innocent and who is base, common and popular enough to be presumed guilty?

      --
      If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
    11. Re:You have a right to refuse searches by Rogerborg · · Score: 2

      While I'm thinking about it, you should actively help out by carrying a weapon with you everywhere. Not necessarily a firearm. A tazer, pepper spray, brass knuckles, you pick one.

      No? It's against your contract to carry a weapon at work?

      Since when did a contract override the 2nd Amendment to the US Constitution?

      "A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed."

      For anyone not getting it, you are "the people". Not just the guy in the rentacop uniform, or even just the guy with the FBI badge. The security of the nation is under threat, and it is your personal responsibility to have and to bear the tools to protect it.

      We've had decades of chipping away at this basic right, because it hasn't been necessary, because employers and airlines and the government have said "Sure, you can have arms, as long as they're the arms we say, and they're licensed, and you can even bear them, as long as you bear them where we say, and in the manner we say." We've accepted that it's OK to be told that if we don't like it, we don't have to get on a plane, or enter a school, or a Federal building, or a mall.

      Once again for luck: the security of a free State is your personal responsibility.

      --
      If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
  6. Haha by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    land of the free indeed

  7. Right... by GiorgioG · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I'm sure if they caught someone entering your building with a bomb, or exiting the building with 'suspicious' materials - you'd be relieved. Put it in perspective and deal with it.

    1. Re:Right... by pe1rxq · · Score: 2, Insightful

      So we should just abandon privacy and freedom completly.
      I am sure you would feel really comfortable in your police state knowing that your 'goverment' (lets also get rid of democracy in case one of those terorists gets elected....) controls your every move.

      Freedom has risks, deal with that.

      I think its ironic that after what many people call an atack on 'the free/democratic/western world' the first thing we do is get rid of the things it stood for.
      Looks like the attacks were successfull afterall...

      Jeroen

      --
      Secure messaging: http://quickmsg.vreeken.net/
    2. Re:Right... by madcow_ucsb · · Score: 1
      So we should just abandon privacy and freedom completly. I am sure you would feel really comfortable in your police state knowing that your 'goverment' (lets also get rid of democracy in case one of those terorists gets elected....) controls your every move. Freedom has risks, deal with that. I think its ironic that after what many people call an atack on 'the free/democratic/western world' the first thing we do is get rid of the things it stood for. Looks like the attacks were successfull afterall... Jeroen

      While at work, sure. I'm working on the company's time on the company's property. As long as they hold up their end of the bargain (ie, they keep paying me), I can put up with security measures.

      I have a choice of where to work, and frankly I don't feel like I need all that much freedom when I'm at work. I'm there to do my job, get paid, go home and THEN take advantage of the freedom I have.

      And what does this have to do with a police state? Granted, the given example was a government agency, but the question at hand has to do with businesses in general searching people on their own property. Hell, I could search everone who wanted to enter or leave my house if I felt like it. I might not be the most popular host that way, but I _could_ do it if I wanted.

      Let's drop the police state FUD. It's someone searching someone on their own property. Once we have cops stopping me in the street asking me for my papers, ok, then we can start bitching about police states. (granted that may be happening in some cases, but this is not one of those cases.)

    3. Re:Right... by Master+Bait · · Score: 1
      We're protecting 'freedom'. We're now permanently at war.

      Welcome to the National Security State.

      --
      "Only in their dreams can men truly be free 'twas always thus, and always thus will be."
      --Tom Schulman
    4. Re:Right... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      These sort of measures have been in place for a long time in certain parts of DOE labs, NSA & CIA, and classified DoD facilities. It's the price you pay when you seek a job that puts you in contact with information or materials that are critical to national security. In the wake of the recent Anthrax attacks, it's only logical that the NIH should implement tighter physical security measures. After all, the NIH keeps stocks of potential biological agents.

      This isn't an illegal or unconstitutional search, it's a condition of voluntary employment. If you want to work in an environment where you may have access to highly sensitive or highly dangerous items, you are expected to be comfortable with such security measures. In that kind of work environment, security is everybody's burden, particularly when there is evidence of recent biological attacks. If you aren't comfortable bearing the burden of security, seek employment elsewhere.

    5. Re:Right... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you have nothing to steal, why lock you door? Basically what I am saying is, search whatever the hell you want to search on me, my car, my property whatever...If it will help my wife and children live a safer life, if it will help them not burn to death or be trapped under a pile of rubble, or crash in a plane as a direct result of terrorist activity, I am willing to for go a little privacy.
      Ya know I knew this would happen. Sept 11 2001 people were crying to our government, "Where were you, where are you, why couldn't you stop this" and now all those that were crying about it have come full circle and are BITCHING about it.
      Well, the gov't is here, so deal with it! you can't have it both ways.
      I agree, the gov't can be a bit much with things, I for one used to hate all forms of gov't. But sometimes its a necessary evil.

    6. Re:Right... by Ceinwyn · · Score: 1

      Yes the attacks were successul...3 planes did crash into buildings, killing many people in the buildings and all the people on the places. Thanks to some heros 1 plane only crahsed into the group, only killing all the people in plane. Somehow I don't think the terrorists objectives were to eliminate liberties in the US (which I have yet to see happen). Put things in perspective THOUSANDS OF PEOPLE DIED simply because they were Americans (or working/living/visiting in America).

    7. Re:Right... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course, what you just happen to neglect to mention in your ignorant arrogant assholistic comment is the millions of us who have been saying "Stop taking away my fucking rights in the name of the scare de jour" since 9/11 10:30 AM CST and for years before it. In fact, there's a hell of a lot more idiots like you who have been suddenly convinced that full body cavity searches on demand by cops are perfectly OK. And those of us who value freedom, liberty, and the rest of the ideals the US was founded on wish you fucking clueless twats would go live in Singapore with the rest of the fascists.

      Fucking idiot.

    8. Re:Right... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This from someone named Master Bait.

  8. Is the 4th ammendment applicable to employers? by DigitalDreg · · Score: 1

    I doubt it ...

    1. Re:Is the 4th ammendment applicable to employers? by NecroPuppy · · Score: 1

      Only if they are de facto acting for the police.

      I.e., the police want, for whatever reason, to search you, your stuff, your car. However, the judge they go to doesn't give them a warrent. So they, in response, convince your employer to search you.

      In that case, whatever judge this matter is brought before, will likely throw it out; if he doesn't, it will almost certainly be thrown out on appeal. And you would probably be able to take action against the police and your employer.

      But for "normal" employer searchs, not much you can do.

      NecroPuppy

      --
      I like you, Stuart. You're not like everyone else, here, at Slashdot.
    2. Re:Is the 4th ammendment applicable to employers? by Coniine · · Score: 1

      I have the feeling that this is what is going on at the airlines : a private agent, the airline, is acting as a proxy for illegal searches by law enforcement. This is done in the name of safety but the net effect of our travels being logged and provided to any LEA that asks is an illegal search. It pisses me off, since there are safety measures that would be effective that would not require this intrusion into my privacy.

    3. Re:Is the 4th ammendment applicable to employers? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am a lawyer, which means you can't trust anything I say and the following information should not be viewed as legal advice or as establishing an attorney-client relationship.

      The 4th amendment applies only to the federal government only only to its use of its police powers. It also applies, though the 14th amendment to state governments as well, but again only as to their use of their police powers.

      A private employer (just like any private person) can search whatever they want if they have your consent. If they search you or your posessions without your consent the evidence they discover would probably not be excluded in a trial against you under the 4th amendment. (You may have a civil action against that person based on a breach of contract you have with that person or based in tort-- that should make you feel better while you serve your time in jail).

    4. Re:Is the 4th ammendment applicable to employers? by NecroPuppy · · Score: 1

      Except in the case of airlines, their policy are posted, and for a valid safety reason.

      You don't have to fly. I don't. But that's because heights scare me; I'm the stereotypical white-knuckle flier.

      If I had to fly, I would put up with whatever searches were called for, as I don't view them as unreasonable.

      NecroPuppy

      --
      I like you, Stuart. You're not like everyone else, here, at Slashdot.
  9. Private Property by wo1verin3 · · Score: 1

    They have the right to ask you to submit to such searches and the right if you declined not to allow you on the property. It's private property, I don't see you have much choice.

    1. Re:Private Property by lorax · · Score: 1

      Actually, NIH (the place where this guy works) is public property, so you can't use this reasoning.

  10. Land of the free? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ha! You continue to fool yourselves.

  11. Sure... by Marcos+the+Jackle · · Score: 0

    you can refuse to be searched. And then they can refuse to let you in. Explain that one to your boss.
    Look, I'm a libertarian at heart, but these searches that many of us are have to deal with every day are there for our protection. You don't like it? Then stay home.
    At least they're not cavity searches. ;-)

    Have a day

    Mk.

    1. Re:Sure... by darkfnord2 · · Score: 0

      That means by definition you are not a libertarian. For some reason it's popular to say one is a libertarian when one isn't.

      Matt

    2. Re:Sure... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ew..

      An appointment with Dr. Jellyfinger twice a day?

      Telecommuting sounds better all the time.

    3. Re:Sure... by Marcos+the+Jackle · · Score: 0

      Are all democrats the same? No. Are all republicans the same? No. Just because one is dem./rep./lib. doesn't mean that they believe 100% in the full party line.

      For some reason it's popular amongst slashdolts to be smart asses and know-it-alls.

      Mk.

  12. Seek legal advice. by rx · · Score: 1

    This is not the place to ask for legal advice. For a small fee if not for nothing you should be able to retain a lawyer and find out where you stand.

    There are lawyers who specialize in this area, with years of experience unlike the masses of Slashdot readers like myself.

    I would equate your post to someone asking a lawyer how to make the best apple pie.

    Phil

    1. Re:Seek legal advice. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      IAAL, and I make a mean apple pie. FYI.

      ;-)

    2. Re:Seek legal advice. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How do you keep the crust from going soggy? Do you pre-bake? Flaky crusts I can do.

    3. Re:Seek legal advice. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Apple pies that don't have a slightly soggy crust are a little weird, I always thought. I use gelatin sheets to stiffen the sauce, though, so that may help a little.

    4. Re:Seek legal advice. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Now I find gelatin weird. I usually stick to a little cornstarch just to thicken things up.

    5. Re:Seek legal advice. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not that difficult, and you don't want to overuse it, but it adds a 'springy'(?) texture to the filling. Of course, it's in addition to the normal thickeners you'd use, not a replacement.

    6. Re:Seek legal advice. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Use powdered agar-agar rather than gelatine, in small amounts. It thickens far better, and quicker too. Plus it has the advantage of not being composed of ground-up animal earholes, eyeholes and arseholes.

    7. Re:Seek legal advice. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'll try that next time. I don't know what I'll do about the taste, though... I've become quite fond of the flavor of those *holes you mentioned. ;-)

  13. You're wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The fourth amendment applies to illegal searches on "your" property. Not on someone elses. For example if i take a gun to work in my car and threaten someone they have the right to call the police and search my car since it's on their property.

    1. Re:You're wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, they have the right because you've given them probable cause. And it's not police searches they're talking about anyway, RTFA.

  14. As a taxpayer... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    ... who is footing the bill for your salary for you to work at a place that could potentially contain VERY dangerous substances, I insist that you submit to such searches.

    If you don't like it, work for the private sector.

    1. Re:As a taxpayer... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I also work at NIH, and let me tell you, I'm glad they've finally started implementing some more stringent searches around here. For a long time, you barely needed a parking pass to drive on the campus. The guards would barely check to see if you had an ID card, and even after 9/11, it took them a week to notice mine had expired a year ago.

      I'm not an alarmist, but it seems like a few extra minutes on your way in or out is not that demanding and is worth the extra sense of safety. The search is not that onerous, and takes under 30 seconds. If you are uncomfortable with that, perhaps you would be better off in the private sector, where they had these kind of searches before the attacks.

    2. Re:As a taxpayer... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Concur.

      Suck it up or get off my payroll.

    3. Re:As a taxpayer... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ah yes, my way or the highway, what an idea. How about this paradoxial statement, I, as a tax payer who pays in part for the governmental services you recieve demand that you cease your demands.

  15. Not your lab by tedd · · Score: 1
    Not your lab -- they can search you if they want.

    You might be trying to sneak out some infectious organisms to sell to bad guys.

  16. Security Checks During "Wartime" by an_art · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Given the recent anthrax attacks, and our national War posture, your security hassles are not inconsistent with US 20th Century history. You might look at a good history of the Manhattan Project for a picture of just how draconian security measures can get during wartime in the US. As they say, "you haven't seen anything yet!"

    1. Re:Security Checks During "Wartime" by NewWazoo · · Score: 1


      Oh, well, since they did it in the past, it must be alright then, yes?

      I guess the phrase "learning from one's mistakes" means nothing to you.

      Brandon

    2. Re:Security Checks During "Wartime" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ah, but it's not wartime. It's close, but the Pres has not asked for, nor has Congress declared war.

    3. Re:Security Checks During "Wartime" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      like learning from the mistake of not ever ending WWI and tring to punish German forever? Kind of like gulf war which is still going on and targets are still be attacked almost ever other day?

  17. Sort of an answer. by Eagle7 · · Score: 2

    If you're employer was a private entity, I think they could basically do whatever they wanted, as long as they did not discrimnate (the Fourth amendment doesn't apply to private entities)

    On the other hand, it sounds like you work for the government, so the Fourth amendment might apply. However, I know that defense contractor employees (Lockheed Martin, etc) are subject to searches by the DOD when they enter or leave the site, and those searches are legal.

    I'd say your best bet might be to talk to an attorney, or pay your legal dept. a visit and ask them about it. If the searching is legal, there is almost surely a federal or DOD statute that makes them legit - ask for a copy.

    Oh, IANAL of course.

    --
    _sig_ is away
    1. Re:Sort of an answer. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I dont know much about the fourth amendment.. IANAA (I am not an american).. but i think you are right.. certain gvmt jobs are subject to these kinds of measures. when i worked for the federal gvmt in a prison.. my bag was opened on the way in and out... everyday. I took a user manual home one day and needed a 3 page document just to do it. of course.. i had no problem with this considering the environment... now any job i have in the future.. I will probably not be bothered by it . theres no reason to bring knives, bombs, pot, anything like that into work.. so in my mind.. theres no reason to be bothered by all of this... as much as i HATE the saying "if you're a law abiding citizen you have nothing to worry about" I cant help but say it.
      I realize it's the principle... last time i checked.. we dont live in communist russia... and people in our society should not have to be subject to this. The more i think about it.. the more it seems like everyday security measures at prisons.. are being used all over our continent. It's all very ironic for me to watch the planes being grounded for days (no free movement = lockdown), people being searched constantly, etc.
      Prison is.. the deprivation of liberty.. whether you're staff or an employee... and everyday.. its seems like more and more people are having to live.. just like if they were in prison.
      its scary... we are living in really fucked up times right now.

    2. Re:Sort of an answer. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      erp... i meant whether you're staff or an inmate

  18. Democracy at work by gentlewizard · · Score: 3, Informative

    To paraphrase a line from the movie Crimson Tide:

    "We're here to sell things in a democracy, not to practice it."

    Manufacturing plants have always had searches like this. You'd be amazed what walks out of the plant in lunchboxes, etc. What is new is that we white collar workers are starting to be subject to the same rules that blue collar workers have had to put up with for decades.

    1. Re:Democracy at work by ArsSineArtificio · · Score: 1
      You'd be amazed what walks out of the plant in lunchboxes, etc.



      The little things I could get in my big lunchbox, like nuts and bolts and all four shocks. But the big stuff we snuck out in my buddy's mobile home.

      My plan went all right till we tried to put it together one night. And that's when we noticed that something was definitely wrong.

      --
      All employees must wash hands before seeking equitable relief.
    2. Re:Democracy at work by dadams · · Score: 1

      Crap. Looks like the Johnny Cash lyric filter is broken again. Although I think Shel Silverstien wrote that song. Whatever. Time to get back to hackin' the slashcode.

      --
      --"In dreams begin responsibilities" - Delmore Schwartz
    3. Re:Democracy at work by Bob+McCown · · Score: 2
      Johnny Cash, ladies and gentlemen!

      Neat song, forgot about that one...

    4. Re:Democracy at work by egburr · · Score: 1

      I remember listening to that song a lot when I was little. Do you know the name of the song and/or artist?

      --

      Edward Burr
      Having a smoking section in a restaurant is like having a peeing section in a swimming pool.
    5. Re:Democracy at work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Johnny Cash - "One Piece at a Time"

    6. Re:Democracy at work by Cid+Highwind · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Manufacturing plants have always had searches like this.
      True dat.
      I worked as temporary manufacturing help for A large mobile phone company. We had to enter and leave through metal detectors, and any bags or boxes you carried were searched as you left. And since the plant was in a free trade zone, there were warnings posted all over that any crime committed on the premises was a federal offense.We had the "right" to refuse to be searched, but if we did, they had the right to tell us not to come back the next day. It was a hassle, but it maked sense to search poeple there, you could carry out the pieces of a phone with a lot less trouble than Johnny Cash had trying to sneak a Caddy out one piece at a time.

      --
      0 1 - just my two bits
    7. Re:Democracy at work by tomblackwell · · Score: 1

      ONE PIECE AT A TIME
      Written by W. Kemp
      Recorded by Johnny Cash on 3/5/76
      Number one - County Chart; Number 29 - Pop Chart

      Well, I left Kentucky back in '49
      An' went to Detroit workin' on a 'sembly line
      The first year they had me puttin' wheels on cadillacs

      Every day I'd watch them beauties roll by
      And sometimes I'd hang my head and cry
      'Cause I always wanted me one that was long and black.

      One day I devised myself a plan
      That should be the envy of most any man
      I'd sneak it out of there in a lunchbox in my hand
      Now gettin' caught meant gettin' fired
      But I figured I'd have it all by the time I retired
      I'd have me a car worth at least a hundred grand.

      CHORUS
      I'd get it one piece at a time
      And it wouldn't cost me a dime
      You'll know it's me when I come through your town
      I'm gonna ride around in style
      I'm gonna drive everybody wild
      'Cause I'll have the only one there is a round.

      So the very next day when I punched in
      With my big lunchbox and with help from my friends
      I left that day with a lunch box full of gears
      Now, I never considered myself a thief
      GM wouldn't miss just one little piece
      Especially if I strung it out over several years.

      The first day I got me a fuel pump
      And the next day I got me an engine and a trunk
      Then I got me a transmission and all of the chrome
      The little things I could get in my big lunchbox
      Like nuts, an' bolts, and all four shocks
      But the big stuff we snuck out in my buddy's mobile home.

      Now, up to now my plan went all right
      'Til we tried to put it all together one night
      And that's when we noticed that something was definitely wrong.

      The transmission was a '53
      And the motor turned out to be a '73
      And when we tried to put in the bolts all the holes were gone.

      So we drilled it out so that it would fit
      And with a little bit of help with an A-daptor kit
      We had that engine runnin' just like a song
      Now the headlight' was another sight
      We had two on the left and one on the right
      But when we pulled out the switch all three of 'em come on.

      The back end looked kinda funny too
      But we put it together and when we got thru
      Well, that's when we noticed that we only had one tail-fin
      About that time my wife walked out
      And I could see in her eyes that she had her doubts
      But she opened the door and said "Honey, take me for a spin."

      So we drove up town just to get the tags
      And I headed her right on down main drag
      I could hear everybody laughin' for blocks around
      But up there at the court house they didn't laugh
      'Cause to type it up it took the whole staff
      And when they got through the title weighed sixty pounds.

      CHORUS
      I got it one piece at a time
      And it didn't cost me a dime
      You'll know it's me when I come through your town
      I'm gonna ride around in style
      I'm gonna drive everybody wild
      'Cause I'll have the only one there is around.

      (Spoken) Ugh! Yow, RED RYDER
      This is the COTTON MOUTH
      In the PSYCHO-BILLY CADILLAC Come on

      Huh, This is the COTTON MOUTH
      And negatory on the cost of this mow-chine there RED RYDER
      You might say I went right up to the factory
      And picked it up, it's cheaper that way
      Ugh!, what model is it?

      Well, It's a '49, '50, '51, '52, '53, '54, '55, '56
      '57, '58' 59' automobile
      It's a '60, '61, '62, '63, '64, '65, '66, '67
      '68, '69, '70 automobile.

    8. Re:Democracy at work by Jburkholder · · Score: 2


      ONE PIECE AT A TIME
      Written by W. Kemp
      Recorded by Johnny Cash on 3/5/76
      Number one - County Chart; Number 29 - Pop Chart


      Well, I left Kentucky back in '49
      An' went to Detroit workin' on a 'sembly line
      The first year they had me puttin' wheels on cadillacs

      Every day I'd watch them beauties roll by
      And sometimes I'd hang my head and cry
      'Cause I always wanted me one that was long and black.

      One day I devised myself a plan
      That should be the envy of most any man
      I'd sneak it out of there in a lunchbox in my hand
      Now gettin' caught meant gettin' fired
      But I figured I'd have it all by the time I retired
      I'd have me a car worth at least a hundred grand.

      I was 12 when I remember this playing on my dad's AM radio in his brand new '76 Torino

  19. anoying but the alternative is worse by Redav · · Score: 0, Troll

    While manual checks like this can be somewhat cumbersome they beat the socks off of an automated (national ID card) system. In short I'd much rather take a little time out of my day for time consuming but decentralized security measures than be subject to more efficient centralized systems. Unfortunatly I think it likely that we will be forced to comply with both types. doh

    --
    hmmmmmm dohnuts.....
    1. Re:anoying but the alternative is worse by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      Are you saying that you like Little Brother better than Big Brother?
      .

  20. well... by Spagornasm · · Score: 1

    Fourth amendment rights can be abrogated in certain places. Schools, for one, conduct random drug searches in kids' lockers. I think at places of work, warantless searches can be made on people, as long as it isn't a government agent (FBI, et. al) conducting the search. If your company wants to search you, I believe (I'm not sure here) they have every right to, because the thinking is that if you don't like it, you can always go work somewhere else.

    I can maybe see the logic in that, but it doesn't make much sense from the outset.

    --

    When nuance becomes the only objective we lose the ability to function
    1. Re:well... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If someone wants to search your desk, office, who are you to complain. Its not yours to start with.

    2. Re:well... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      students don't own their lockers. they can search the locker, but not inside a purse in that locker. unless, of course, it "happens to fall out and open on the floor." :)

  21. Personally by almeida · · Score: 1

    I'd much rather have them annoy you with the searches, than for you to one day tweak out and try to blow up the rest of us. Sure, it might not ever happen, but I'm willing to put you through these minor inconveniences for my safety.

    1. Re:Personally by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So you are essentially saying that you are happy to sacrifice someone elses freedom for your security?

      Hmm ..

  22. We're at War ... by CriticalMass · · Score: 1

    ... and we live in the battleground ...
    Stop whining!

    1. Re:We're at War ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Amen.


      Suck it up and soldier on!

    2. Re:We're at War ... by cyclist1200 · · Score: 1

      Still not a valid justification for trashing freedom.

    3. Re:We're at War ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe you should apply for Afgani citizenship and try their form of freedom.
      Get real you twit and get your head out of your A**.

    4. Re:We're at War ... by Tungbo · · Score: 1

      Gee. I must be deaf and blind.
      I don't see any bombs or shells falling from the sky.
      I don't hear any landmine exploding.
      I didn't read any reports of ships or air crafts being down'd by enemies.

      If you think this is war, you should go talk to some WWII or Korean war veterans.
      So far, this is less of a war than the Gulf War and not much more of a war than the 'war on drugs.'

      Consider the UK. They have dealt with terriost attacks for decades and have not declared themselves at war. They just put every one on camera! (See recent NYT maazine article)

      I am quite unhappy with the current rhetorics based around the word 'war'. But I'm not sure what might be a better approach to discussing the situation. Any one with some independent thoughts?

    5. Re:We're at War ... by ahfoo · · Score: 1

      This is the CNN war. CNN was talking about the "Upcoming War" weeks before Bush used the term. And these posts about it not being a war are right on the money. It's bullshit.
      The US has basically failed to go to war ever since WWII. Korea was a Police Action, Vietnam was a Conflict. Everything since that involving unilateral action by the US has either been so small in size like Grenada or short in length like Iraq that it was little more than a skermish.
      The US is impotent to go to war because it takes two to tango. You get not credit for being a great jerk off in war. You've got to have a partner for this game they call war. It's just like fuckin'. You can't go kill "them" if nobody will wear their uniforms.
      So let's drop the word war here and then let's talk about the war on drugs Bush you Coke head nut! Kick down on the world, let's legalize that funky dumb stuff from down south. Clinton took a toke, but Bush is all out in the open saying he dug coke and loved getting stoned and if he's like his daughters, he obviously likes to put back a few beers. He was a bad boy, right? So where's it at man? Why is he holding out if he was the party guy back in the days and now he suddenly like doesn't get it. What up? How many of you out there actually had a Coke habit, it's not that bad compared to cigarettes. Ask the prez, he knows and he's frontin' this game his dad was playing with Ron RayGun, but look how sad that dude turned out to be. There was some weird sexual Elvis thing going on with his wife.
      Let's start brewing beer with buds instead of hops again like it used to be back in the days. And let's make Coke-a-Cola back into Coke-a-Cola. Fuckin' A. Let's talk about war. The rest of the world is getting bored waiting for the americans to step up to the plate and get the party going. If they start without us, they think we're gonna play cops on 'em. We've got to clear the air here so we can get on with the gettin' on.
      I know what the wait is though, everybody's waiting for my nanotech delivery device to clean up all these addiction issues, but whatever. It's almost done. You'll print them at home. Got most of it worked out. It's all open source.

    6. Re:We're at War ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is this post your work, Mentifex?

    7. Re:We're at War ... by netrangerrr · · Score: 1

      I live in NYC. this is war.

      Quit whining about getting your stupid bag searched! Are you wanting to carry contraband? Kiddy porn or cocaine or something? If not, then how hard is your life with a 1 minute search?

      --
      "As for the future, your task is not to foresee it, but to enable it." - Antoine de Saint-Exupery
  23. look were you work by Rubbersoul · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I work at the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, MD,

    While I do not agree with all of the searches and invasions of privacy that have begin in the country, you have to keep in mind were you work.

    If I worked at the National Institutes of Heath I would expect to be searched due to the threat of a biological attack and all. If I worked at Burger King or something of the like though I would be a bit more tense if they searched me every time, but that is just my 2cents.

    --
    man .sig
    No manual entry for .sig.
    1. Re:look were you work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If I worked at Burger King... ...I would be a bit more tense if they searched me every time...

      Why, are you afraid they'll discover the Pokemon toys you're smuggling out in your pants?

    2. Re:look were you work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Hmmm... Burger King sounds like a great place to spread bio-weapons. Billions served Billions infected.

      That's real humiliation. Minimum wage and body cavity searches.

    3. Re:look were you work by ryanwright · · Score: 2

      If I worked at the National Institutes of Heath I would expect to be searched

      Yeah - we'd all be in trouble if one of them there candy bars fell into the wrong hands...

      --
      -Ryan, with the unoriginal sig
  24. Quitting not an option... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why should this person quit? Quitting is the easy way out. He should fight for his rights. Quitting only makes it easier for "the man" to nibble away our rights.

  25. Fourth Amendment rights? by dinivin · · Score: 3, Insightful

    And why should it be considered acceptable for me to relinquish my Fourth Ammendment rights so I can go work on in my lab?

    I hate it when people do this... The Bill of Rights is a list of limitations on the federal government. When you submit to a search for your employer, you are not forfeiting your fouth amendment rights. That's like saying that you have the right to say whatever you want while in my apartment without fear of repurcussion. While you obviously can't get punished by the federal government (except in some extreme cases), I can certainly kick you out.

    Dinivin

    1. Re:Fourth Amendment rights? by camusflage · · Score: 2

      The Bill of Rights is a list of limitations on the federal government.

      True, but you don't hand over all your rights when you walk through your employer's door either. Unless conspicuously stated, they can't listen in on your phone calls, watch your net usage, or anything like that. They can't discriminate against you because the DOL says so. So yes, while this is not a constitutional issue, there are still some protections afforded you as an employee by the government. Fortunately (in this case, I'd have to think), this is not one of them.

      --
      The truth about Scientology, Xenu, and you: Operation Clambake
    2. Re:Fourth Amendment rights? by Happy+Monkey · · Score: 2

      Of course, this person does work for the federal government...

      --
      __
      Do ya feel happy-go-lucky, punk?
    3. Re:Fourth Amendment rights? by Tassach · · Score: 2
      In case you didn't notice, his employer is the Federal Government. Any search conducted at the behest or order of a federal official is definately subject to 4th amendment restrictions.


      However, working for the Fed. Gvt. is voluntary. By accepting a position in a secure federal facility, you have given explicit prior consent to submit to things like searches, wiretaps, etc., as a condition of your employment. If we still had conscription, that would be a different story. Typically, you sign a consent form when you take a gvt. job. About the only thing you can do in that situation is force them to produce the consent form with your signature -- if they can't produce it, they can't search you.

      --
      Why is it that the proponents of "one nation under God" are so eager to get rid of "liberty and justice for all"?
    4. Re:Fourth Amendment rights? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, since he works for the government the Constitutional restraint applies to them, doesn't it? And by what right did they search a car which did not enter or leave the building? They are, in fact performing unreasonable searches. He would have to sue to stop them, but whoever is in charge of security ought to be fired.

    5. Re:Fourth Amendment rights? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      By accepting a position in a secure federal facility, you have given explicit prior consent to submit to things like searches, wiretaps, etc., as a condition of your employment.

      When I worked as a contractor to the DOE, I never signed any document consenting to any of those things. The fact that telephones there (and in many private homes in the area) were wire-tapped bothers me.

    6. Re:Fourth Amendment rights? by ryanwright · · Score: 2

      About the only thing you can do in that situation is force them to produce the consent form with your signature -- if they can't produce it, they can't search you.

      Nope, but they can hand you another form and give you the choice between signing it and submitting to a search or going home unemployed...

      --
      -Ryan, with the unoriginal sig
  26. You probably don't... by WombatControl · · Score: 2

    Chances are you just have to live with it.

    • You work in a government laboratory that works with dangerous pathogens that could be suitable for biological warfare.
    • You probably signed a contract stating that you must consent to all necessary searches. (These are common in contracts for workers in critical government facilities as part of your standard security agreements.)
    • We're currently facing the first known biological attack in US history.

    Considering all these factors, you either have the choice of quitting or just living with the inconvience. There is certainly nothing unreasonable about throughly searching someone who works in such a critical environment. While, yes, IANAL, I don't really thing you have any case to object to these searches.

    1. Re:You probably don't... by Shoten · · Score: 2

      Um, a few things...


      One, they don't keep dangerous pathogens at NIH in Bethesda. NIH is across the street from where the President gets his checkup, and is only a few miles from the DC border. If they're worried about him carrying out a smallpox/ebola/lassa fever/whatever culture, they have the rent-a-cops in front of the wrong building.


      Two, he probably did sign something, but there's also a difference between what he consented to then as opposed to what they are doing now. The contract may be vague, but that vagueness is often interpreted in context of what was to be expected at the time. And again, NIH is not a high-security super-secret facility.

      Three, the fact that we're facing a biowar attack is irrelevant...what, he's more likely to steal something because another entity has mailed anthrax to various public figures? See under "non sequitur."

      --

      For your security, this post has been encrypted with ROT-13, twice.
    2. Re:You probably don't... by dorzak · · Score: 1, Flamebait
      You probably signed a contract stating that you must consent to all necessary searches. (These are common in contracts for workers in critical government facilities as part of your standard security agreements.)

      Heck, many non-government jobs have them as a standard of employment. My current employer does have such a policy, and I work for a ISP, working with PTP and Frame circuits.

      Previous jobs that have had similiar policies where I have worked. Actually come to think of it EVERY place I have worked has had such a policy. Look at your employee manual.

      Staples

      Super Saver (Albertson's Warehouse Store)

      GenCo (recoupment warehouse)

      Lamson & Sessions (poly fabrication)

      University of California, Davis Campus

      Blue Shield of California

      Unocal (Part of Union 76 Petroleum companies)

      If it is illegal, a lot of employers seem to do it. Now I have not had the policy exercised, but the employee manual did include it. It was something along the lines of:
      "In order to protect our valuable resources of the company, we reserve the right to search all personal belongings on company premises, including bags, purses, pockets, desks, cars in the company parking lot, breakrooms, and any other place related to your place of work."

      I am not quoting exactly, but you get the idea. Now, working for the Federal Government, in a time during which we are at WAR, and in a facility that potentially could be handling potential biological weapons, I would say, "Get the heck over it." Other Federal employees are getting more personal searches. You know the Postal workers with the swabs up their noses? You are complaining about a daily search of your bag going in and out of a facility handling biologicals? Get some perspective here.

      Btw, did you bother to RTFM? In this case your employee manual before asking slashdot.

      For those with puritan sensibilities that is Read The Forgotten Manual.

      Federal Employees have long enjoyed many "perks" that those of us in the private sector have not. For example it is next to impossible to fire a civil servant.

      Oh, of course IANAL

    3. Re:You probably don't... by Yet+Another+Smith · · Score: 2
      One, they don't keep dangerous pathogens at NIH in Bethesda. NIH is across the street from where the President gets his checkup, and is only a few miles from the DC border.

      What do they do there? Is there anything there that could be of real use to bioterrorists? Clearly if there's nothing there other than a bunch of adminstrators and info that can be found at a university library, then this guy is right to be pissed off, cause its typical overreaction (see this article at The Onion). Still, the fact that its across the street from Bethesda Hospital or not far from DC is hardly evidence that there's nothing dangerous there.

      Three, the fact that we're facing a biowar attack is irrelevant...what, he's more likely to steal something because another entity has mailed anthrax to various public figures?

      If you are in fact correct that there's nothing dangerous going on at NIH, then you're probably right. However, if there is anything dangerous there, and it is far from clear that the NIH building is totally benign, then its highly relevant. This isn't searching the handbag of everyone coming out of the Hooterville Mall. At first reading, however, this seems to be targeted specifically at a location that could be a target for a very credible threat to the lives of untold thousands, should these attacks go unchecked or escallate. In fact, if there was nothing at NIH to worry about I'd expect the guy to have said that in his submission. If it were me, I'd be shouting, "Hey, there's no way a terrorist would be interested in this place, so this is totally unnecessary." This guy hasn't said that.

      While there is every reason to resist going overboard, and every reason to be extra vigilant to protect our rights from our own worst instincts, it is important to distinguish between Stalineque paranoia, and the concrete threat that we are currently facing.

      Remember:
      • There have already been at least 3 deaths in this bioattack, with two more people hospitalized with a disease that has an extremely high mortality rate.

      • There have been numerous other attacks, with no sign that the attacks will stop.

      • We are facing an enemy that has demonstrated the ability to kill inocent people literally by the thousands, with a probable hope that the death toll might have been 100,000.

      • This same enemy has stated "it is the duty of every [insert any true beleiver here, its really irrelevant which theology/ideology this particular group is on about] to obtain biological, chemical, or nuclear weapons" and "kill [insert ethnic group here] whereever they are, at home or abroad."


      Given these circumstances, it is not unreasonable to expect that government installations which deal with health issues, such as the NIH, to be the target of terrorist attacks and/or thefts. Hence it is reasonable to search people entering that building, regardless of who they are. Unless, of course, you'd rather that they only target brown-skinned people who try to go there. I for one don't want to see racial profiling get any more acceptance, so lets assume that high-risk targets get everybody searched, rather than a subjective "probable cause" selection criteria that is vulnerable to racism and witch-hunt hysteria.

      Short version, if there's something dangerous where he works, then searches are not only reasonable but important. However, this situation should not be taken as an excuse for blanket searches aimed at other goals, wether they be control of information, preventing embezlement, or anything else. That sort of thing really does require probable cause, and should be verbotten.

      that's my two yen's worth anyway.
      --
      if ($it != $onething) {$it = $another;}
    4. Re:You probably don't... by unitron · · Score: 2
      Actually for anyone who needs to be told to RTFM it probably *is* the Forgotten Manual, and they need to be reminded of its existence.

      Plus, "Read The Forgotten Manual" has a less hostile tone than the original version of the phrase, and keeps both parties in a more civil frame of mind.

      --

      I see even classic Slashdot is now pretty much unusable on dial up anymore.

  27. My two cents... by wrinkledshirt · · Score: 1

    I don't know about anyone else, but I think that after the Sept 11th attacks they're probably stepping up the security for pilot training schools, right? And given that the West is currently in the middle of an anthrax scare, doesn't it make a little sense that medical centres and chemical labs be under a little bit of heightened security?

    I think the rationale being applied is this: if the place is a potential conduit for attacks by subterfuge, it's fair game while everything's still on red alert, which we currently are.

    Now, ask me this again in five years when the War on Terrorism goes the same route as the War on Drugs or the War on Communism (ie: a nebulous foe that is redefined to justify continuing budgets for miscellaneous useless defense departments), and I'll probably have a different answer...

    --

    --------
    Bleah! Heh heh heh... BLEAH BLEAH!!! Ha ha ha ha...

  28. It'll only get worse by Mr.+Sketch · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Especially if the Uniting and Strengthening America Act of 2001 (S.1510) gets finalized today. Newsforge had a little article written by RMS about it. It's pretty scary, but you can read the link for more information. It will basically:
    * Allow for indefinite detention of non-citizens, denying them the chance to defend themselves in court.

    * Expand secret searches.

    * Grant the FBI broad access to sensitive business records about individuals without having to show evidence of a crime. See http://www.aclu.org/congress/l100801a.html.

    * Allow officials to designate domestic groups as terrorist organizations. Membership in such an organization would become a deportable offense; see http://www.aclu.org/congress/l100801d.html.

    1. Re:It'll only get worse by jnik · · Score: 1
      Allow officials to designate domestic groups as terrorist organizations. Membership in such an organization would become a deportable offense

      Sounds to me an awful lot like a bill of attainder. (sp?)

    2. Re:It'll only get worse by cavemanf16 · · Score: 1
      I agree with the Insightful moderation someone gave you. Besides, all the new airport 'security' is nothing more than all those minimum wage employees copping a feel on every other person that goes by. If we enforced laws already on the books (like illegal immigration laws) then we wouldn't need a bunch of new ones.

      Besides, there's probably plenty of muslims out there who don't like Christians, so what's to stop them from branding any Christian organization a terrorist organization when they lobby our government hard enough. (Doesn't really matter what the truth about such groups, or lack of physical or mental harm done anymore - just how much you can pay off your local politician to say what you want him/her to say).

    3. Re:It'll only get worse by HiroProtagonist · · Score: 2, Interesting

      * Allow for indefinite detention of non-citizens, denying them the chance to defend themselves in court.

      * Allow officials to designate domestic groups as terrorist organizations. Membership in such an organization would become a deportable offense; see http://www.aclu.org/congress/l100801d.html.

      # 1 & # 4 are the most interesting together!

      Just think, you're in some organization that you feel is fairly harmless and just exersizing your free speech (or assembly) rights. All of a sudden, you're deemed a "terrorist" and deported!

      Well, you'd do something about it, but now you're not an American Citizen, so they detain you.... INDEFINITELY

      This is not a far jump in logic here folks, and if you think that our government is any less prone to corruption than any other gov. your fooling yourself.

      --
      --Remove chicken to e-mail
    4. Re:It'll only get worse by david+duncan+scott · · Score: 2
      Are you suggesting that the US would simultaneously detain and deport somebody? Neat trick -- we throw them out but don't let them leave.

      Deportation is the ejection of a foreign national. Depriving an American of citizenship would be an entirely different matter, and I'm not even sure that can be done. The only instances I can recall involved those who accepted citizenship elsewhere, and were held to have therefore given up US citizenship.

      --

      This next song is very sad. Please clap along. -- Robin Zander

    5. Re:It'll only get worse by flink · · Score: 1

      1988 - ...A fifty-foot containment wall is erected along the New Jersey shoreline, across the Harlem river, and down along the Brooklyn shoreline. It completely surrounds Manhattan Island. The US police force, like an army, is encamped around the island. The rules are simple. Once you go in, you don't come out.
      - Escape From New York, John Carpenter

      Hey, he was thirteen years early, but he was a prophet.

    6. Re:It'll only get worse by Boomer2 · · Score: 1

      Interesting how the ACLU opposes the USA Act because "The Administration has not adequately explained why this new crime should be created or why the definitions in existing anti-terrorism laws are insufficient."

      If this is such a concern, why are they so interested in creating scads of laws for "hate crimes"? Is killing a person of a different background/race more heinous than killing someone of the same background/race? Apparently only if you two live in the same country. If you live in a different country than your victim, then it's OK.

    7. Re:It'll only get worse by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Simultanious detention and deportation..

      Next step: Simultanious life and death sentences.

    8. Re:It'll only get worse by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Sorry, left my password at home. You are incorrect. While the ACLU is deemed a "Left Wing" organiztion, and painted as having the full set of the "Left Wing" Agenda, you will find that the ACLU is focused on the First Amendment, and does not back Hate Crime laws.

      Actully I just double checked the ACLU site (HTTP://WWW.ACLU.ORG) and (in an admittedly brief look) found no mention of "Hate Crimes" one way or another. And since they have been at the forefront of the legal defense of a number of hate organization's freedom of speech issues. I find it hard to think of them as backing those laws.

      The ACLU is one of the most valuable organizations defending the freedom of speech in the USA, even unpopular speech, and it kills me to see it bad mouthed by flag waving "Patriots"

    9. Re:It'll only get worse by BluedemonX · · Score: 2

      RE: Depriving an American of citizenship would be an entirely different matter, and I'm not even sure that can be done.

      Any country can strip citizenship from its citizens. Genesis P'Orridge was exiled from England, for example. (As was Aleister Crowley).
      Believe me, birth in any country doesn't mean you have inalienable rights to citizenship there.

      --

      --- Jump!! Fire!! Bullet time!! - Lego version of the Matrix
    10. Re:It'll only get worse by david+duncan+scott · · Score: 2
      Well, I do believe you, but I also don't know quite how it would be done. Act of Congress, I suppose. I'd wager (a very small amount) there's no statute on the books about it -- we tend to either imprison or execute, not exile.

      As for G P'O, I'm having a little trouble getting details (based on an exhaustive 5-minute Google search -- I'd never heard of him, I'm afraid.) It looks like he's been told that he'll do time if he returns, which to me makes him an unpursued fugitive, not an exile per se, but I'm not clear on this one. Crowley apparently died in England, but perhaps he re-entered the country illegally.

      --

      This next song is very sad. Please clap along. -- Robin Zander

    11. Re:It'll only get worse by armb · · Score: 2

      > Is killing a person of a different background/race more heinous than killing someone of the same background/race?

      No. Killing someone with intent to frighten and intimidate others as a deliberate side effect as part of a ongoing campaign is more heinous than just killing someone.
      Now that doesn't necessarily justify all "hate crime" laws (and there's an AC reply pointing out the ACLU don't support them), or indeed all anti-terrorism laws, but you should at least understand the argument.

      --
      rant
    12. Re:It'll only get worse by BluedemonX · · Score: 2

      RE: As for G P'O, I'm having a little trouble getting details (based on an exhaustive 5-minute Google search -- I'd never heard of him, I'm afraid.) It looks like he's been told that he'll do time if he returns, which to me makes him an unpursued fugitive, not an exile per se, but I'm not clear on this one.

      It's very difficult to get accurate information about the man, but seeing as he's returned to England to put together art gallery shows by request and not been imprisoned, I don't think the "unpursued fugitive" thing is correct. He still is unwelcome to live there. That's the problem with criticising the government for years, eventually they tell you to leave and never come back. There's a lot of smokescreen stuff around it, like accusations of cult mind control and ritual torture, that kind of thing.

      --

      --- Jump!! Fire!! Bullet time!! - Lego version of the Matrix
    13. Re:It'll only get worse by david+duncan+scott · · Score: 2
      Well, it doesn't really sound like they have told him to leave and never come back, does it? What the hell -- lots of people are unpopular with their governments, but apparently nobody cares enough to stop him at the airport.

      Of course, the original issue was the removal of citizenship, which is obviously a separate issue from residence, or even imprisonment. Does anybody know whether he still holds a UK passport, is entitled to vote, etc.? (The inability to vote doesn't equate with loss of citizenship -- felons and children in the US are still citizens -- but the ability to vote would be a pretty good indicator that one is a citizen.) I wonder how much of this is official and legal and how much is some London cop running people out of town on his own.

      --

      This next song is very sad. Please clap along. -- Robin Zander

    14. Re:It'll only get worse by BluedemonX · · Score: 2

      RE: Of course, the original issue was the removal of citizenship, which is obviously a separate issue from residence, or even imprisonment. Does anybody know whether he still holds a UK passport, is entitled to vote, etc.?

      I believe he does not. He's welcome to visit, but that's it.

      --

      --- Jump!! Fire!! Bullet time!! - Lego version of the Matrix
    15. Re:It'll only get worse by david+duncan+scott · · Score: 2
      This has all rather caught my interest. Is there any official, or even semi-official (BBC, eg), description of his status? All I've come across are his own comments and some slightly breathless supporters.

      Frankly, I'm trying to picture what would have pissed off the British government to this extent. You can beat a child to death and get out when you turn 18 on the one hand, and on the other hand they manage to shoot people in the streets of Belfast, so what in God's name did a musician do to earn such special treatment?

      --

      This next song is very sad. Please clap along. -- Robin Zander

    16. Re:It'll only get worse by BluedemonX · · Score: 2

      Same here. Again, hardcore info is hard to come by on this guy - but he appears to be a real touchstone, things happen around him.

      Keep in mind G P O isn't just a musician - he was one of the Gore artists (COUM transmissions), someone fond of exposing "interesting" facts people might not have been aware of (e.g. the fact that Dennis Thatcher has connections with Falkland Oil, which might explain Britain's rapid response to Argentinian movements into these Islands) - but most of all, his main thrust that he keeps putting forth is: you can do whatever it is you want to do. You might have to make some sacrifices, you will certainly have to work for it, but there is absolutely no reason why you have to be told what to do, where to work, etc. According to him that's the most subversive message of all. I'm inclined to agree.

      The ostensible reason is his artwork - his 70s performance art pieces pushed every concievable limit of taste and decency - nudity, sex, scatology, torture, etc. and his various projects contributed greatly to rave culture (which produced - the E scourge! Live on Oprah!), body piercing (now you know who to blame when your daughter comes home with a navel ring!) industrial music, etc. When they raided his house the subject matter of much of what he had (COUM art, folio of various body piercing/modification photos, etc) were considered scandalously disgusting... he was pilloried in the press as a Satanic cult mind-melding pornographic goat pimp etc. But it makes me wonder, as you say, would that really be enough to make the authorities hound you so?

      --

      --- Jump!! Fire!! Bullet time!! - Lego version of the Matrix
    17. Re:It'll only get worse by david+duncan+scott · · Score: 2
      My admittedly very limited experience with performance artists has given me the impression that few people take them as seriously as they take themselves. Pilloried in the press I'm sure, but we are talking about the UK, who tolerated Jonathon Swift, George Orwell, and even Karl Marx without exile (hell, I imagine Marx was a resident alien, and they didn't even ask him to leave.)

      Still, if he'd prefer to think that he was "exiled", who am I to argue? I gather that, like Warhol, he sees his life as art, and some Suffering and Oppression at the Hands of the Petty Middle Class is probably useful for atmosphere. :)

      Is his music any good?

      --

      This next song is very sad. Please clap along. -- Robin Zander

    18. Re:It'll only get worse by BluedemonX · · Score: 2

      RE: My admittedly very limited experience with performance artists has given me the impression that few people take them as seriously as they take themselves.

      Actually, this guy is more likely to STOP doing something as soon as people start taking it too seriously. Throbbing Gristle was aborted as it started getting popular, TOPY was abandoned when people started flocking to it, etc. I appreciate your views on performance artists - but this wasn't "Boopsie from Doonesbury" - tortured for his art, Dieter on Sprockets kind of thing. But there was a period where he was nailing himself to a cross and ingesting various bodily secretions and excretions, in public. Before it became hip. He then got into the more subversive and dangerous job of being a self-help guru of sorts for the weirdos amongst us out there. Public acts of gross indecency get you fined. Telling people they really don't have to do boring, mundane jobs and being told what to do... and BTW here's how to get your s--- together to run your own life.... apparently gets you watched by various security agencies and eventually pilloried and chucked from your home country.

      RE: Still, if he'd prefer to think that he was "exiled", who am I to argue? I gather that, like Warhol, he sees his life as art, and some Suffering and Oppression at the Hands of the Petty Middle Class is probably useful for atmosphere. :)

      More like, waking up to booted cops crashing through the house, destroying and removing all your personal effects and telling you to leave. Then, seeing on the news you're being depicted as a modern day Crowley prostituting and cult-duping teenage runaways...

      RE: Is his music any good?

      Some of it is, some of it isn't. He isn't particularly gifted as a vocalist, but he doesn't attempt to work outside what he has. Some of his stuff is utter noise, some of it is quite pretty, his work with other bands (Download, Pigface) is neat. I happen to like Godstar and Alien Be-In by Psychic TV, and United by Throbbing Gristle.

      --

      --- Jump!! Fire!! Bullet time!! - Lego version of the Matrix
    19. Re:It'll only get worse by david+duncan+scott · · Score: 2
      Before it became hip. Before it became hip!? Jesus Christ, where do you live? Hell?

      Still, if nailing yourself to a cross isn't self-concious suffering, I'm not quite sure what is.

      Taking yourself seriously is pretty consistent

      --

      This next song is very sad. Please clap along. -- Robin Zander

    20. Re:It'll only get worse by BluedemonX · · Score: 2

      As in, before it became hip to collect serial killer art, make dresses out of meat, etc etc. Back in his day, showing up nude and ejecting human blood out of various orifices was beyond scandalous... there's no way on Earth to recreate that level of sensation, because of how jaded we've become.

      The nailing oneself to a cross thing was not about suffering, it was about shock value. You had blasphemy and gore balled up into one. The idea was to turn deconstruction of one's core personalities by visiting the darkest corners of existence, etc. Keep in mind this was in 60s-70s ENGLAND, not the USA.

      --

      --- Jump!! Fire!! Bullet time!! - Lego version of the Matrix
    21. Re:It'll only get worse by BluedemonX · · Score: 2

      But getting back to your original point... Bin Laden is no longer a Saudi citizen... there have been people stripped of their citizenships in many countries, and I'm sure the process exists in the USA, just as it's possible for anyone to renounce his/her citizenship.

      --

      --- Jump!! Fire!! Bullet time!! - Lego version of the Matrix
    22. Re:It'll only get worse by david+duncan+scott · · Score: 2
      "Renounce" -- that's the word I was trying to remember earlier. Thank you.

      Yes, as I said, I'm sure it could be done as an Act of Congress, in the same way that citizenship is granted under special circumstances. All I meant was that I don't know of any regular means of doing so. I don't know of any sentencing guideline that includes "stripping citizenship".

      Actually, with regard to the original discussion, I'm not entirely against the idea of declaring certains organizations inimical to the US, and deporting their members who are guests in this country. That frankly seems pretty reasonable to me. If, for instance, Peruvians wish to be Shining Path at home, that's between them and their government, but I feel that the US should be free to deny them entrance, or expel them if their membership is discovered after their arrival. We don't need the grief. Frankly, I'd bet most Americans assume that the authority exists for that already.

      The indefinite detainment, OTOH, is simply wrong. If we can't make a case we need to let people go -- expel them, perhaps, but let them go. Anything else simply encourages bad police work.

      --

      This next song is very sad. Please clap along. -- Robin Zander

    23. Re:It'll only get worse by BluedemonX · · Score: 2

      What you're advocating is deporting people based on beliefs or creed as opposed to actions.

      Whereas our openness is our strength and freedom is our virtue, it's also something that can be used against us. As in, it technically shouldn't be a problem to live in the US and love Osama Bin Laden, so long as you don't mail anthrax and pilot planes into the side of buildings. Think of all the other freedoms that can be abused e.g. free speech, the right to own guns... I mean, you can't stop people from owning guns in this country until they commit a crime with it. The alternative is more frightening, though.

      --

      --- Jump!! Fire!! Bullet time!! - Lego version of the Matrix
    24. Re:It'll only get worse by david+duncan+scott · · Score: 2
      Nope, I'm advocating deporting people based on their memberships, not their beliefs. Joining an organization is an action, not a belief.

      Those kids hanging around on your street corner wearing gang colors and trashing the place -- do you want them gone because of their creed, or because they're dangerous, they don't even live in this neighborhood, and maybe they should go piss on the walls of their own houses?

      --

      This next song is very sad. Please clap along. -- Robin Zander

    25. Re:It'll only get worse by BluedemonX · · Score: 2

      RE: Nope, I'm advocating deporting people based on their memberships, not their beliefs. Joining an organization is an action, not a belief.

      Ever heard the term "guilt by association"?

      RE: Those kids hanging around on your street corner wearing gang colors and trashing the place -- do you want them gone because of their creed, or because they're dangerous, they don't even live in this neighborhood, and maybe they should go piss on the walls of their own houses?

      I'd want them gone if and only if they were trashing the place. Regardless of their gang colors, flashing the hand signals, etc. nothing wrong with that. Killing people and trashing stuff is wrong.

      --

      --- Jump!! Fire!! Bullet time!! - Lego version of the Matrix
    26. Re:It'll only get worse by david+duncan+scott · · Score: 2
      Yes, I have heard the term, and when the association exists for a purpose I find reprehensible then I think the concept is valid.

      Guy joins the Assocation of People Who Want to Kill BlueDemonX. You want him hanging around outside your house? The oath he took says, "I do solemnly swear that I will take out that BlueDemonX bastard first chance I get, and anything else blue that I see, including the sky. This I swear on my mother's grave."

      Sounds ridiculous, I know, but then I'm not Jewish, or black. I'm more or less Catholic, but then again I'm not Irish. Up until fairly recently nobody was making much of an organized effort to kill me.

      Let me put it to you this way: plenty of people come to this country to get away from organizations, and I don't want them here either. We don't need Black September, we don't need the IRA, we don't need the Russian mob, we don't need the triads -- the list goes on. When some poor son of a bitch manages to get out of Haiti and get here, I think he deserves some confidence that we won't tolerate the Tonton Macoute (God help my spelling there)

      In war, an enemy soldier is an enemy soldier because he has joined an organization. Some organizations are at war with the very concept of a civilized society. How about we don't invite them for sleepovers?

      --

      This next song is very sad. Please clap along. -- Robin Zander

    27. Re:It'll only get worse by david+duncan+scott · · Score: 2
      plenty of people come to this country to get away from organizations, and I don't want them here either

      Jeez, just reread my own comment and realized that this was badly phrased. What I meant to say was:
      plenty of people come to this country to get away from organizations, and I don't want those organizations here either

      I welcome the refugees.
      --

      This next song is very sad. Please clap along. -- Robin Zander

    28. Re:It'll only get worse by BluedemonX · · Score: 2

      I understand what you're getting at- but any legislation that allows one to get rid of, deport, harass or otherwise get after someone based on who he/she hangs out with, versus having committed a crime... opens the door to a LOT of other, scarier ideas.

      Let's face it, if someone's a member of a CRIMINAL gang who hasn't committed a crime yet but intends to, he or she has still committed conspiracy to murder, conspiracy to arson, etc.

      If we want to become like China, killing people and torturing them for belonging to meditation clubs, or like Afghanistan, trying to suppress any speech or ideas or belonging to any group antithetical to the status quo, let's just hand the victory to the terrorists and be done with it.

      --

      --- Jump!! Fire!! Bullet time!! - Lego version of the Matrix
    29. Re:It'll only get worse by david+duncan+scott · · Score: 2
      I do see your point, and in general I agree. At the very least I think we'd agree that any such organizations need to be chosen with extreme care and only under duress.

      However, there is precedent. When a soldier shoot an enemy, he does so because the other is a member of the opposing army, an organization inimical to his country. I'm not suggesting that anybody be shot, or even imprisoned, merely that enemy soldiers be asked to leave.

      I don't think the laws of hospitality are so stringent in our culture that our nation's guests must be allowed to conduct themselves destructively, or even rudely. The fact is that they are not our citizens, and while our morals as well as are laws impel us to extend ordinary human rights to all, regardless of citizenship, remaining in the US is not such a right.

      --

      This next song is very sad. Please clap along. -- Robin Zander

    30. Re:It'll only get worse by BluedemonX · · Score: 2

      RE: I do see your point, and in general I agree. At the very least I think we'd agree that any such organizations need to be chosen with extreme care and only under duress.

      I disagree. I think that actions, rather than membership, should dictate what goes on.

      RE: However, there is precedent. When a soldier shoot an enemy, he does so because the other is a member of the opposing army, an organization inimical to his country.

      The problems we are having now have nothing to do with conventional ideas about war - you in that uniform, me in this one. You have coalitions between, for example, the Saudi royalty, who worry about losing their oil-rich thrones to the rabble yet at the same time finance Bin Laden and Wahabism and refuse to block his bank accounts, and America, who just want to get the people responsible in the name of national security while realising full well there's a whole HOST of devils they're making deals with to do so.... Try bending your head around this: we must get the entire world in line to combat Islamist terrorism. Unless it's in Israel. Or Kashmir. Get the point? Hard sell...

      Let's put it this way. Trying to fit a "uniform" on anyone is tricky because of the mercurial nature of things. Last year the Chinese were Satan incarnate, now they're our allies. America was paying for and training Bin Laden against the Russians. Now we're trying to get Russian support against the mujaheddin.

      Can we not then, just do it based on what the people are doing?

      RE: I don't think the laws of hospitality are so stringent in our culture that our nation's guests must be allowed to conduct themselves destructively, or even rudely. The fact is that they are not our citizens, and while our morals as well as are laws impel us to extend ordinary human rights to all, regardless of citizenship, remaining in the US is not such a right.

      Agreed. But membership in an organisation, speech or point of view should not be reasons to deny anyone any rights. Otherwise who knows when you might be next? One final note: 80% of the mosques in the US are Wahabist (the same fundamentalist strain that Bin Laden belongs to). Should we start bombing them? Guilt by association dictates we should: although you and I both agree that would be a horrible crime. That's why I reject it.

      --

      --- Jump!! Fire!! Bullet time!! - Lego version of the Matrix
    31. Re:It'll only get worse by david+duncan+scott · · Score: 2
      Ah, but which association?

      I'm not suggesting that, for instance, Catholics are guilty of the violence in Ireland, and that therefore every Catholic should be expelled. I'm not even suggesting that every Irish Catholic somehows shares the guilt.

      However, if somebody arrives here with "Provisional IRA" stickers on his luggage, I think we have the right to turn him away (and in fact I believe that legally we do), and if we find out that somebody is a member of an active terrorist organization only after he arrives, then I think we have the right to toss him out -- not bomb him, not arrest him, not exile him from his own country, but just ask him to leave ours. "You don't have to go home but you can't stay here."

      --

      This next song is very sad. Please clap along. -- Robin Zander

    32. Re:It'll only get worse by BluedemonX · · Score: 2

      RE: I'm not suggesting that, for instance, Catholics are guilty of the violence in Ireland, and that therefore every Catholic should be expelled. I'm not even suggesting that every Irish Catholic somehows shares the guilt.

      What happens when you have a young Catholic emigre who opposes English "occupation" of Ireland (the fact that they're there by invitation is just as lost on the Irish as it is to the huddled masses plotting terror that US soldiers are on Saudi soil ALSO by express invitation), and starts getting VERY vocal, doing everything he can to spread info about "what's going on in Mother Ireland", etc. Should we deport him? How about all those folk we have in exile from other countries wishing the overthrow of their governments? (Gosh, I'd like my family home back from the Red Vietnamese.... Down with the Saudi Royal family...) How do we pick and choose whose protest is protest (Buddhists yelling "Chinese out of Tibet!") and whose is "terrorism" (Moslems yelling "Israelis out of Palestine!")

      Let's remove "association", "point of view", etc. from this and just deport people who commit crimes and/or conspire to commit crimes, leaving the Orwellian thoughtcrime concept out of it. As for the "Provisional IRA" sticker example, you'll get some wag trying it on with Customs as a joke and bleating all the way to the ACLU about it, with some reason, if you think about it. If I was to wear a T-shirt that says "SWAT" on it (I bought it at a military surplus place) it's a shirt: if I try to use it to get into Ground Zero in NYC, that's a crime. Owning the shirt isn't the problem. Hope the analogy helps.

      --

      --- Jump!! Fire!! Bullet time!! - Lego version of the Matrix
    33. Re:It'll only get worse by david+duncan+scott · · Score: 2
      When I mentioned stickers on his luggage I was being metaphorical (personal baggage and all that), not literal. The point I was trying to make is that a Provo does more than speak out about the British occupation -- he lashes out. Where there are Provo's there are often explosions, and while this may be a stunning coincidence, I think it probably has to do with the fact that blowing things up is what the Provos do.

      The regular IRA is dodgy, but there are members of that organization who do not personally undertake acts of violence. There are even some who seek peaceful solutions. So far as I know, the same cannot be said of the Provo's -- they're rootin' tootin' urban guerillas with few other skills.

      I guess I'm sort of weird in this, but I feel that when we permit people to enter the US it's because they will make a contribution, or at least try. Obviously most do, whether by artistic achievement, scientific prowess, driving a cab well, or working late at significant personal risk so that I can get a Slurpee at any time, day or night. There are, however, a few people whose intention is to do us harm after they get here. Some of them have joined groups that take it as their duty to do us harm. Others may join after they arrive. In either case, if someone takes an oath to kill Americans, this is more than a difference of opinion, and I think it's reasonable to ask them to go away. I don't think it's necessary to wait until a conspiracy to commit a particular act of violence can be proved of a member of bin Laden's group -- the whole damned outfit is one big conspiracy to commit violence.

      --

      This next song is very sad. Please clap along. -- Robin Zander

    34. Re:It'll only get worse by BluedemonX · · Score: 2

      RE: The point I was trying to make is that a Provo does more than speak out about the British occupation -- he lashes out. Where there are Provo's there are often explosions, and while this may be a stunning coincidence, I think it probably has to do with the fact that blowing things up is what the Provos do.

      What I'm trying to say is, there may very well be Provo's who just practice law to defend other Provo's, or fundraise. Anyone conspiring to commit a crime or committing a crime should be deported on those bases and those bases alone.

      RE: I guess I'm sort of weird in this, but I feel that when we permit people to enter the US it's because they will make a contribution, or at least try.

      The flip side of the coin is that they are entitled (and should be entitled) to the same rights. Including freedom of association and freedom of speech.

      RE: In either case, if someone takes an oath to kill Americans, this is more than a difference of opinion, and I think it's reasonable to ask them to go away. I don't think it's necessary to wait until a conspiracy to commit a particular act of violence can be proved

      The flip side is rounding up all Arabs in a given area and deporting them as a "pre-emptive strike". Like it or not, until there's proof someone's a threat, it is wrong to consider it otherwise. Innocent until proven guilty means exactly that - not innocent until proven guilty if you're a middle class WASP, not guilty based on skin color, creed, race, political affiliation or anything else. Your style of speech indicates you are of British extraction (if I'm wrong please correct me): please don't fall into the "They tried to teach me subtle racism at 6 by putting all these racial caricatures in "The Beano"" trap or the stereotypical Briton "give em a thousand pounds and send em back to where they came from" trap. Because it's a trap. A dark one.

      --

      --- Jump!! Fire!! Bullet time!! - Lego version of the Matrix
    35. Re:It'll only get worse by david+duncan+scott · · Score: 2
      Who the hell's talking about rounding up all the Arabs in given area? I'm talking more about rounding up all the Klansmen.

      Let's take the KKK as an example. Nobody's born in the Klan, they join. They take a positive step to sign up. They deliberately enroll in an organization with the publicly-stated and often-repeated goal of doing grevious harm to many innocent people. If we could export all our Klansmen I'd do it in a heartbeat, but I don't think there are any other countries looking for pimply crackers in sheets.

      As it happens the KKK is home-grown, and we're stuck with them. Pin-headed as they are, they are entitled to the same treatment as any other American citizens.

      Now let's consider the Provos. They, too, are not born into the Provisional IRA. They join. They go out of their way to sign on with an outfit that most Irishmen avoid. The difference is that they are not American citizens, and with them we have a choice. We can deny them visas if we choose, and we do, just as we can deny visas to people with felony records, or even simply because we decide that enough people have come from there lately and it's somebeody else's turn. We have, in fact, the legal authority to turn people away because they're blond, or too tall -- we just have more decency than that.

      All we're talking about here is the legal authority to revoke a visa based on somebody's membership in a terrorist organization.

      Look at it this way: we turn away thousands of Mexicans every year, simply because we feel that enough Mexicans have entered lately. Nothing wrong with the individuals in question, just too many of them. Well, we have enough murderous assholes too, so lets drop the quota to 0. Let's reduce the popukation of sworn killers.

      (British extraction? No, but my parents were State Department [my Dad was actually PNG'ed by the Israelis for being a little too sympathetic with the Arabs], and although we came back to the States when I was 5 we had a legacy of Enid Blyton novels and such from various posts. Some of it seems to have stuck.

      (Alas, I am merely a mildly Anglophilic American, who often spells things with a superfluous "u". Sheer pretension. )

      --

      This next song is very sad. Please clap along. -- Robin Zander

  29. Scientist by geekoid · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Since you claim to be a scientist, I suppose you're a smart guy. Why would a smart guy like you, ask the /. crowd this question instead of a lawyer?
    It would seem to me that you could do yourself a favor(and the /. crowd as well) by talking to a lawyer and then report what you find out to /.

    How much leverage do you have? If you are wroking on an important project, and the company thinks your irreplacable, make a demand that they stop searching property.
    OTOH if your only a step above bottle washer, go to a lawyer. If you do have the right to refuse, document every activity you do, save every eMail, and be ready to sue when they fire you on some unrelated matter. I hope you do have the right to refuse, and I hope to hell you do refuse and stand your ground. If you do not have the right to refuse, use your intellegnce to figure out how you can get a law passed that makes it illegal for a company to search personal bags, even if an employee says its ok. Or at the very least, be forced to show probable cause.
    I'm the guy that won't let people at the exit of stores search my purchase, and I refuse to stop if some stores alarm system goes off when I happen to be leaving. Personally I am very tired of having to prove my innocense, and I'm not stopping just becuaes soe faulty piece of hardware beeps and whirs at me.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    1. Re:Scientist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Why would a smart guy like you, ask the /. crowd this question instead of a lawyer?

      Isn't the answer obvious? I mean, if there is a site that offers more disinformation and poor advice than the average Slashdot discussion, I haven't seen it. Anybody who relies on Slashdot for accurate information & advice is probably at least a little bit IQ impaired. So, I would have to say one of the following applies here:

      1. Despite being a scientist, the poster is not a bright person.

      2. This is a clever troll.

      My money is on the latter. I find it hard to believe that a scientist employed at the NIH doesn't understand the importance of tight physical security procedures right now to protect stocks of biological agents and information pertaining to using them as weapons.

  30. A new way of life... by jgrumbles · · Score: 1

    Welcome to the new United States. Unfortunately it is going to be a necessary evil, for how long no one is sure. Of course we'd all like things to go back to normal, on the otherhand, we don't need anymore jumbo passenger jets slamming into huge skyscrapers or masses of people getting infected with "x" disease. People are either going to accept that the terrorists did their job to some extent, others will say that we will rebound better than before. The problem is that a lot of people saw how easy it is to rock the nation a little bit. As far as many government agencies and other places that could be in danger of being on the receiving end of a terrorist act, your rights will continue to be thrown out the window until something is instituted that will both make citizens feel comfortable but not invaded.

    1. Re:A new way of life... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The 'masses of people getting infected with "x" disease' would be, what, herpes? Chlamydia? Heart Disease?

      Only 5 people have died from Anthrax this year. That many died from reptile bites last year.

      Ooh, scary. We should outlaw snakes and lizards while we're at hyper-super hysteria level.

  31. I hate to say this... by GreenJeepMan · · Score: 1

    But in these times, we all sooner or later need to make a few sacrificies. Wether it be the economy or acts of terror.

    I have every belief that things WILL eventually get back to normal.

    Just be thankfull you don't work in a post office or a high rise in a major city.

    1. Re:I hate to say this... by Syris · · Score: 1

      I have every belief that things WILL eventually get back to normal.

      I wish I had this same faith in our return to "normalcy." It seems that as our rights are continuously eroded(as they have been for a long, long time now), they never come back, or rather are never returned. There's always a new reason to "be more vigilant", etc. It's sad, really.

      Obviously, we have to respond to the recent attacks and future threats.
      It's just that the Government finds that easier to do with a lesser regard for our constitutional rights.

    2. Re:I hate to say this... by ssahin · · Score: 1

      Believe me things are not going to get "normal" Once the security devices and infrastructure is instaled it remains where it is . At the country I live in (Turkey) we had some serious terorism problems during the late eighties and early nineties. When secuity checks , metal dedectors etc first appeared we were told they were temporary .Now although things have relatively cooled down and there is much less terorist action , security checks are practicaly everywhere , every shoping mall and office building , have full blown metal detectors. One of the large malls even have airport style xray machines.
      Just today I had get through two security checks to see a senior executive of a large bank ,one at the main gate and one at the executive floor. At first it is annoying but after a while you get used to them and barely take notice. What I hate most though is the jerks who see security as a sign of prestige and/or method of intimidation and realy have no need for it. I get extremely pissed when I go to a small ass company (10-20 people max)and they have full security at the door. These jerks can afford security but rarely manage to pay our bills on time !

  32. Why are you getting upset? by invisik · · Score: 0

    Are you moving items around that you shouldn't be? Sure, it adds 5-10 minutes when going to and from the building. It's a reality now.

    -m

    --
    http://www.invisik.com
  33. You might wanna move to by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Afghanistan
    scientists are left alone there...
    well, until they are shot or bombed by the US

  34. Sanitation Engineer != Scientist by Zico · · Score: 1

    I would think that an NIH scientist would have better sense than to come here and ask a legal question. Oh well, maybe he gets turned on whenever he sees the string "IANAL" or something.

    1. Re:Sanitation Engineer != Scientist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      biggest troll ever. . .

  35. Out of curiosity... by jea6 · · Score: 1

    ... to what degree do you come near/work with Anthrax? Or other such substances?

    --

    sarchasm: The gulf between the author of sarcastic wit and the person who doesn't get it.
  36. Awareness or Paranoia by nairnr · · Score: 2, Interesting

    They say the first casualty of war is the truth, the second seems to be personal liberty and freedom. The problem with terrorist war, is that you really don't know for certain who your enemy really is. The net result is that in order to catch the few, you inconvience the many. We have enjoyed a great deal of freedom as a result of being somewhat isolated from the rest of the world. The only threats were fairly well defined and easy to differentiate. The security measures are a reaction to events rather then precaution.

    This is not unusual, witness the guarding of schools with the tragic violence experienced in the past. We recognize that the gun toting kids are not the norm, however we figure out who they are by searching everybody.

    It is a balance, a pendulum. I am sure when we are not actively fighting a terrorist war things will relax. For now, we inconvience ourselves for perceived safety. As a Canadian, I haven't had to deal with this to any great degree. So, how free do you want to be, at what cost would you have freedom at the expense of safety...

  37. You probably agreed to it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As distasteful as these measures are, you probably agreed to them in one of the 284,729 forms you filled out when you hired on. I know that in my job (on an Army base), you agree that by coming on the base that you will submit to any and all searches under any conditions.

    The only real recourse is to vote with your feet.

  38. Yes by Syberghost · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You have an absolute right to refuse those searches, by terminating your employment.

    Either you signed a contract, in which case I guarantee you agreed to searches, or your employment is at-will, and every day is a new contract.

    1. Re:Yes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So the price of liberty is poverty? Great values system buddy.

    2. Re:Yes by Syberghost · · Score: 5, Insightful

      So the price of liberty is poverty? Great values system buddy.

      How does my value system enter into a decision made 225 years ago by a bunch of guys to whom I'm not even related?

      However, yes, sometimes the price of liberty is poverty. Sometimes it's even death. Didn't you learn this stuff in Civics in grade school?

      You have the right to be free from unreasonable search and seizure. You do NOT have the right to be employed by any particular employer. Indeed, if you did, that would necessarily be a heavy restriction of that employer's right to have anybody working for him he wants, or to not have them. Your rights aren't any more important than his.

      After all, they can fire you for exercising your free speech, can't they? Or your freedom of the press?

      It should come as no shock in a discussion of reducing liberty to enhance security that the converse is also true.

    3. Re:Yes by argel · · Score: 1
      You have the right to be free from unreasonable search and seizure. You do NOT have the right to be employed by any particular employer. Indeed, if you did, that would necessarily be a heavy restriction of that employer's right to have anybody working for him he wants, or to not have them. Your rights aren't any more important than his.

      Yet we are more likely to need to work for someone else today then we were in the past. There is no longer a frontier to move to and rarely can you own a plot of land today and actually live off of it -- the property tax alone is likely to force you to hold a job with someone else. Even if you could live off of your land you are likely to become more and more diconnected with the rest of our society, much more so than in the past (e.g. Davey Crockett was elected to the House or Senate -- is that going to happen today?

      We need to recognize that the rules have changed, which in turn means we need to be much more vigilant about worker's rights.

      --

      -- Argel
    4. Re:Yes by Shelled · · Score: 1
      The implicit assumption in your reasoning is that employers have every right not specifically curtailed by law while employees have only those allowed. You're basically saying they can do anything they want and an employee's only recourse is to quit. Pure bullshit contradicted by a century's worth of civil right legislation. Whenever I read this kind of comment I get images of eight year olds in coal mines and losing arms in mills. I suppose to you "they could always quit." When did we become so retrograde as a society?

      Employers are people no different than you with the same sets of rights and restrictions. Organizing in into a business doesn't automatically confer on them governmental power at the threat of loss of livelihood.

    5. Re:Yes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is this right of an employer to have whatever policy he want in hiring people generic?

      Can he have whatever policies he chooses himself in what ethnic groups not to hire people from?

      Private property my ass, try to put signs outside your restaurant: Help wanted, no need apply.

      You are wrong.

    6. Re:Yes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is this right of the private employer in doing what he wants with his private property generic?

      My ass, next time your local [insert favorite local fast food chain here] joint needs to hire a few helpers, please advise them to formulate their ad like this : Help wanted, excellent opportunity, [insert least favorite ethnic minority] need not apply.

      Tell me this is within the free right of a private company.

      You are wrong. You lose.

    7. Re:Yes by roju · · Score: 1

      Thing is though, why is a corporation now a 'he'? A corporation is not a person, and is not awarded any such rights.

    8. Re:Yes by Syberghost · · Score: 2

      Can he have whatever policies he chooses himself in what ethnic groups not to hire people from?

      If you'll check, you'll find that he indeed has that right under the Constitution. We as a society have chosen to pass laws removing that right. I support that decision.

      The fact that I support it does not make it implicit in the Constitution, however. In fact, even the government could restrict your Constitutionally-protected rights until 1870, when the 15th Amendment added new protections.

  39. Seems pretty clear to me... by darklord22 · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Amendment IV
    The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.

    Where is it written that this doesn't apply to private property?

    1. Re:Seems pretty clear to me... by scheming+daemons · · Score: 1
      "Persons, houses, papers, and effects" does not cover items taken off of work premises. You are in your "employers" house, using their "papers and effects", and as such the Bill of Rights does not apply.


      The second part says "unreasonable searches and seizures". A strong case can be made that searching a scientist on his way out of the NIH is quite reasonable, considering some of the deadly stuff they have there.


      Lastly, the individual signed away his 4th Ammendment rights with respect to the Company grounds when he signed his employment papers.


      The 4th Ammendment protects one on/in one's personal property. The company's property is another matter.

      --
      "I have as much authority as the pope, I just
      don't have as many people who believe it" - George Carlin

    2. Re:Seems pretty clear to me... by wampus · · Score: 1

      I didn't sign the damned Bill of Rights, and I will search whoever the fuck I want on the way into my house. If you don't like it, use your own private property.

    3. Re:Seems pretty clear to me... by 3am · · Score: 1

      NIH, anthrax, terrorist cells operating in the US...

      That at least tests the boundaries of 'reasonable'

      Try this excerpt (taken from http://www.eff.org/Legal/email_privacy.citations):

      "Individuals do not lose Fourth Amendment rights merely because they work or the government instead of a private employer. The operational reality of the workplace, however, may make *some* employee's expectations of privacy unreasonable ... Public employees' expectations of privacy in their offices, desks, and file cabinets, like similar expectations of employees in the private sector, may be reduced by virtue of actual office practices and procedures, or by legitimate regulation. ... Given the great variety of work environments in the public sector, the question of whether an employee has a *reasonable expectation of privacy* must be addressed on a case-by-case basis."

      [Majority Opinion, O'Conner v. Ortega, US Supreme mCourt, 1987]

      --

      A: None. The Universe spins the bulb, and the Zen master merely stays out of the way.
  40. What do you do? by slackbits · · Score: 1
    Is it just you or is everyone being searched.

    You say you work at a lab, with what? If you work with viruses and what not, I hope that they would search you.

    Some of this privacy stuff is being taken too far but this is not that extreme. They want to know what is going in and comming out of nih, and I have no problem with that as long as it is within work premisis. If they try and search your house that is a different story.

    I suggest that you leave your 12" dildo home or anything else you do not want anyone to see. This is the annoying thing about all this people are bitching about searches at government institutions, but what are they hiding that they do not want others to see.

    1. Re:What do you do? by j-beda · · Score: 1
      I suggest that you leave your 12" dildo home or anything else you do not want anyone to see.

      The problem isn't the stuff at home, it is the stuff that was stashed in the lab before the searches started. How's he supposed to get the porn collection back out to his car? :-)

  41. that's the problem by DiveX · · Score: 1

    >Only thing is how to bring the lab with you?

    I think that is exactly what they are trying to prevent. When all this is over, will the investigation find that the anthrax spores were stolen from a lab by some scientist with a grudge or for money? With the current crisis, I am willing to forgo some privileges rather than argue every step of the way.

    --
    Cave, wreck, and deep diver.
  42. What's wrong with you? by www.sorehands.com · · Score: 2, Insightful
    What's wrong with you? Are you a terrrorist/thief/hacker? Why would object if you have nothing to hide? It's for your own protection!

    Does that all sound familiar? When you didn't object to being x-rayed and having your bags searched at the airport, or going into city hall to pay a parking ticket, or being searched by the Fry's door nazis...You Asked for this! You allowed your freedom to be taken a little bit at a time for an illusion of security. Why are you complaining now? This is how we lose our rights, a little at a time.


    [/rant]

    1. Re:What's wrong with you? by the_quark · · Score: 5, Funny
      On the Fry's door nazis - I got fed up with them a long time ago. At some point, I decided Fry's had wasted enough of my time, and just walked around the six-person line of folks getting searched. The receipt-checker said, "Sir, can I check your receipt?" And I replied, "No, that's alright, I don't need that, today," and kept walking. When he didn't follow me out in into the parking lot, I made this my Fry's SOP. Most times they don't even ask, anymore - if they do, I politely decline without slowing down.


      Now, the Best Buy Nazis are a lot more serious about it. They tend to be big, bouncer-types and take their job very seriously. I walked right past one of them the other month, and he said: "Sir, can I see your receipt?" I replied with my standard, "No, that's OK, I don't need that today," while continuing to walk. He followed me out into the parking lot (!): "Sir, I NEED to see your receipt." I kept walking. "No, I believe you're mistaken: You don't need to see my receipt." (A little Jedi-mind-trick action there). He stopped following, realizing the basic impotence of his position, and yelled at my back: "Well, you're NOT WELCOME here as a customer, anymore!"


      I was so surprised I unfortunately did not put my purchase in my trunk and go back to speak to the manager, but I did call the manager when I got home. He wouldn't come out and say that I didn't need to get my receipt checked, but when I pressed and said, "I spend about $250 a month with you guys, would you rather have me walk through without showing my receipt, or would you rather have my money go somewhere else?" He replied, "Oh, we absolutely want your business!"


      Anyway, bottom line, the Fry's receipt checkers are imminently ignorable. They don't have the right to detain you or search you. They could detain you until the police arrive if they suspect you're shoplifting, but they don't want to engage in that hassle (and a possible lawsuit) for the average customer.

    2. Re:What's wrong with you? by fleck_99_99 · · Score: 1

      heh. in my own little piece of civil disobedience, I refuse to let best buy search my stuff.

      Hi, I came from the register 10 feet away. If you couldn't watch me there, that's your problem.

      --
      seven two six five
      seven four six one seven
      two six four two e
    3. Re:What's wrong with you? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i'd like to see you try to get away with this at costco

    4. Re:What's wrong with you? by orkysoft · · Score: 1

      You mean, at stores, you have to show your receipt when you leave? That's preposterous!

      Silly Americans... ;-)

      --

      I suffer from attention surplus disorder.
    5. Re:What's wrong with you? by drinkypoo · · Score: 1
      As an AC said, you should try it at Costco. They get all pissy. I seem to recall a past conversation here on slashdot where we discussed that costco is a private club - you can tell because you have to pay for a membership. If they want, they can suspend your membership (if they can figure out who you are, remember you, et cetera.) At a retail store like Fry's, they cannot legally stop you. Once you have paid, you have paid. The only way they can genuinely stop you and search you, for example, is to actually place you under citizen's arrest, at which point if you depart you're resisting arrest, no joke. If they do it without just provocation, though, IE if you are actually innocent, you can put a legal foot through their anal sphincter without too much greasing.

      So yes, blow off the fry's wankers. I walk by holding my receipt out and if they can mark it with the pen, that's okay. If they try to take it from my hand, I growl or bark at them... that usually gets their attention :)

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    6. Re:What's wrong with you? by KyleCordes · · Score: 2

      Here is an explanation I have heard; I cannot vouch for its validity:

      What may not be so obvious is that these searches are not necessarily there primarily to catch you making off with something... they are there to catch the checkout clerks from colluding with a customer to ring up a $500 item as a $20 item.

    7. Re:What's wrong with you? by Crashin · · Score: 1

      I know I will probably regret saying this, but the reason these companies do this is to prevent theft and like the store propaganda states it is in effect us the shoplifters steal from. All Fry's, Best Buy, Costco or any other logical retailer is going to do is raise prices to compensate for losses. Looking at the big picture I still hate to have to stop and prove I am not stealing, but at the same time I understand how the merchants feel. If it was my house that people were stealing from I would attempt the same thing.

      --
      Crashin "There is no great genius without some touch of madness. " Seneca, Moral Essays
    8. Re:What's wrong with you? by palerider · · Score: 1

      re fry's doordweebs, sometimes they're there to catch stupidity on the part of the even more clueless checkers...

      I bought 2 gig of memory (4 sticks) and the door guy caught the fact that the checker gave me three 128 meg sticks and one 512 megger, then went and got me what I'd paid for.

    9. Re:What's wrong with you? by bungalow · · Score: 2

      If you shop at costco, you've already given them your name, address, dob, drivers' licence, and probably credit card or checking account number (dependin gon how you financed your "membership". I attempted to enter one in Arlington, TX, and was refused admittance becuase I chose not to identify myself and purchase a 1-day pass.

    10. Re:What's wrong with you? by pi_rules · · Score: 3, Funny

      It's easier to embarass them by stopping. I love it when the little beeper-detection deals go off on me. I just drop my package, or set it down, walk over to the wall, hands on the wall, feet spread and ask the guy loudly, "You're not doing the rubber glove thing again, are you?".

      You get some weird looks...

    11. Re:What's wrong with you? by dfranks · · Score: 1

      Another thing they are trying to prevent is a customer purchasing some expensive items, exiting the store, returning to the store with only the receipt, picking up a duplicate set of merchandise and exiting the store again. If you were smart and fast, it would be extreemly difficult to get caught without the marks on the receipt when exiting.

    12. Re:What's wrong with you? by geekoid · · Score: 2

      Door Nazis.. Have you been to frysucks.com?
      anywho
      I have the same experience with both companies in you post. For a moment I thought the BB guy was going to grab me, but reason seemed to penetrate his thick skull.
      One of these days there going to grab me, then I'm going to sue the Hell out of them, and demand they remove the policy.
      I can't believe what sheep people are. Nothing like waiting in line to get your goods, then waiting in line to pay for them, then waiting in line to leave the store, sheeesh.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    13. Re:What's wrong with you? by bstrawse · · Score: 1

      As someone who makes a living working in retail loss prevention, let me clarify that its not citizens arrest that is generally used, but rather the broader power defined in your state's respective merchant privilege statute.

      You'll find that this is significantly less restrictive than the requirements for citizen's arrests and extends a significant amount of civil & criminal immunity to the merchant as long as the letter of the statute is followed.

      Again, this varies by state.

      Bryan

    14. Re:What's wrong with you? by fishbowl · · Score: 2

      I think if you tried this in Phoenix AZ,
      you would be talking to the police about being
      put under a "tresspass warrant", before you left
      the parking lot. Basically what that means is
      that the business has decided to exercise their
      right to refuse service to you, and there is a process by which they can make it a criminal matter if you return. You don't have to break the law to get this treatment, you just have to have an angry shopkeeper. It's 30-90 days in jail if you violate it.

      --
      -fb Everything not expressly forbidden is now mandatory.
    15. Re:What's wrong with you? by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      If you have them on tape pocketing something, you can hold them without arresting them. You still can't search them without the cops, except that you can make them open their bags/pockets and show them to you. You don't get to peek in their boxers, though.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    16. Re:What's wrong with you? by reynolds_john · · Score: 1
      I can't even tell you the joy it brought me to read that, because my friends and I make it an absolute point to do the same thing, at every damn store that has that crappy policy - Costco, Fry's, etc.


      Fry's is especially gratuitous because of the incredibly poor service you get inside... walking past the door nazis while smiling makes my day. A favorite is to pretend you're having an in-depth cell phone conversation, and pretend not to hear them. One fool followed me out into the parking lot.. "Sir, Sir!" all the while I ignored him.


      On a serious note however, I simply refuse to be treated like a criminal at a business. It's demeaning, and the public should *not* tolerate it. Even if it *is* their policy.

    17. Re:What's wrong with you? by jchristopher · · Score: 1

      Wow, do you shop at the same Best Buy I do? The door bouncer at mine is a Samoan guy that looks to be about 300 pounds! Each time I walk past him, he folows me into the parking lot for about 50 feet before turning and going back into the store.

  43. NIH is particularly bad, but it's other places too by tshoppa · · Score: 1

    I live near the NIH, and the security being imposed there is particularly extreme. Especially considering that the NIH campus is like a big park, and how open it was before!

    But there are other examples in the DC area too. For example, I just went to eat lunch at the Old Post Office in downtown DC and to get into the food court area, you have to go through a metal detector *and* show a photo ID.

    I don't know about the legal implications, but the security crackdown is *sure* to drive the food court shops bankrupt - they were struggling already with the lack of tourist traffic.

  44. Get Over It by scheming+daemons · · Score: 1
    You work at the National Institute of Health. Most of the Bill of Rights does not apply when you are on company grounds or on company time:
    • You don't have freedom of speech. Your employer can, and will, fire you for speech that harms the company.
    • You most likely aren't allowed to bring firearms on site. The 2nd ammendment doesn't apply at work.
    • Your desk and person are subject to searches without cause.

    Your rights at work are whatever the company says they are on the employment agreement you signed when you started there.


    I work at a D.O.E. lab and have been subject to the same searches you have. It comes with the territory. It comes with your job. You agreed to it implicitly when you accepted employment. If you don't like it, go work somewhere else.


    Do you have to like it? no. Do you have to put up with it? If you want to remain employed, yes.


    You do have a choice here. You just don't like the options.

    --
    "I have as much authority as the pope, I just
    don't have as many people who believe it" - George Carlin

    1. Re:Get Over It by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just one minor additional option here beyond like it or leave it.

      You are almost certainly a member of one of the Unions or Bargaining Units. As such, your duties and working schedule are well defined. Since the extra time spent at work because of the security is entirely due to demands by the employer, it is reasonable to demand that you be paid for the time. Asking the rep to have the time clock situated outside the security area or at least in it will allow you to charge the time to the employer.

      This is a short term fix but more importantly, given the absolute hatred for paying overtime, it will cause the various policy people to seriously think about who and what needs to be searched. Hopefully, if they have to pay for the time wasted, they will quickly come to a reasonable position that makes the required security appropriate to the situation.

      There is no way any lawyer or jury would allow you to avoid searches given where you work. The truth, regardless of law, is that we are in a war and you have just joined the Department of Defense. The best you can hope for are reasonable policies that make sense. Making the department pay for your time will likely result in the best compromise.

  45. News for Nerds???? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    As a poster had eluded to in CmdrTaco's /. update, I have to wonder how this can possibly be news for nerds.. Is it relevant to many of us..maybe. But this type is article is a perfect example of how slashdot has strayed from its original purpose, and become such a mess.

    The new editors are really using this site to push their own political agendas, and I'm surprised nobody has tried to reign them in.

    Hey Taco, if you want this site to still be around in another 4 years..please dump articles like these and leave it to another place to handle them.

    1. Re:News for Nerds???? by Strudel_Man · · Score: 1

      So, what, Nerds don't care about civil liberties?

      (Yes, I am aware that this isn't actually a matter of civil liberties, but it is undoubtably related and similar.)

      I don't have a slightest bit of problem with this type of news being on /. The newest law permitting 'shoot on sight' for suspected terrorists is of considerably greater interest to me than the latest color of iMac.

  46. For the record -- and some questions by LMacG · · Score: 1

    Amendment IV:

    The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.
    -----

    Now, considering the questioner's place of employment, how is "unreasonable" going to be defined?

    Should our interpretation of "unreasonable" be modified in light of the attacks of 9/11?

    How much "stuff" can/should a person need to carry to/from work that is not strictly work-related?

    Talk amongst yourselves . . .
    --

    --
    Slightly disreputable, albeit gregarious
    1. Re:For the record -- and some questions by thedavid · · Score: 1

      Amendment IV:

      The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.


      I can't believe you even quoted that. This applies to law enforcement searching your private residence/property off of government grounds. If he is employed there, he has consented to such searches. After all, he always has the option to leave and find other employment.

      This kind of stuff reminds me of when spammers quote the first amendment when they get their ISP accounts shut down ...

    2. Re:For the record -- and some questions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It doesn't matter what your employer deems "unreasonable". The 4th Amendment only applies to the power of the goverment over the people. Read the preamble. Amendments don't stand on their own, they must remain under the context of the preamble.

      The Supreme court has gone far in protecting the 4th amendment, upholding cases where police improperly searched a house or car or person. They have pretty clearly defined "unreasonable".

      Private employers have no right to search you or your property. You also don't have the right to enter their building or premisis unless you agree to certain conditions. This isn't a 4th amendment issue since it's between two private entities. It falls under state penal code. So if you are getting searched by a private sector employee and you have not signed a contract or otherwise agreed to the search, then you probably have a case in the state court system.

      You wouldn't be able to push it into federal court unless they did an actual body search. The courts have determined that searching the car, your handbag, your backpack does not violate your civil rights since they are not your "person". Also, metal detectors although penetrating the body do not violate the "person".

      The only difference with a government agency is that they know they are bound by the 4th amendment and everything is laid out giving them blanket rights to search you. I'm not sure about pseudo government agencies like the NIH, but I'd assume that once you cashed your first paycheck, you gave the NIH a lot of power over the possessions you bring onto NIH property.

  47. yep ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    IANAL

  48. So far by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    most posts have been olong the lines of "This is a necessary evil."

    Maybe I agree, but I also think it's the right thing to hope for something better. We may have to live with this sort of thing now, but we should make it our goal to produce a better world where this isn't necessary.

    How? I haven't the foggiest.

    1. Re:So far by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe a chip implanted in the right hand or forehead? I've been lobbying for that for awhile.

      D.

  49. Rejoice that you can buy gasoline by defaulthtm · · Score: 1

    Not for nothing but, we are kind of at war. In the past that has led to significant rationing and suspension of liberties much more dear than the ability to walk into a government building unimpeded. This one strikes me as a reasonable search.

    --
    K
  50. dont bring your sex toys to work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    duh

  51. Why does Everything require a Lawyer? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful


    Some posters seem to act as if you need a lawyer to scratch your own ass.


    This is unnecessary: All he has to to is talk to his fellow employees- If enough of them agree that the searches are unreasonable them they can have a strike. (or a Work to Win strike if a normal one is too risky)


    And even if noone else cares about it- then he should start hunting for a better job- at a place with a no body cavity policy. Once his current employer loses enough scientists, theyll fix their problems.

    1. Re:Why does Everything require a Lawyer? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why in the world would you want to cause as much damage as a strike in this case? If the measures are truly unlawful, a lawyer would be able to issue a C&D (yeah, we all hate those) and the matter could be solved for about a thousand bucks.

      Striking, OTOH, costs everyone much more money and much more goodwill than going the legal route.

    2. Re:Why does Everything require a Lawyer? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Its often the threat of a strike, or even the mere act or organizing that is sufficient.


      Actually performing one is an extreme act that should only be taken as a last resort.


      You would imagine that just the flood of comments from unhappy searchees should do it.

    3. Re:Why does Everything require a Lawyer? by Lars+T. · · Score: 1

      Problem is, the employer is afraid somebody will sue them if something should hapen and they didn't took meassures. It's the American sueing industry.

      --

      Lars T.

      To the guy who modded me down from perfect to terrible Karma - Apple haters still suck

    4. Re:Why does Everything require a Lawyer? by Poppa · · Score: 1

      Too true. For example, I have a Concealed Weapons Permit which required me to be fingerprinted and go through a background check. Our State Constitution is even more clear than the 2nd Amendment regarding our right to be armed for self-defense, but our work policy prevents us from even having a gun in our cars in the parking lot.

      Here's the logic: an employee will ignore the laws against assault and murder but the fact that he could get fired will prevent him from causing violence? Riiight.

      Well, if something happens to me on the way to work, I *will* sue! ;)

    5. Re:Why does Everything require a Lawyer? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, if something happens to me on the way to work, I *will* sue! ;)

      Where do you live? Johannesburg?

    6. Re:Why does Everything require a Lawyer? by jazman_777 · · Score: 1
      Here's the logic: an employee will ignore the laws against assault and murder but the fact that he could get fired will prevent him from causing violence? Riiight.


      The real reason is to create a gun-controller's Utopia: no guns, the State can easily maintain control. Has anyone else ever felt more naked and defenseless than on an airplane these days? I can't even take my Swiss army pocketknife on board.

      --
      Slashdot: Failed Car Analogies. Amateur Lawyering. Anecdote Battles.
    7. Re:Why does Everything require a Lawyer? by jonathan_atkinson · · Score: 1

      Yeah, because firing a gun on an aeroplane is such a fucking good idea...

      --
      Cleanstick.org: Dumb weblog about nothing
    8. Re:Why does Everything require a Lawyer? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's only a bad idea if you miss.

    9. Re:Why does Everything require a Lawyer? by fmaxwell · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      The real reason is to create a gun-controller's Utopia: no guns, the State can easily maintain control.

      If only the Chinese dissidents at Tiananmen Square had been "packing", those tanks wouldn't have stood a chance. Yeah. Right.

      I am so tired of this absurd argument by gun nuts that citizens with pistols, rifles, and shotguns can successfully defend themselves against a government gone bad. That may have been the case when the Declaration of Independence and Constitution were written, but it's not any longer. Tanks, planes, and bombs are relatively immune to some bunch of yahoos with Glocks, Rugers, and Colts.

      P.S. Before trying to write me off as some anti-gun zealot, know that I own two pistols, a rifle, and a shotgun. But I'm not so deluded as to believe that they are going to be of much use in holding our government in check.

    10. Re:Why does Everything require a Lawyer? by flink · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I think the scenario they want to avoid is this:

      They have a layoff, some one gets fired, has a shitty meeting, whatever. He snaps, and goes stalking office to office pumping round after round into his coworkers...(sorry).

      Anyway, the thinking is probably that if some one has to drive home, get a gun, and come back, they're more likely to calm down first and go blow off steam at the shooting range rather than the office.

      I think most gun owners are perfectly responsible. At least the ones I know are. I'm just saying it's not too dificult to imagine the companies' position.

    11. Re:Why does Everything require a Lawyer? by DunbarTheInept · · Score: 2

      the State can easily maintain control. It was the COMPANY making the policy he was complaining about. How you say that amounts to "the State" maintaining control I don't know. (Unless you are implying that the state and big business are the same thing - a fact which is, admittedly, becomning closer to true lately. But there still is a difference (for now).)

      --

      Don't label something "offtopic" unless you know the topic well enough to tell what's on topic.

    12. Re:Why does Everything require a Lawyer? by slam+smith · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Yeah, because firing a gun on an aeroplane is such a fucking good idea...


      I think if offered the choice between watching a terrorist fly the plane into a building or blowing his a** away. I would pull the trigger. Or to translate it into political correctese.

      "No sir, I wasn't trying to kill him, I merely fired at center mass to halt aggressive action"

    13. Re:Why does Everything require a Lawyer? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But with those guns, you know that you can die a free man.

    14. Re:Why does Everything require a Lawyer? by slam+smith · · Score: 1

      Tanks are relatively immune to rifle fire. However, the trucks that supply them. The mechanics that fix them, the diesel that fuels them, for that matter the factory that builds them are all very vulnerable to personal weapons. Modern weapons have an enormous supply chain behind them. Break that chain and the modern army that depends on it soon will be left with the weapons that the rebels hold.

      Of course the cost of breaking that chain is very high. But people who have sought freedom in the past have paid that price.

    15. Re:Why does Everything require a Lawyer? by Chris+Y+Taylor · · Score: 2

      Let me see if I can summarize your points in 2 statements:

      Statement 1: The state of the art in military technology has advanced to the point that a militia unit equipped only with rifles cannot stand against a normal military unit.

      Statement 2: The purpose of the "right to keep and bear arms" is to keep the gov't in check.

      Well, then it seems to me that the logical solution to the problem you describe in your post would be to start considering anti-tank and anti-aircraft assets as "arms" covered under the 2nd Amendment.

      Actually, now that I think about it, that is not so crazy. A TOW 2 or a Bofors AAA cannon are WAY too big to be useful in 99.9999% of all crimes. It is not like you could carjack somebody with a Stinger or walk into a liquer store with a AT-4 rocket hidden in your coat. Heck one round would be worth more than you could get in the robbery anyway. It would make things like wipping out the Branch Davidians in Waco more difficult; but isn't that the idea, to make the gov't think twice before using military force against civilians (even if they evenutally decide that the answer is still "yes")? I still doubt it would ever become law. Hopefully if it such a thing ever happened, enough military units would defect to give the rebels a chance (assuming they deserve one). Still, isn't that the situation we wanted to avoid in the 1st place, where the whim of those in the military is more important in determining the outcome of a rebellion than the "will of the people."

    16. Re:Why does Everything require a Lawyer? by Chris+Y+Taylor · · Score: 2

      If the attacker does get into the office with a gun, though then he only has unarmed opponents to worry about.

      In some cases it makes more sense to allow many trusted employees to carry on premises, that way if any one person goes on a shooting spree, he is outnumbered by other armed employees. If a facility has its own armed response team, then this policy could cause a problem where the response team doesn't know who to shoot at; in which case the "nobody carries guns at work except security" policy is the way to go. If the facility does NOT have the resources to spend on an armed resonse team, then allowing (or even encouraging) certain employees to "pack heat" makes more sense. I know of a law firm in Memphis that does that (though they are more worried about a disgruntled client than they are about one of the partners going Postal... I don't know what that says about the quality of their work).

      Whether to allow employees to carry firearms on the premises is actually a complex trade off that should be made by someone aware of the security and legal pros and cons, not something that should be quickly decided by someone in the HR dept.

    17. Re:Why does Everything require a Lawyer? by _Mycroft_VII · · Score: 1

      "Well, then it seems to me that the logical solution to the problem you describe in your post would be to start considering anti-tank and anti-aircraft assets as "arms" covered under the 2nd Amendment. "

      Actually they already are, if you read what the people who wrote the second amendment have said about it.
      One of them was asked what he meant by 'arms', his reply was:
      "Every arm of the soldier, however terrible"

      Mycroft

    18. Re:Why does Everything require a Lawyer? by DarkZero · · Score: 0, Flamebait
      I am so tired of this absurd argument by gun nuts that citizens with pistols, rifles, and shotguns can successfully defend themselves against a government gone bad. That may have been the case when the Declaration of Independence and Constitution were written, but it's not any longer. Tanks, planes, and bombs are relatively immune to some bunch of yahoos with Glocks, Rugers, and Colts.

      Most protests, riots, and general citizen insurrections do not involve tanks, planes, or bombs. They usually involves people fighting against the armed police officers, in which case five hundred people with shotguns will easily overwhelm one hundred police officers. So while a gun won't help if the government if they choose to go all the way into using tanks, planes, and bombs, a situation that rarely arises because it risks other large governments taking "humanitarian action" against them, it WILL help in 99% of citizens-versus-local-government altercations.

      Personally, I think anyone that doesn't come to a large, potentially violent protest without a gas mask and a gun somewhere on their person is dumb. I would at least take those two "just in case".

    19. Re:Why does Everything require a Lawyer? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I have to give you credit here; this is the first immensely completely fuckingly idiotic post I've read on ./ today. Thanks, I need my daily dose of human insanity.


      As a sidenote, I'm seriously happy about people like you not being able to carry weapons in many public places. I fear armed "law-abiding citizens" more than criminals, for the simple reason that it doesn't take much for them to turn into non-law-abiding.

    20. Re:Why does Everything require a Lawyer? by Lars+T. · · Score: 1

      The guys on flight 93 managed just fine without guns.

      --

      Lars T.

      To the guy who modded me down from perfect to terrible Karma - Apple haters still suck

    21. Re:Why does Everything require a Lawyer? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No they didn't. The airplane crashed, killing everyone aboard. If an armed guard had been aboard the plane it is likely that the outcome would have been different.

    22. Re:Why does Everything require a Lawyer? by sigwinch · · Score: 4, Informative
      If only the Chinese dissidents at Tiananmen Square had been "packing", those tanks wouldn't have stood a chance.
      That statement is absolutely accurate. Undefened tanks (and planes, ships, etc.) are hideously vulnerable. A bunch of primitives can simply walk up to a tank that isn't defended by infantry and jam its treads with sticks and rocks. Then they can build a fire underneath it at their leisure and cook the tank crew to death. All mechanized weapons are similarly vulnerable. Look at what a couple of random attackers were able to do to the U.S.S. Cole with a raft, fertilizer, and oil.

      If you can take out the infantry guarding the mechanized weapon, you can destroy the weapon. If you have small arms, you *can* take out the infantry.

      I am so tired of this absurd argument by gun nuts that citizens with pistols, rifles, and shotguns can successfully defend themselves against a government gone bad.
      The argument, however, is true. If every block of a city is defended by a modest supply of small arms, the city is unconquerable. Destroyable, perhaps, but unconquerable. If there are enough defenders with guns, and the government-gone-bad doesn't have the will to exterminate the city, the revolution is successful.
      Tanks, planes, and bombs are relatively immune to some bunch of yahoos with Glocks, Rugers, and Colts.
      You can only be conquered if the enemy can send in flesh and blood people to impose their word as law. If you have small arms, you can keep sending those would-be conquerors back home in coffins indefinitely. If the would-be conqueror is not willing to use weapons of mass destruction, they must eventually withdraw.

      Small arms also tend to keep the police and other government enforcers reasonable. If John Suspect might be carrying a gun, law enforcement won't be nearly so quick to put him in a position where he has nothing left to lose. Ditto for prospective mass murderers, muggers, rapists, and so forth.

      --

      --
      Kuro5hin.org: where the good times never end. ;-)

    23. Re:Why does Everything require a Lawyer? by TwP · · Score: 2

      Who said this?
      In what context was it said?
      Could you give me the Congressional Library reference number and the page number for the volume that contains this quote?

      Appropriate size grain of salt will be applied until above requests are met.

    24. Re:Why does Everything require a Lawyer? by zangdesign · · Score: 1

      Yeah, and the moment dumbshits like you crack one off, the police open up on everyone.

      --
      To celebrate the occasion of my 1000th post, I will post no more forever on Slashdot. Goodbye.
    25. Re:Why does Everything require a Lawyer? by Assistant+Madman · · Score: 1

      Yes - the guard would have been overpowered by the hijackers and they would then have a gun. The passengers wouldn't have been able to take control and the plane would have hit a building instead of an empty field.

    26. Re:Why does Everything require a Lawyer? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why does it matter? They wouldn't leave it at a "right to bear arms" if they wanted to limit it specifically to knives or guns.

      Don't know if you can 'bear' a cannon or a bomber exactly... but then a lot of the larger weapons available now just didn't exist then.

      The basic idea (something about a 'well armed militia?') was more about invading armies and overthrowing corrupt governments, nothing to do with the current abuse of "shooting criminals who enter my home... and my family if I choose to mistake them for criminals entering my home". With those original intentions in mind, there doesn't seem much point in setting a limit on what are 'acceptable' arms. That they don't fit the current interpretation is a problem with the way the law is now used, rather than with the meaning of it.

    27. Re:Why does Everything require a Lawyer? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You assume that the guard would be in the same compartment as the passengers. There's no reason other than "that's the way it's always been done" that this needs to be the case. A crow's nest at the back of the cabin would work just fine.

    28. Re:Why does Everything require a Lawyer? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      Wow, someone who is clairvoyant!

      Can you tell me what would have happened if Kennedy hadn't been killed? What if Alexander the Great hadn't died so young?

      Or maybe you don't know, and you are making $#!? up that supports your position.

    29. Re:Why does Everything require a Lawyer? by Lars+T. · · Score: 1

      This is getting better every time. So the guard would have kept the hijackers out of the cockpit from the other end of the plane?

      --

      Lars T.

      To the guy who modded me down from perfect to terrible Karma - Apple haters still suck

    30. Re:Why does Everything require a Lawyer? by Lars+T. · · Score: 1
      Oh? I thought we were talking about passengers with guns "protecting" the plane.

      Well, if. If the door to the cockpit had simply been shut and locked, the hijackers couldn't have entered the cockpit and hijacked the plane. Again, no need for a gun.

      --

      Lars T.

      To the guy who modded me down from perfect to terrible Karma - Apple haters still suck

    31. Re:Why does Everything require a Lawyer? by shani · · Score: 1
      I am so tired of this absurd argument by gun nuts that citizens with pistols, rifles, and shotguns can successfully defend themselves against a government gone bad.
      The argument, however, is true. If every block of a city is defended by a modest supply of small arms, the city is unconquerable. Destroyable, perhaps, but unconquerable. If there are enough defenders with guns, and the government-gone-bad doesn't have the will to exterminate the city, the revolution is successful.

      Like Chechnya? Now only a pile of rubble. :(

    32. Re:Why does Everything require a Lawyer? by billcopc · · Score: 1

      If a business wants to avoid workplace violence, maybe they should start at the root of things and try to reduce stress levels in the work environment. Gun or no gun, when someone snaps it gets real ugly real quick, and most of the time the employer is to blame for imposing long hours, overloaded schedules, bad managers, etc. Good people don't go bad just on a whim, they need to be pushed to it, against their will.

      --
      -Billco, Fnarg.com
    33. Re:Why does Everything require a Lawyer? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just because you're too damn stupid to follow a logical chain of events doesn't mean everyone else is.

    34. Re:Why does Everything require a Lawyer? by rbrackett · · Score: 1

      We're still talking about them though, aren't we? Without arms the Russions would've simply rolled in there with the tanks and it all would've hardly made the news. One of the most compelling stories was how such lightly armed militias were able to bloody the Russion mechanized nose.

      --
      Except principles, ALL things are relative.
    35. Re:Why does Everything require a Lawyer? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A rotting home life, a death in the family, neighbors who need to wake up at 4:30 in the morning and sing the National Anthem on the front lawn at the top of their lungs, etc. are not things that an employer can do anything about. Laying the blame for this at the feet of employers is misguided.

    36. Re:Why does Everything require a Lawyer? by Yet+Another+Smith · · Score: 2

      If every block of a city is defended by a modest supply of small arms, the city is unconquerable.

      I concur. The Onion's Our Dumb Century has a faux editorial headline from 1969 reading "WE CAN LAND A MAN ON THE MOON, BUT WE CAN'T BOMB A TINY ASIAN NATION INTO THE STONE AGE?"

      Vietnam had a bunch of guys without much in the way of a mechanized army, but ask them if they lost the war. The US Army beat the NVA at every set-peice engagement. They had tanks, and every time they used them, we stomped them into the ground. Decisively. The US never lost a major engagement with regular army troops from North Vietnam. Estimates of casualties inflicted by US forces during that war range from 500,000 to 2,000,000. Yet in the end, the North Vietnamese drove the US out, and then used regular army units to conquer the Republic of Vietnam.

      Edward Abbey, environmental activist and writer, said, "The rifle and handgun are 'equalizers'--the weapons of a democracy. Tanks and bombers represent dictatorship."

      Small arms also tend to keep the police and other government enforcers reasonable. If John Suspect might be carrying a gun, law enforcement won't be nearly so quick to put him in a position where he has nothing left to lose. Ditto for prospective mass murderers, muggers, rapists, and so forth.

      Here I disagree, not on political grounds, since as a libertarian I am at least suspicious of, and more often vocally opposed to, any governmental edicts opposed to individual empowerment. However, from an empirical observation standpoint, I have to say that British police (outside Northern Ireland) facing a largely unarmed populace, are not nearly as likely to shoot first and seek to understand later as their US counterparts. For the most part, they are unarmed, and, I believe, most are not even trained in firearm use. I could be wrong here, but that's my impression.

      Also, Tianenmen Square would have been far bloodier if only those students had had weapons. There were police and infantry units in the area that could have been used to cover the tanks if they'd been threatened. The only way there'd have been a different outcome in Beijing is a thoroughly armed populous sympathetic to the protestors' cause.

      Also, tanks in the open are, effectively, machinegun pillboxes that can survive quite a while against small arms and pointy sticks.

      Generally, an armed populace in a democracy defends liberty not by firing their weapons, but by remaining involved in government to maintain their rights. If a government can't even take away the populace's guns, it may be too distracted to throw people in the gulag for "political crimes." Hence, I don't let the Government take away my gun rights, despite the shrill cries of Rosie O'Donnell, because any government that respects a dubious right, will generally also respect the really important ones.

      And so we need to keep civil liberties top on our list. However, searches of people entering and exiting likely terrorist targets are not unreasonable, so long as it is only as a preventative, and not an investigative search, and is specifically targetted on places with credible threats. Shopping malls are out. Government installations responsible for policy and research on combatting infectious disease and biological warfare are probably in right now.

      --
      if ($it != $onething) {$it = $another;}
    37. Re:Why does Everything require a Lawyer? by 17028 · · Score: 1

      The irony is that the smae people who preach gun owners' rights are the first ones to persecute citizens for being "unamerican". Case in point, McCarthy and people like him before and after. Another irony is that calling someone unamerican for speaking his mind, is in itself unamerican. Keep this in mind in the coming months, as the right-wingers try to impose unreasonable restrictions on our freedoms "for our own good". I hope the Democrats have the guts to stand up against this even though it is not a popular opinion to have these days.

    38. Re:Why does Everything require a Lawyer? by fors · · Score: 1

      Are you always so dense that you don't realize it takes people to operate planes and tanks? Those poeple have to get out of them every once in a while.

      --
      "If there is nothing you are willing to die for, then you are not really alive." Myself
    39. Re:Why does Everything require a Lawyer? by Flambergius · · Score: 1
      If you can take out the infantry guarding the mechanized weapon, you can destroy the weapon. If you have small arms, you *can* take out the infantry.

      and
      If every block of a city is defended by a modest supply of small arms, the city is unconquerable. Destroyable, perhaps, but unconquerable. If there are enough defenders with guns, and the government-gone-bad doesn't have the will to exterminate the city, the revolution is successful.

      What a wonderful piece of self-delusion. You probably belive this too. And why shouldn't you, after all, it happend in Vietnam (in jungle not in cities) and Chechnya, didn't it.

      Ask yourself which was the most important weapon in the arsenal of the Chechen. The small arms? Nope. The defendable positions like Grozny and the Caucasus Mountains? Nope, although they help a lot.

      The correct answer is determination. Most succesful rebels have been willing to endure such losses that it wouldn't be much of parabole to say that they are fighting by getting killed in large numbers. When you are able to endure 10 or 20 to 1 casualty ratio it really doesn't matter if you have any weapons at all.

      To it has always been a mystery to me how people seem to become much braver and determined with a basicly useless gun in their hand. An determined non-violent opposition a'la the Gandhi-led Idian strugle against the British leads to lesser loss of life and limb and produces just the same result: the more determined wins.
      Small arms also tend to keep the police and other government enforcers reasonable. If John Suspect might be carrying a gun, law enforcement won't be nearly so quick to put him in a position where he has nothing left to lose. Ditto for prospective mass murderers, muggers, rapists, and so forth.

      The possibility that opposing participant in a potentially violent encounter might be armed with a deadly weapon makes a person act more reasonably? With more forethought, which is what you imply in your example, I agree, to an extent.

      Forethought is reasonable, I concur. It is also forethought and reasonable for law enforcement officers to device and practize tactics and methods that emphesize their own safety when in dangerous situations. You are quite right, they won't put John Suspect into a desperate, nothing-to-lose situation, they put a bullet in his head. Likewise, the forethoughtful mugger is faced with a choice of becoming a begger or a murderer-robber.

      Sure, 90% of the newly-dead John "Bullet in the head" Suspects were guilty and Mich Mugger has also been ripped. Streets are safe now for Jack Survivor and Jenny Bystander, the widow of Peter Bystander (whose draw wasn't fast enough), to go on a date and try to build their lifes anew.

      I don't know about you but if I ever find myself in Dodge I will get the hell out and fast.

      Guns make conflicts more dangerous and _most importantly_ harder to resolve without serious harm. A bar-room brawl becomes a shoot-up with bystanders at deadly risk. A domestic disturbance call leaves the drunken father dead and a police officer crippled.

      But then again what I would know about guns and crime. After all I live in a country that, by American standards, has no violent crime or guns.

      --Flam,
      perversely, a Finnish male is more likely to shoot himself then any other persons

      --
      Computers are useless. They can only give you answers - Pablo Picasso
    40. Re:Why does Everything require a Lawyer? by Yet+Another+Smith · · Score: 2

      Irony abounds. But I am a strong advocate of gun ownership as a civil right, but also am a strong opponent of curfews, flag-burning amendments, and other signs of the police state.

      It won't only be right-wingers imposing unreasonable restrictions. Democrats are just as happy to use the power of law to silence speech they oppose. The problem is not one of left/right ideology, but rather one of authoritarianism versus libertarianism. There are left and right wing authoritarians in roughly egual numbers.

      Left-wing appologists (such, apparantly, as yourself) tend to forget that although McCarthy was a Republican, his commission was bi-partisan, and there weren't many dissenting voices from the democratic party until he'd been running rampant for quite a while. Also, President Eisenhower (a republican, if you haven't read your history books) got fed up with him as quickly as the democrats.

      Which is not to say that I don't hope the democrats fight for civil liberties. I'm all about that. I hope anyone in elected office will do so. But to turn it into a partisan rant is to ignore history.

      --
      if ($it != $onething) {$it = $another;}
    41. Re:Why does Everything require a Lawyer? by fmaxwell · · Score: 2

      You aren't too clever, are you? Do you really think that citizens armed with handguns and rifles could have successfully stormed Chinese military bases and killed tank drivers and airplane pilots? Or did you think that the tank drivers would stop and get out in Tiananmen Square to get a breath of fresh air?

      You have no power over a government gone bad if all you have are handheld guns. If you think otherwise, you've watched too many Rambo movies.

      Grow up.

    42. Re:Why does Everything require a Lawyer? by billcopc · · Score: 1

      True, but shit happens, family can help deal with many things, neighbors can be shot (or arrested).. but when you get stressed at work, quite often the stress stays all balled up inside because there are no suitable outlets to vent. If the stress isn't easily shrugged off, then it must be controlled at the source, before it sinks under your skin.

      --
      -Billco, Fnarg.com
    43. Re:Why does Everything require a Lawyer? by 17028 · · Score: 1

      Not many people were speaking up during the witch trials either, but I think we both know why. Hardly admirable, but I'm not one to judge them.

  52. Mellow by xanadu-xtroot.com · · Score: 1

    D00d, mellow out. Seriously.

    I would rather be patted down on my way into work then have some lunitic making a bomb or some chemical for some crazy mission sitting next to me.
    Yes, I understand that just some Rent-A-Cop rubbing my legs isn't going to stop the determined individual, but it certainly isn't a bad idea.
    Yes, I'm sure it's VERY damn annoying (I can't speak from personal experience other than the gown-up procedures involed in going into a bio-medical clean room), but d00d, mellow out.

    --
    I'm not a prophet or a stone-age man,
    I'm just a mortal with potential of a super man.
    1. Re:Mellow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      With the things that have been going on lately you shouldn't be bothered by this. Would you rather have someone sneaking something in they shouldn't or even sneaking something out that is dangerous. If you odn't like it quit and try and find a good job in these hard economic times that doesn't search you. Good look trying to find something outside of McDonalds.

    2. Re:Mellow by xanadu-xtroot.com · · Score: 1

      ~~~~~
      some Rent-A-Cop rubbing my legs

      You, uh, wouldn't happen to have pictures of that going on, would you? They're for a friend.
      ~~~~~
      :-)

      No, sorry. CCTV...

      --
      I'm not a prophet or a stone-age man,
      I'm just a mortal with potential of a super man.
    3. Re:Mellow by xanadu-xtroot.com · · Score: 1

      This AC has a point:

      With the things that have been going on lately you shouldn't be bothered by this. Would you rather have someone sneaking something in they shouldn't or even sneaking something out that is dangerous. If you odn't like it quit and try and find a good job in these hard economic times that doesn't search you. Good look trying to find something outside of McDonalds.

      --
      I'm not a prophet or a stone-age man,
      I'm just a mortal with potential of a super man.
    4. Re:Mellow by ryanwright · · Score: 2

      Yes, I understand that just some Rent-A-Cop rubbing my legs isn't going to stop the determined individual, but it certainly isn't a bad idea.

      Yeah, especially if she's attractive.

      Really, why not turn this into something fun? Campaign to get a few attractive females on the "scanning" staff, then bring some questionable items out one day along with a bullshit story delivered poorly enough to warrant a full body cavity search.

      --
      -Ryan, with the unoriginal sig
  53. This has worked by mr_rangr · · Score: 1

    In one place I worked, they did random searches of cars. They used to pick on one guy I knew and stopped him pretty regularly.
    His solution was to make sure they searched every nook and cranny of his car, and he'd continue to point out every spot they missed and make them look again. They grew tired of that and eased up.
    If you make it an undue burden on security to do a thorough job, then a) they'll ease up on the requirements, or b) you complain that they're doing an ineffective job.

  54. Define unreasonable by ejaytee · · Score: 1


    Obviously, IANAL.

    But, "unreasonable" search and seizure is the target of the 4th amendment.

    Consider this:

    Airport security is not unreasonable search and seizure.

    Metal detectors at football stadiums, White House tours, and concerts are not unreasonable search and seizure.

    Checking your receipt against your stuff at Fry's, Best Buy, and Target before you leave is not unreasonable search and seizure. (Even though I hate it.)

    When I say "is not", I mean that it legal, therefore constitutional until challenged and defeated. There have been 4th amendment challenges to stores checking receipts and to the airlines. They failed.

    Point being - which will be made over and over here undoubtably - it's their building, their service, and your privilege to make use of them. You don't have to be there if you don't want to.

    If you don't like it, quit your job or work to change the law.

    1. Re:Define unreasonable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, you can refuse the reciept check at those stores. They don't like it, but I always do.

  55. Not Unreasonable... by barfy · · Score: 1

    The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.

    Now, the founders put the word UNREASONABLE in there for a reason. They could have left that word out, and prevented all searches except by warrant.

    In order to protect the public interest of not being killed by terrorists, is this search "unreasonable?"

    Also the search is voluntary, not mandatory. Because it is not mandatory for you to go to the building. You are NOT being compelled to go there, you have really good reasons to go there, but it is different than being compelled.

    While it is likely that the search would be upheld as reasonable, it may be only useful as prophylactic. IE, the fruits of the search may turn out NOT to be admissable. But that is likely not the point of the search.

    The only really interesting thing about your case is the fact that it is a "government" facility and that you are a civilian employee. I suspect you signed some sort of employment contract in which you agreed to certain rules, and relinquished some of your rights.

  56. I feel your pain by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ok, actually I don't
    fuck you and the USA, you deserve any pain you get imperialist aggressors

    1. Re:I feel your pain by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Shut up Osama and bend over so I can fuck you like the little bitch that you are

  57. It is acceptable...go somewhere else by Orkin · · Score: 1

    If you are a contracted employee, then this is only acceptable if there are provisions for it in your contract. If not, your employment is just an agreement with your employer. If they change the terms of the employment, you have every right to seek employment elsewhere.

    Of course, you could turn it around on them. Be preemptive. Approach the security guard menacingly and insist on searching him.

  58. You have a choice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Your rights as a member of society are different than your rights as an employee of a corporation. Companies have a right to request certain things, such as drug tests, genetic screening, searches, etc. You have the right to either comply or go find a job elsewhere.

    What keeps this in check is that if a company screws with its employees too much (at least relative to competing firms) they risk losing their valuable employees.

  59. Searches are more common than you think by Dead+Penis+Bird · · Score: 1

    For years, especially after the first WTC bombing in 1993, office buildings in NYC implemented search procedures and ID card checks at the door, before you got on the elevators.

    Hoax bomb threats were commonplace. I understood and welcomed the security measures.

    --

    If I weren't nailed to the penis, I'd be pushing up the daisies!

  60. Slashdot might not be a bastion of legal knowledge by eclectric · · Score: 1

    That aside, I'm guessing you have very little rights in that regard. It's their building, they have the right to control what comes into and out of their building. We sometimes forget that the Bill of Rights often falls apart when we're talking about private organisations dealing with private people... they were designed to protect people from the Government.

    The searches out of the building sound frivolous, unless they're afraid you really are going to take dangerous stuff out of there. I'd talk to the head of your department or the dean's office that runs that building.

    All I know is that security checkpoints are hardly "unreasonable" and cases right and left have been lost trying to beat them.

  61. here here!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    i simply cannot stomach the "Your Rights Online"(as if my offline rights didn't count as much) and the moronic "Ask Slashdot" questions that could be answered with 2 seconds of googling.

    But now you combine them into this article, you have one big mass of dogshit..and the comments will hardly be any more insightful..

  62. It's a Grey Area by starkfist · · Score: 1

    A private entity can search you without reason, but not the gov't. The "Choice" to enter also waves the right to privacy. Ex. If you don't want to get searched at the airport you don't have to, Leave the Airport. Only thing to do, call a lawyer, and join the Libertarian Party to fight against crap like this.

    --
    http://undeadlinux.com
    1. Re:It's a Grey Area by dtrent · · Score: 1

      Uh, the Libertarian Party would have no problem with a private entity searching its employees. It would however have a problem with the government telling said entity that it can't.

      Are you sure you're a Libertarian?

  63. Feel Good by twistedfuck · · Score: 1, Interesting
    I'm surprised at the number of people who think that there is really some increased level of security through imposing bag searches on employees. Most people who have worked somewhere for a while can think of many ways to bypass security and commit genocide. Its the same with home security, everyone knows how to break into their own house without having to actually break anything.

    As some airline employees have said, the added security at airports is a sham, and only serves to reassure the public into a false sense of security.

    People would be better off preparing themselves to die instead of worrying about it every minute of their lives.

    1. Re:Feel Good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Truer words about reality have never been spoken before.

  64. Article: -1, Flamebait by Crispy+Critters · · Score: 1
    Whether or not such searches are reasonable depends on what is done at your particular lab.

    Duh.

    If you are working on, I don't know, maybe cancer research, then the searches are probably not reasonable. If the lab works with highly infectious strains of fatal diseases, then daily searches may be necessary.

    If you know that they are going to be doing such searches, then you should minimize what you carry to work. Most of us carry around backpacks full of paper, pens, and 10 dollar calculators even though we have those things in our homes and offices already. Why not try to make security's job a little easier and don't carry things you don't need to?

  65. No Big Deal by CrashRide · · Score: 1

    I've worked in government facilities supporting UNIX/VMS/WIN boxes for over 5 years. I regularly have my ID and bags checked coming and going. It's no big deal. I'm not trying to take anything in or out that I'm not supposed to, and I want them to catch the people who are. The rest of the country is just now catching on to the need for security measures - the world has changed. Get used to it.

  66. Have Fun With It! by Greyfox · · Score: 5, Funny

    Start carrying increasingly bizarre/disgusting items in your bag. Start with an industrial sized box of trojans and K-Y Jelly. Throw some issues of goat porn monthly into the mix. A dead fish might be a good one day gag. If they ever question what the hell you're doing with, say, a tupperware container of dog poo, make up surreal non-sequetor answers designed to confuse. Make it a competition to make the searcher go eww! It could be fun!

    --

    I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

    1. Re:Have Fun With It! by ferd_farkle · · Score: 5, Funny

      Friend of mine at Gigantic Manufacturing got tired of the "Plant Protection" personel's attitude about searches. One night he caught this enormous Luna moth and put it in his lunch box. Upon leaving, he fussed about the box being opened, but the (lady) guard prevailed, and when this bat-sized thing came flapping out into her face, she shrieked like a banshee, ran back into the guardhouse and slammed the door. He hasn't been searched since.

    2. Re:Have Fun With It! by Midnight+Thunder · · Score: 1

      ... but surely that would make you the person they would like to check the most. Heck, even security gaurds need something to make the day more interesting :)

      --
      Jumpstart the tartan drive.
    3. Re:Have Fun With It! by Gumpy · · Score: 1

      Just think, that tupperware container with the *really* fuzzy nasty looking stuff inside could be a research experiment. The searchers would then be obligated to examine it *very* closely! :)

      On the down side, someone might actually think it was important and detain you.

      Welcome to the Land Of The Free!

    4. Re:Have Fun With It! by seanmeister · · Score: 2

      That's a scream - reminds me of when I worked at a naval nuclear reactor training facility. They x-rayed everything that went into the facility, so we would put things that would produce interesting x-ray silhouettes in our lunch coolers... loads of fun on the swing shift!

    5. Re:Have Fun With It! by MrResistor · · Score: 3, Funny
      That's actually not a bad idea. As long as you aren't bringing in anything that you aren't allowed to have with you, or that you could get fired for bringing in (like the goat pr0n, though there's no reason you couldn't have it in your car if they're searching that too), why not have fun with it? You'll lessen the stress it puts on you (after all, you're carrying stuff you WANT them to find) and at the same time demonstrating the absurdity of what you're being subjected to.

      --
      Under capitalism man exploits man. Under communism it's the other way around.
    6. Re:Have Fun With It! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or if you want to take a little bit more risk, check to see how good they are. You probably couldn't take a gun into work, but what about various parts of a gun? Perhaps you could get the entire gun in over the course of a month or two? Probably a quick way to get fired/arrested, but might still be fun....

    7. Re:Have Fun With It! by andy_from_nc · · Score: 1

      The dog poo and fish could be construed as biological agents.

    8. Re:Have Fun With It! by SirSlud · · Score: 2

      Before you pack KY Jelly, make sure sodomy is not illegal in MD (I'm a Canadian, so I dunno). I know that sodomy is illegal in many states. Goat porn is also illegal. Try legal things .. blow up dolls, dog poo, old folx porn. You can check out the ACLU website in order to find out what states are sexually repressed.

      --
      "Old man yells at systemd"
    9. Re:Have Fun With It! by Anne_Nonymous · · Score: 1

      Start bringing office supplies *into* work, and leaving them there. In order to make this obvious to the screeners, use a container separate from your briefcase. After about a week of showing up with random office supplies in a PBS tote every day, and leaving with it empty, you should attract some attention. When questioned, use the Ronald Reagan defense ("I have no recollection of that"). Then move on to the weird stuff like dead fish and filled diapers.

    10. Re:Have Fun With It! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sodomy? KY Jelly is a legitimate marital aid. I'm shocked to hear you imply that it's used for anything else.

    11. Re:Have Fun With It! by gorilla · · Score: 2

      KY Jelly has legitimate medical uses. It's often used to aid insertion of catheters.

    12. Re:Have Fun With It! by SirSlud · · Score: 2

      >It's often used to aid insertion of catheters.

      Cool! Any chance we could use this as an argument for cannubis too? ;) Heehee, seriously tho, I stand corrected .. my and my gutter mind.

      SirSlud

      --
      "Old man yells at systemd"
    13. Re:Have Fun With It! by Dread_ed · · Score: 2, Funny

      Of course, the one sure fire way to eliminate those pesky searches is to walk to work wearing only your lab coat. When you get to work, remove the lab coat!

      Follow up with comments like: "Hey PAL! Search THIS!" while grabbing various portions of your anatomy, etc etc...

      Of course, this behavior could get you fired, which, in turn, would eliminate those pesky searches.

      --
      When the only tool you have is a claw hammer every problem starts to look like the back of someone's skull.
    14. Re:Have Fun With It! by chryptic · · Score: 1

      How about all the parts needed to make a gun but all the parts come from different incompatible guns.

      --
      The two most common things in the Universe are hydrogen and stupidity. -- Harlan Ellison
    15. Re:Have Fun With It! by FFFish · · Score: 3, Funny

      Tell 'em you keep KY jelly with your lunch just in case they decide that lunchbox checks are no longer adequate, and start going for body cavity searches...

      --

      --
      Don't like it? Respond with words, not karma.
    16. Re:Have Fun With It! by shelby289 · · Score: 1

      At the plant where I work at now. I heard of a story a few years back where the guards were going to start checking bags on the way out the gate. Upon hearing this one of the "Old timers" who had been there for years, and was not to be intimidated, spent the entire day makeing confeti at an old fashion blade cutter. By the end of the day he had a grocery sack full. When the guard asked him what was in the bag, he dumped in on the ground. They tell me that it looked liked it had snowed there for about two days.

      --
      This is the way the world ends, not with a bang , but a wimper
    17. Re:Have Fun With It! by tcc · · Score: 2

      > I know that sodomy is illegal in many states. Goat porn is also illegal.

      Speaking from experience?

      Want to share with us? :)

      --
      --- Metamoderating abusive downgraders since my 300th post.
    18. Re:Have Fun With It! by incompetent_bitch · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      But don't you see, this isn't solving anything. Sure, you may get a few laughs out of it, but what have you accomplished besided maybe offending some security guards sense of decency/morality? Not a thing. The searches will still be performed and instead of making a constructive effort to change things you're making light of something that could be a serious problem. I think a better approach would be to get others on your side, and then approach the bosses with how you, the employees, see this matter. Don't just fuck around with big dildos, do that on your own time in your bedroom.

    19. Re:Have Fun With It! by Rogerborg · · Score: 2
      • Before you pack KY Jelly, make sure sodomy is not illegal in MD

      Tsk tsk. KY has plenty of non sexual uses, quite apart from as a substitute or helper for natural vaginal lubrication (plus, it doesn't dissolve latex like oil based lubricants). Also, it's non toxic and edible, if you really want to make a point. ;-)

      --
      If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
    20. Re:Have Fun With It! by Rogerborg · · Score: 2
        • I know that sodomy is illegal in many states. Goat porn is also illegal.
        Speaking from experience?

      Yup, sounds like someone hard to learn the hard way not to get the pictures of him sodomising a goat developed at Fotomat.

      --
      If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
  67. General Paranoia by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Unlike so many /.'ers, im neither libertarian nor socially paranoid. In general, Americans are going to have to give up certain public conveniences for the sake of safety. Frankly, I am horrified that you were not searched long before the anthrax attacks. First and foremost, there is no intrinsic right to not be searched - it is a man-made declaration that we should not be subject to unreasonable searches and seizures - and that line has been rightfully redrawn for our safety.

    What if, and I know its not always best to play with counterfactuals, the same kind of security were used prior to the anthrax dillema? Would we have been able to prevent those who wish to do harm from gaining easy access to it? And, more appropriately, are you willing to take this risk so that you dont have to have your bag searched. I personally believe that the ten minute inconvenience is far worth the safety that it brings.

    1. Re:General Paranoia by pavera · · Score: 1

      Sorry, see, the 4th amendment of the constitution, assures us that we cannot be searched without probable cause. What if our friend here, happens to have some narcotics in his bag, now, that is his right to choose to break this law, however, if he were to be caught at work with a little pot, they would arrest him, and send him to jail. Well of course the evidence would not be admissable in court, because it was obtained without a search warrant, thus violating the 4th amendment. Furthermore, any person caught breaking a law in this way, would be found innocent, because it is a violation of the constitution. We wouldn't be able to jail even a terrorist entering with a bomb, because he would find protection under the 4th amendment, (the trial might go to the supreme court) however, anything found in these searches is completely inadmissable in a court of law. I do like the idea of having fun with the searches though. (stated in an earlier post)

    2. Re:General Paranoia by j-beda · · Score: 1
      We wouldn't be able to jail even a terrorist entering with a bomb, because he would find protection under the 4th amendment,

      I don't think that this is entirely accurate. I think that there have been a number of supreme course decisions that validate the use of evidence collected by a "third party" (ie. not the police) in trials, even if that evidence was not obtained via a search warrent. Private investigators, insurance investigators, and similar professionals do this type of thing all the time, and private citizens can provide evidence as well. Of course if the non-cop was acting under the direction of the police, then as an "agent" of the police limitations are imposed, but in general if you "joe public" bust down the crack house door and grab up all the evidence without a warrent, it would probably be legitimate.

  68. And... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... you'd probably be first in line crying that the building management didn't do enough to protect you while at work if some loony brought in a bomb in a bag/package. Your survivors would be lining up ambulance chasers to file suit against the gov't and anyone else with sufficiently deep pockets.

    Suggestion: stop bringing a bag, or bring your lunch/whatever in a clear plastic bag. IOW, consider becoming part of the solution rather than bleating about it and ensuring your position as part of the problem.

  69. Freedom, oh freedom.... by jandersen · · Score: 0

    It might interest everybody to know that people in China have more freedom and rights than what you people in America have these days. It's a nice country and lovely people too; I think I'll move over there...

    1. Re:Freedom, oh freedom.... by CrashRide · · Score: 1

      Move soon, OK?

  70. Defend Your Rights !! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes ! You have the right to refuse a search. You also have the right to be blown up by the guy standing next to you at work. You probably have the right to post to Slashdot on your deathbed asking if you can sue your employer for poor security practices.

    -- AC and proud !!

    1. Re:Defend Your Rights !! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Defend your rights! I'm sure some employer won't search you...

  71. Unreasonable searches (for scientists) by ffoiii · · Score: 1

    When I worked at Argonne National Labs, there was always a chance that the security officer would ask you to pull over and would check your vehicle/bags either on the way in, or on the way out. This didn't bother me at all given that I was working in an area where I had access to dangerous and hazardous materiels, despite that fact that I had already been cleared to work in the area. Note: this was several years ago and the probability of a search was significantly lower than it is now.
    I don't know the specifics of your circumstances, what materials or information you may have access to or work with, but it seems reasonable to me to increase security in public places in a time of heightened risk. Now, increasing searches does not necessarily correlate to an increase in security, but in some circustances, if done correctly, it can help.
    The major distinction that I think needs to be made is that you are not going to "your" lab, but that you are going to a (semi) public facility that by its' very nature (National Institute of Health) is a high profile target.
    No one is asking to search your belongings before you enter your house...yet. ffoiii

  72. DoD by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I work for a defense contractor so this sounds like my normal every day existance. When I came to work here I signed an employment agreement that included my consent to searches of my personal belongings whenever people in positions of authority decided that it might be a good idea.

    By working at a place that deals with sensative information or materials or is a possible terrorist target you basically have to expect this kind of stuff. It is for your own and the country's protection, and more than likely you agreed to it the day you were hired, so live with it.

  73. Unreasonable ? by d_edge · · Score: 1


    IMHO it's a matter of priorities. What do you value the most, your privacy or your safety?

    Searches before you enter and/or leave your workspace can be a nuisance, I agree, but they greatly decrease the risk of another tragedy catching anyone by surprise.

    Seeping through your personal files and/or communications... that would be too much of a privacy invasion; asessing if you pose an IMMEDIATE threat to those around you wouldn't.

    --
    I am not young enough to know everything. --Sir J.M. Barrie
    1. Re:Unreasonable ? by thedavid · · Score: 0

      Seeping through your personal files and/or communications... that would be too much of a privacy invasion; asessing if you pose an IMMEDIATE threat to those around you wouldn't.

      If you were an employer, and had spent thousands of dollars on computer equipment, don't you think that you would at least have some right as to what happens on said equipment?

      How "personal" can things be when you do them with someone else's property?

      I work telephone technical support. While I'm there, there's downtime - when there's no calls. I certainly read slashdot, ssh into my home computer, send email to my wife, and more. The important distinction is that when I'm using my employers computer, I do nothing that I would be afraid my boss would see.

      Don't forget that they're paying you for composing those personal communications...

    2. Re:Unreasonable ? by Monte · · Score: 2

      If you were an employer, and had spent thousands of dollars on computer equipment, don't you think that you would at least have some right as to what happens on said equipment?

      Replace "computer equipment" with "bathroom facilities". You paid for the crapper too, and the plumbing, and the ongoing costs of water, TP and cleaning. I recon you have the same right to make sure somebody isn't in there whacking off on your company time... right? Smile for the camera!

      I used to think the same way regarding the company's monitoring of how computers are used, but then I thought of the bathroom example and realized that there are certain reasonable expectations to privacy. Now the question before me is how much monitoring of the computer/network is reasonable.

      I still believe the company has the right to whatever computer/network monitoring they care to do, but I don't use the "because they own it" argument any more.

    3. Re:Unreasonable ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Um, I'd say I value my privacy and my civil rights most.

      Those that give up some rights for a little safety deserve neither (ben franklin, more or less) pretty much sums it up.

      Police states don't happen overnight, they happen over time. That constitution and bill of rights weren't written during peaceful boom years. They were developed during a war. A war which taught the founding fathers that your right to privacy is paramount.

      Now the 4th amendment is mostly gone (thank you Messrs. Reagan and Bush and the "Drug War").
      If this War on Terrorism is going to be another excuse to empower the gov't to do anything they want in the name of "security", then I'll take the terrorists. At least they are up front about their goals.

    4. Re:Unreasonable ? by d_edge · · Score: 1


      If you were an employer, and had spent thousands of dollars on computer equipment, don't you think that you would at least have some right as to what happens on said equipment?


      If we follow that line of thought, you're a taxpayer, and government facilities and infrastructure are paid with YOUR tax money, so why are there calssified documents to which you don't have access to, even though you paid for the mechanisms that made it possible to generate them?

      How "personal" can things be when you do them with someone else's property?

      Are we willing to say that whomever pays for the means on which information is generated actually OWNS it? I'm not ready to make that concession. If I take an award winning picture with a friend's camera does that entitle him to claim the award as his?

      I commend you on your willingness to dissociate your personal matters and your office matters. But does this mean you will abstain from having small-talk or even friendships with your co-workers during office hours since the company is paying for that time ?

      Don't forget that they're paying you for composing those personal communications...
      True... but you compensate that with the personal time you lose when a meeting runs late, or with a business trip that takes more time of your schedule than a regular office day. They don't pay for those.. do they? it's a reciprocal swap... but someone snooping on your e-mail or personal files isn't(unless you're a sysadmin and can read theirs too >] J/K )

      --
      I am not young enough to know everything. --Sir J.M. Barrie
  74. It's not the police by SquierStrat · · Score: 1

    Were it the police, the constitution would provide protection against such searches. However, you are being searched by your employer, who does not to that extent have to abide by the constituion (IOW, you employer government agency or not, does not have gun power and therefore has less limits.) The choice is yours, you can continue with you current job and leave the status quo, continue and try to change things, or quit. No one is forcing you to stay there (unless you are under contract, in which case another point is brought up and they might be in breach of contract.)

    IANAL, but IANAI (I am not a lawyer but I am also not an idiot) most of this is common sense.

    Derek Greene

    --
    Derek Greene
  75. I'm hoping it's just where you work. by ChelleyBean · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Where you are working probably has a huge impact on the level of security being exercised. I hope airports look at it and consider putting their employees through tighter security instead of just their passengers. The car search seems a bit over the top, especially if they've searched your person upon leaving the building. If they have guards on the parking lots themselves then the most they should have to do is a light search upon entering the property.

    We're currently under a bio-terror panic that is being fueled, for the most part, by the media. It's understandable that businesses, especially those in medical research and healthcare, are trying to cover their own rear ends. Under these circumstances I think you'd have a hard time proving that the searches are "unreasonable". I think the current body count is possibly three, if the two postal workers they discovered yesterday prove to be the result of anthrax. Dozens have tested positive for exposure, but they are not ill. A handful has tested positive for the disease itself. Yes, it's scary. Yes, it's tragic. No, it's not yet an epidemic, in spite of what the media says.

    Anthrax is hard to catch. It's all around us every day, but few actually get ill from it. People who work in the wool industry are exposed to hundred of anthrax spores per hour and may never get ill. It takes a high dose in the right form at one time to actually get sick and it is very treatable with antibiotics. Still, you shouldn't run out and take Cipro as a preventative, or we're likely to end up having Super Anthrax, just like we're now beginning to see Super Tuberculosis. On top of that, it's getting into flu season. With the current panic level in the US and the fact that the first symptoms of Anthrax are similar to those of the flu, do you realize the nightmare physicians are about to face? I'm glad I work off campus and not in the hospital proper. I wouldn't want to be caught up in that fuss.

    Everyone, keep your heads screwed on straight. Things aren't likely to really start floating back to something resembling normalcy until after the Super Bowl (think stadium full of people plus airliner, you know the FAA probably has). Maybe not until after bin Laden is either locked up or buried. We'll all be subjected to some major pains in the hindquarters for a while yet. Just keep your eyes and ears open, and be prepared to pitch a bitch if the ruling powers really start stomping on our rights.

    1. Re:I'm hoping it's just where you work. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you had typed your text in a modern word processor, it would have warned you that your text is missing six 0x91-opening-quote to match the six 0x92-closing-quotes that you have in your text.

    2. Re:I'm hoping it's just where you work. by yesthatguy · · Score: 1

      Nobody ever accused a browser's box of being a modern word processor.

      --
      Yes! That guy!
    3. Re: I'm hoping it's just where you work. by Inthewire · · Score: 1

      Fueled by the media? True...that and people dropping dead.

      --


      Writers imply. Readers infer.
    4. Re:I'm hoping it's just where you work. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nobody ever accused a browser's <TEXTAREA> box of being a modern word processor.

      If only people would stick to the textarea editor instead of pasting text typed in moronic MS Word...

  76. In this day of .com bankruptcies by xeeno · · Score: 1, Funny

    Sometimes the only way that you can get
    severance is through liberated equipment. :)

  77. Where were you when the other rights were taken? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Where were the academics when all of the other rights in the constitution were being taken away?

    Over the years, the goverment has slowly been eroding the constitution:
    1. First ammendment rights (ie: DMCA)
    2. Second ammendment rights (ie: disarming passengers aboard aircraft for example)
    3. Fourth ammendment rights (ie: the drug war, property seizures, searches of your belongings and your vehicle). 4. Tenth ammendment - do the states have any rights left?

    Nobody said a word when a minority was pulled over and asked to have their car searched, but when you finally feel what it is like to be violated by our over zealous goverment, you finally take notice.

  78. get used to it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    as this terrorist bullshit will never end, you can expect more and more places to start doing this. offices, schools, public buildings, etc... try to refuse and you'll prolly be arrested, or at least detained and interrogated. solution: move to another country where people don't trade freedom and privacy for the illusion of security.

    george orwell was 17 years off.

  79. The Constitution by eMilkshake · · Score: 2, Troll

    When will the American public (especially the /. crowd) realize the rights guarenteed by the government are guarentees regarding government behavior. Any company can do WHATEVER it wants to limit "free speech" or so forth except what is limited by law. This is an extension of freedom, not a limit of it. You, personally, can choose not to abuse private property, etc.

    1. Re:The Constitution by pavera · · Score: 1

      Then the search has absolutely no merit whatsoever. The only reason to search is to find something, so as to prosecute in a court of law. However, these searches violate the 4th amendment, and therefore, would nullify any incriminating evidence found, so basically, all the lab could do is say "ok, go away". Now, if a terrorist were entering with a bomb, he could detonate it there, or rush the guards and detonate it slightly inside the building.. the company has no power to enforce laws, only the gov't. and therefore, these searches are baseless.

    2. Re:The Constitution by Bighund · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The searches do not violate the 4th Amendment because the search is not being conducted by law enforcement. Your reasoning that "the only reason to search is to find something so as to prosecute in a court of law" would nullify EVERY single search by any person or entity, whether law enforcement or not, if that person then turned over any illegal/suspicious substance to the police, who then chose to prosecute based upon some fact or knowledge gained during the search. Further, the 4th Amendment only protects against "unreasonable" searches.

      I agree that we must be very, very careful not to lose our freedoms in the rush to discover or prevent future plots. There is a fine line between paranois and prudence in this field and most public officials tend to rather quickly gravitate toward over-zealousness, and give our civil liberties short-shrift.

    3. Re:The Constitution by j-beda · · Score: 1
      I think that you are very much mistaken. There is a long legal history of the "citizen's arrest", and company security and other private police forces are quite able to gather evidence and detain people - happens all the time. You think that the bank guards are just there for show?

    4. Re:The Constitution by __donald_ball__ · · Score: 1

      "When will the American public (especially the /. crowd) realize the rights guarenteed by the government are guarentees regarding government behavior."

      That's not true. The government can, should, and does step in to forbid business practices that violate our civil liberties. Refusing service to people based on the color of their skin is one such practice that has been curtailed. Eavesdropping on employees' phone calls is another such practice.

      When a condition of employment is a violation of civil liberties (you must be white, you must perform sexual favors for the boss, etc.), the business is doing something illegal. I can't say if forcing employees to consent to searches is or should be illegal. On the one hand, the people have a right to privacy. On the other hand, the government has a duty to protect the people; making it difficult to smuggle biological agents out of a government lab would seem to be reasonable.

    5. Re:The Constitution by rfc1394 · · Score: 1
      When will the American public (especially the /. crowd) realize the rights guarenteed by the government are guarentees regarding government behavior. Any company can do WHATEVER it wants to limit "free speech" or so forth except what is limited by law. This is an extension of freedom, not a limit of it. You, personally, can choose not to abuse private property, etc.
      In case you have forgotten, he said he works for the National Institutes of Health, which is a division of the Department of Health and Human Services, which is, in fact, a government agency and thus IS subject to being required to follow the Fourth Amendment. The question is whether, in view of the conditions that now exist, whether a 100% bag check violates the "reasonable searches" clause. While a private employer is usually not subject to the 4th Amendment, a government employer certainly is.
      --
      The lessons of history teach us - if they teach us anything - that nobody learns the lessons that history teaches us.
  80. You have no rights at a work!!! by digitalamish · · Score: 3, Insightful

    That statement seems a little bold, but it is true. Think about it. Companies routinely censor employees, demand random drug checks, spy on you, and many other things. The difference between your employer and America, is that your employer PAYS you to be there. As long as you agree to it, they will do what they want. If you don't like it, leave. It's harsh, but I once quit a job because they started random drug tests. I've never touched a drug stronger than asprin, but I felt they were going too far. It's not like I was going to get them to change their policies.

    The only rights afforded to you at a job came about because someone sued someone else, and the new 'guideline' was the result.
    ---
    "That's Homer Simpson, sir. One of your drones from sector 7G." - Waylan Smithers

    1. Re:You have no rights at a work!!! by LordNimon · · Score: 1

      No matter how badly a company wants to, they can't violate child labor laws. Some things a company isn't allowed to do, even if they pay for it. I don't know if excessive searches at a company are a violation of law (the Constitution tends to apply more to the government than to private companies).

      --
      And the men who hold high places must be the ones who start
      To mold a new reality... closer to the heart
    2. Re:You have no rights at a work!!! by trcooper · · Score: 2

      Child labor laws are aimed directly at business. Unreasonable search and seizure is to protect you from police. If I want to require a search of your person before you are allowed into my property, that is completely within my rights.

      When the Gov't is your employer it acts as a company and not government.

    3. Re:You have no rights at a work!!! by dachshund · · Score: 1
      When the Gov't is your employer it acts as a company and not government.

      Really? There are hundreds of examples where the government has been treated differently by the courts (vs. private corporations) in regards to the way it hires and treats employees.

    4. Re:You have no rights at a work!!! by FFFish · · Score: 3, Interesting

      "Companies routinely censor employees, demand random drug checks, spy on you, and many other things."

      This may be the norm in America, but it certainly isn't normal in Canada, and I doubt it's normal in many other free nations.

      When will the American public wake up to the fact that their nation is no longer free? That nearly everything the founding fathers fought for (ooh, nice alliteration) has been decimated over the past couple decades?

      Come the revolution, comrades. Wake up! Throw off your shackles etc. (Seriously, you all got a big problem, and seem to be mostly blind to it.)

      --

      --
      Don't like it? Respond with words, not karma.
    5. Re:You have no rights at a work!!! by rhaig · · Score: 1

      Come the revolution, comrades. Wake up! Throw off your shackles etc.

      Exactly, that's what the second amendment is all about. Oh wait, the democrats want to take that away also. At least I don't live in the Republic of California.

      --
      "We are not tolerant people. We prefer drastically effective solutions"
    6. Re:You have no rights at a work!!! by sam_handelman · · Score: 1

      When the Gov't is your employer it acts as a company and not government.

      Actually, that's not quite true. It's one of the reasons that right-wingers love subcontractors.

      All of the provisions of the bill of rights (for example, equal protection under the law regardless of race) apply uniformly to any government action - including employment. They also (this is a sticky area) may or may not apply to government subcontractors, depending on whether or not that subcontractor is acting as an agent of state authority.

      The equal rights act effectively extends that particular clause of the constitution to affect private employers, but the US government would be affected anyway, since the things that authorise the government to have employees are laws, and those laws must be applied equally to everyone.

      That's somewhat academic, but what *isn't* academic is that there are a number of laws regarding labor relations that effect only government employees.

      As it so happens, few of them (for obvious reasons) interfere with the government taking security precautions against its own employees.

      So, yeah, the original poster can like it or lump it, even though government employer is subject to all the restrictions government is always subject to, I'm sure there's precedent that the search and seizure restriction doesn't apply to government employees going to and from work.

      --
      The good and new comes from no quarter where it is looked for, and is always something different from what is expected.
    7. Re:You have no rights at a work!!! by Xofer+D · · Score: 3, Interesting
      You are aware, are you not, that our Prime Minister is adamantly in favour of new, sweeping legislation that severely limit our civil liberties? That proposed Canadian anti-"terrorism" legislation defines "terrorist" as anyone employing civil disobedience in order to influence the government?

      Yes, Canada has big problems too. I'm trying to figure out what I can do about it that will actually have an effect. I'm really concerned that all this anti-terrorism stuff will be applied to reduce our ability to disagree with the government, provoking terrorist actions. After all, terrorism is what people do when they feel they have no options left.

      --
      The Signal/Noise ratio can be improved in two ways. Remaining silent is the OTHER way.
    8. Re:You have no rights at a work!!! by FFFish · · Score: 2

      Dammit, I skimmed the press release and it didn't look that bad. Looks like the weasel-wording let it slide right on by my eyes.

      Got a good site recommendation for where I can learn more?

      --

      --
      Don't like it? Respond with words, not karma.
    9. Re:You have no rights at a work!!! by Lilior · · Score: 1

      There are rights, limitations, on even contracts you agree to. There are rights you can't sign away, especially within the context of an employment.

      That is what contract law is all about -- a contract isn't automatically legal simply because I sign my name to it. That is true for private sector and public sector jobs -- there are things the government cannot do, even when handing out 'gifts' (ie: jobs). There are even some things private sector jobs cannot do.

      For example: your employer cannot require you to sign a contract to continue employment that allows him to sexually harass you.

      As far as search and seizure goes: the limit is against unreasonable. The government, no matter what, cannot do unreasonable search and seizures. It can ask, in the form of a contract, for a redefinition of reasonable within a certain scope -- like the military, or the CIA. That makes sense, and is reasonable. But such a contract doesn't say: "you agree to submit to unreasoanble searches whenever we want you to". A justification is necessary -- in the case of the military the justification is obvious. That makes it *reasonable*.

      So as far as the topic is concerned: it is an empirical question. It isn't about the ideals of freedom or the limits of governmental power so much as it is about what we, as Americans, think is reasonable for a scientist at NIH to be enduring for our collective security. There are a couple quick ways to answer such a question:
      is he being searched more than his peers?
      Because if he was; then it is obviously unreasonable: the only justification for enforcing searches on this individual is because of his position. If people in the same position are not being as harassed, then it is obvious that the searches are not being done because of his position, but rather, on some other (until proven reasonable) unreasonable criteria.

      So -- no. We do have rights at work. We are not slaves to the corporations or the government -- we are the corporations, we are the government. We are responsible for the definition of reasonable, and for limiting the power our peers (political and business leaders) are allowed to have. If *you* want to sell your freedom for money...then you are welcome to... But that is only legal if we as a majority agree that freedom has a price -- that the 'privilege' of having a job can justify limitations on freedom.

      Personally...the cynic inside me would say that that has already happened in this century. That it might not even be repairable without significant violence. That would be truly sad, and I hope that as a collective we will not be so fatalistic as to legitimize our own enslavement.

      --
      --Lilior
  81. There is an answer by debrain · · Score: 3, Insightful
    This answer is not for everyone. Leave your draconian country while you can. Few countries permit such embarassing yet incredibly futile actions. Much less condone them. Look to Amnesty International for a list of countries with human rights violations and campaigns they have engaged in; their largest human rights campaign was directed against the US rights violations.


    Be thankful you still have your free speech and freedom to leave. You've exercised the prior, now I suggest you exercise the latter. You can rest assured that things will get worse before they get better. You can grin and bear it. I would leave. But that's not the answer for everyone. The alternatives will be listed here; contact your society-altering hooks: lawyers and politicans. Start a riot. Get noticed.

    1. Re:There is an answer by Dr.+Scott · · Score: 1
      Leave your draconian country while you can. Few countries permit such embarassing yet incredibly futile actions. Much less condone them. Look to Amnesty International for a list of countries with human rights violations and campaigns they have engaged in; their largest human rights campaign was directed against the US rights violations.

      Oh, that's just silly. People all over the world are trying hard to get into the United States. As for Amnesty... I dropped out of AI a long time ago, when it became clear that they have one standard for the US, another for the rest of the world.

      Darlin', don't talk about things you don't understand.
      Darlin', don't talk about things you don't know anything about.
      Darlin', if you don't like it here, go back to your own miserable country.
      -- Randy Newman, "Christmas in Capetown"
  82. Deport domestics: who will take them? by eclectric · · Score: 1

    So, you mean we can finally deport the CC? Where can we send them? Maybe the vatican will take them in.

    Let's deport Operation Rescue back to Mars.

  83. Your choice by jathos · · Score: 2, Insightful
    You work for the federal government, in *their* lab, not yours. I live just a few miles away from NIH, and I personally am quite glad that they are instituting tough security measures.

    If you worked for a corporation, you would most likely be searched in case you were trying to steal intellectual property. But in this case, you work for a government *at war*, and the sooner you realize that, the better off you'll be. Downtown Washington DC is just a 10 minute drive from NIH, and people are dying from anthrax in DC. You being searched is a small price to pay for the increased security of my loved ones.

  84. What about Non-Government offices? by cporter · · Score: 1
    A "bags are subject to search" policy has been implemented at my non-government building. What is the enforceability of this? What rights do I have?

    1. Re:What about Non-Government offices? by scheming+daemons · · Score: 1
      You have the right to quit your job if you don't like it.


      The Bill of Rights is left at the door when you are on company time.

      --
      "I have as much authority as the pope, I just
      don't have as many people who believe it" - George Carlin

  85. Re:No Big Deal -- Yep -NO BIG DEAL! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The world hasn't changed. 6000 out of 6.3 billion died. tragedy, but not a population impact. And now that this all happened. I doubt 3-4 guys with pocket knifes and potato peelers will be able to hijack a plane full of 150 angry Americans. Remember Terrorism only work if you succumb to the Terror.

  86. It gets worse. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My employer uses an infrared camera with a polarized filter on all employees leaving the building. Why? It sees through light layers of clothing. Why? Aside from giving the security folks their jollies, it lets them see who is walking out with DIMMs and CPUs in their pocket.

    AC'd to protect myself and my employer.

  87. Re:On one condition by Jagged · · Score: 1
    Allow officials to designate domestic groups as terrorist organizations. Membership in such an organization would become a deportable offense.

    Only if we are allowed to add Congress to this list after this passes.

  88. Use the gun argument by OeLeWaPpErKe · · Score: 1

    substances don't kill people ! people kill people

    Anthrax doesn't ... oops ;-)

    I don't know about America, but in belgium the law on the subject is pretty specific, ONLY a law officer can legally search you without your permission, and if they are not police they have to give back ANYTHING they find immediately, and cannot hold you ( they can NOT hold you till the police get there, not even if you stole from them ). They can only refuse access to their property (and only if they prove they have that authority, if not you can defend your rights, and if they do anything, all you do to them is self defense.

    Hint : refuse the search on the way out, and have them call the police EVERY time you walk out, and defend yourself against them if they try anything.

    I am not suggesting you kill someone, but if you cause a serious enough incident, it will cause them to rethink their policy ( take 15 of your coworkers, refuse the search, overpower the security agents, and have them arrested for example )

    1. Re:Use the gun argument by praedor · · Score: 1

      Hah. They'd fire him in an instant if he started a fuss. He's not just some employee, he's a GOVERNMENT employee, a civil servant, for an institute that does have controlled areas and does sometimes deal with dangerous biological agents. He MUST accept certain government rules to work. They can toss him for cause. They can fill his position easily (I'd take it, for instance...I am also a military man so I am used to the FACT that certain jobs mean giving up certain levels of freedom).

      --
      In Bushworld, they struggle to keep church and state separate in Iraq as they increasingly merge the two in America.
  89. Face it... by thewiz · · Score: 1

    If you work for the government or work for a company that has contractors on government facilities, you are out of luck. When you were hired, one of the documents you signed (if you remember it) gave the government the right to subject you to searches ANYTIME you are at work or coming or going.

    IANAL, but I do work for a government contractor and my job is at a military base. My base ID has a little statement on the back that says I have consented to searches and questioning anytime they feel like it. And I had to sign the back of my ID before they'd let me on base.

    --
    If "disco" means "I learn" in Latin, does "discothèque" mean "I learn technology"?
  90. Make it easier on yourself and them by jnik · · Score: 5, Insightful
    First off, I think the car search is a little ridiculous and you should probably speak briefly with your superior about it. Heck, just talk to your boss and explain that you understand the need for increased security, but you'd prefer it be a little less in-your-face.

    The other thing to do is minimize what you bring in and out. What are you taking home? A laptop to do work at home? Just leave the work at the office for a few weeks. Use a paper lunchbag and throw it out when you're done. Don't wear cargo pants. And when you talk to your boss, let him/her know that you're taking these steps to make life easier for both you and the security people.

    In other words, do what you can to make the intrusion less of an intrusion, and make it know that you do still consider it an intrusion, but are willing to be reasonable, especially in the short term.

    1. Re:Make it easier on yourself and them by Number6.2 · · Score: 2, Informative

      Ah, I can see you've never worked for The Feds before. Our friend has exactly two choices:

      1. Endure it
      2. Leave

      That's it. I used to be a contractor for the Navy, and every once in a while they would conduct searches like that too. You know what? They were well within their rights, as far as the documents I had signed on joining were concerned.

      The point that everyone misses around here is that security people are malajusted, paranoid bastards because they have to be. They do not have a sense of humor.

      --
      "If god did not exist, it would be necessary to invent him" --Voltaire
    2. Re:Make it easier on yourself and them by pi_rules · · Score: 2

      Make it really easy on them...

      Voulntarily get an extensive background check done, if you haven't already. Depending on your state see if you can get a permit to carry a concealed weapon around. Encourage co-workers to do the same who have clean backgrounds and no possible link to any terrorist organization. If you walk around in a lab-coat all day that's awesome, much easier to conceal a weapon under that robe than in a dress-shirt and slacks.

      Security's a nice thing and all, but it's not 100% perfect. Make it well known that the installation is very secure. If some nut job(s) run in their with assault weapons trying to nab some smallpox or ebola and are confronted by a swarm of gun-toting employees I wish them good fucking luck getting out of the building alive, let alone with any viruses.

      Other people have noted that you're at 'Ground Zero' here in a war. If your employer/co-workers think you're nuts keep reminding them of just how dangerous your position is. If they (or you) refute that then why is everybody being searched like this?

    3. Re:Make it easier on yourself and them by Rinikusu · · Score: 1

      Even better, why wear pants at all? Just go to work naked, to expedite searches. And when the guard looks surprised to see you when you walk up, hand him a rubber glove, some KY, and bend over in front of him and spread your checks while shouting

      "God Bless America, Sir! Citizen is ready to be searched, SIR!"

      --
      If you were me, you'd be good lookin'. - six string samurai
    4. Re:Make it easier on yourself and them by Rogerborg · · Score: 2
      • Depending on your state see if you can get a permit to carry a concealed weapon around. Encourage co-workers to do the same who have clean backgrounds and no possible link to any terrorist organization

      Welcome to the 2nd Amendment to the US Constitution. An armed and effective militia. The Constitution places the defence of the nation in the hands of the people, not in the hands of a few appointed representatives.

      --
      If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
  91. Stop Whining. by blair1q · · Score: 2, Troll

    You don't like it, quit.

    You work in a (target) sensitive (target) government (target) facility (target).

    If not for those (prophylaxis) searches (diligence), there's no telling (anthrax) what (ebola) might (plague) get (guns) through (bombs).

    So stop your whining. I'm sure you took a low-paying government job because you like the job security and the pension plan, but you also took on a responsibility to the public--which includes you--and a risk in case of war.

    You're not contracted to the military, so you have the privilege of leaving your job at your pleasure.

    --Blair

    1. Re:Stop Whining. by bwlang · · Score: 2

      I agree that searching is probably called for in this situation - but there is no call to insult this person. Most scientists I know work where they do beacuse they can get access to interesting things/people there.

    2. Re:Stop Whining. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Yeah, you big loser. How can you expect to have a country where freedom reigns unless you are willing to have full-body cavity searches on an hourly basis?
      Geez, you commies disgust me. Why, in my day we ASKED to have the cops beat us up if we weren't perfectly lily-white! I bet you think you can wear any kind of towel you want on your head, too, you un-american pansy!
      Here in God-fearin' GWBush-lovin' Real America, we don't want any of you anti-christian scientist freaks interfering with our Holy Righteous Crusade, so get your ass back to work and be thankful we used KY-jelly instead of sandpaper.

    3. Re:Stop Whining. by blair1q · · Score: 2

      Um...might that be the same reason the terrorists would be interested in the place?

      And these days, considering the weapons, I think many previously innocuous medical research may have become classifiable information.

      --Blair
      "innocuous, not innoculous"

  92. similar experience in DC area by ragnar · · Score: 4, Insightful
    I work for a federal agency and my bags are inspected every day I come to work. I don't like it, but I suspect this is the sort of treatment people have undergone at other more sensitive offices like the Pentagon, CIA and FBI for years. Like it or not, heightened security has come to many of our lives in the DC area.

    Does that mean I'm rolling over and letting "the man" trample on civil liberties? No, it simply means that I recognize the change in climate that has come to my workplace. I don't like it, but the alternative could be much worse.

    Most people would be in favor of searching the parsels of NIH employees. I don't know all the stuff that you do at NIH, but I have heard it is similar to the CDC. In these times, a bit of diligence and inconvenience will be worth it. This isn't very popular with much of the /. crowd, but residents of DC (like myself) are glad to see more stringent controls and searches.

    --
    -- Solaris Central - http://w
    1. Re:similar experience in DC area by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      actually, at the Pentagon/CIA/FBI/etc buildings, the only people having bags searched are uncleared persons. Regular folks there are not searched because they hold security clearances. OTOH, exit inspections may still occur at random times and are always done after 6pm. Exit inspections mainly look for classified docs leaving the building.

      The reason NIH and DOL are being subjected to searches is because they dont require security clearances for the majority of employees.

    2. Re:similar experience in DC area by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If the FBI searched everyone, then how are they losing so many laptops? Hmmm?

      I really doubt they've been that stringent in the past, tho they might be now.

  93. Work within the system by 91degrees · · Score: 1

    The reason they are still doinf this is probably because they don't perceive anyone objecting. Make a few polite complaints. Talk to other people about how they feel. Encourage them to request less extreme security. I'm sure you're not the only person getting sick of it.

  94. Rights in the workplace by denzo · · Score: 2

    Everything in the U.S. Constitution doesn't directly translate over to the workplace very well. As a paid individual, you are basically forking over your person to a company or agency. They own you for that period of time because they are paying you for it.

    You don't have a right to free speech, from searches, to bear arms, etc. Certain other rights, such as being able to practice your own religion, are only specifically granted by Federal labor laws. Sexual harrassment isn't illegal because it's in the constitution, neither is equal opportunity rights. Employees all work within the framework of labor laws, not the Constitution. Once you clock out, and aren't on company time, then you actually have all your "personal" rights again.

    So unfortunately, there isn't much you can do, except for extraordinary circumstances such as being racially singled out when being searched. If you don't like it, you either grin and bear it, or resign.

    1. Re:Rights in the workplace by Enigma2175 · · Score: 2
      As a paid individual, you are basically forking over your person to a company or agency.

      This simply is not true, although the Corporations would like you to believe this. The content of your comment is true (the Constitution does not protect you from your employer) but your reasoning is flawed. The Constitution (and the Bill of Rights) exist to protect us from the Government, not from each other. The Government is given the task of protecting us from each other, in the form of legislative and judicial powers.

      --

      Enigma

  95. Unresaonable Search? by dtrent · · Score: 2, Insightful

    You don't have a *right* to work in your lab, it's something your employer allows you to do, with their own conditions.

    Quit if you don't like it, but don't escalate your situation to an *unreasonable search*, that's not what it is.

  96. What are you hiding by soybean · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Well, I think that it's clear that you are hiding something. Why would you even consider the question unless you are doing something wrong? Now you ask us to rationalize your avoidance of your own guilt. I never knowingly commit any crimes. I never possess any illegal contraband. I'm an upstanding patriot, and I'm happy to let anyone who cares see that I've got nothing to hide. Why don't reveal you real agenda and tell us what you are hiding in you bag at work. Or, better yet, why don't you just walk down to the nearest police station and turn yourself in.

    1. Re:What are you hiding by Amazing+Quantum+Man · · Score: 1

      He's obviously carrying illegal copyright circumvention devices. I bet his laptop runs that unAmerican Linux thingie!

      Call the RIAA!

      Yes, this is a troll. Go ahead and mod me down.

      --
      Fascism starts when the efficiency of the government becomes more important than the rights of the people.
  97. It's a Risk vs Annoyance Thing.... by dschuetz · · Score: 3, Informative

    Most recently, they've instituted a policy of 100% bag/package searches on entering buildings.

    I'm more concerned why they're not checking your bags when you exit the buildings!

    Truthfully, in the government world (especially in the Intelligence or Defense communities, but I can understand it happening in key health-related establishments like NIH, too), employees are subjected to more stringent security than in most private companies. Mostly, they're restricted to preventing guns going in or information going out.

    I wouldn't be surprised if, eventually, the 100% check got reduced to a 50% spot check or something. But the big question still remains -- "how far can vigilance go before it becomes an invasion of our rights?"

    I don't have an answer to that. In certain professions, you give up some 4th amendment rights (such as submitting to drug testing if you drive a train), in others, you give up certain rights of association (yes, they still ask you if you belong to the communist party when you get a clearance). I'd say it's a necessary balance between protecting the public (or nation) from risk, and protecting individual rights.

    Hopefully, eventually, one will calculate the overall risk to the organization to certain threats. Like, what's the chance of someone bringing in a grenade? What would they have to gain from that action? What's the potential damage? It's a RISK = THREAT * DAMAGE calculation. Then you structure your security program around those calculations, for each risk type.

    Eventually, they may determine that the risk associated with not having an in-bound bag check (that is, the sum of all risks that could be averted with such a check) may be at such a level that they can reduce the 100% bag check to a 100% badge check and 10% spot check on bags.

    All this is simple risk management theory, though...where, the question was asked, is the line between group and individual rights? I'd suggest that you could perform an "Annoyance" measurement -- multiply frequency of checks by time wasted in line waiting your turn and by embarrasment caused when they find the bottle of, say, viagra in your briefcase, and you get some arbitrary measurement of the "SEARCH COST" against employees. Better to include, also, things like a measure of the chance that employees will get sick of the searches and find a new job, or that productivity will drop due to reduced morale.

    The line, then, is when the ANNOYANCE level outweighs the RISK level. Something could be very annoying, like a 100% outbound bag check for departing toxins, but as long as the RISK is very high, it's reasonable. On the other hand, if someone decides to check for explosives in every package within every car upon entry to, say, a desert park where there are no humans for a hundred miles (and, thus, a low risk for harm), then your rights to privacy should win out.

    Or something like that. Of course, all the numbers used in such a calculus are totally arbitrary, so it'd also be important to make up-front "value judgements" to calibrate the system against "obvious" cases where a search is good, or where it'd be bad...

    You might try skimming FindLaw.com for stuff, I'm sure there's got to be some caselaw or opinions on this. It sort of relates to drug checks, sobriety checkpoints, and workplace monitoring, to some degree.

    If you find any very good resources, or get real advice from an attorney, be sure to post a follow-up story...

    1. Re:It's a Risk vs Annoyance Thing.... by drinkypoo · · Score: 1
      I'd suggest that you could perform an "Annoyance" measurement -- multiply frequency of checks by time wasted in line waiting your turn and by embarrasment caused when they find the bottle of, say, viagra in your briefcase
      ...

      How do I get a job where I need to take viagra to work?

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  98. Hmm, read the headlines lately? by spliff · · Score: 2

    Perhaps because CDC is located in NIH, and with this crazy bioterrorism frenzy going on about you, security does become a bit overzealous. I myself contract at the *high-profile* target of the Dept of Labor, and am subject to searches as well. One of the costs of living in a capitol city.

    I also do some afterhours doorstaff work at a local club, and can understand where the security is coming from. They are not there for your convenience. They are trying to protect you, your coworkers, the (expensive) labs at NIH, and themselves. Unless they're slipping on a latex glove with a dab of lubricant on the index finger, I'd say get used to it.

    --
    Some of us have fallen in love with the notion of giving without reserve-Raoul Vanegiem, Revolution of Everyday Life
  99. You made the most common mistake. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Like many people, you took the amendment out of the context of the entire Bill of Rights. Read the preamble, which states exactly what the amendments are doing, ensuring the people are protected from the government.

  100. Somebody report this guy to the FBI by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    The FBI needs to check Slashdot's logs to find out who this guy is, and what he is trying to hide. I wouldn't be at all surprised if his name sounds like one of the terrorists'.

    Somebody please report this guy to the FBI.

  101. ���d�d萋� by c_g_hills · · Score: 0

    Zgåkçä[[tÁgÁsZ "ZzZ'eZ"(TM)Ò"V[sâcK'£äzÁ'Ï ÁLkkk

  102. The only right way to solve any problem by Tha_Zanthrax · · Score: 1
    The key to problem-solving is not to work around the problem but to eliminate the problems source. You're problem is that when you go to work you are searched which you don't like. By eliminating the source I don't mean get the security measures a bit louser (speelingk ?!) but the not having to be searched: so don't go to or leave work, sleep in you lab !!

    PS: this was meant to be funny, but I don't think that is really clear.

  103. A-Frelling-Mazing by uberdood · · Score: 1

    I submit a story about a US Senator advocating that the US government IGNORE patent rights and that gets rejected - in SPITE of all the stories on the idiots in the US Patent Office.

    Yet a story gets posted about a whining guy who works at a government facility with secure areas (regardless if HE works in a secure area), sensitive data, and controlled access.

    Mohammud-frelling-Allah. If you don't like the policy, seek your lawyer (DUH), or better yet another job.

    Go ahead and mod me down. I'm not a kharma-whore, else I'd post this anonymously.

    --
    "Population 1,656"
    1. Re:A-Frelling-Mazing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Chuck Schumer is a goat's ass.

  104. What's in your lab? by CaptDeuce · · Score: 1

    It's impossible to say (not that it'll stop your typical slashdot reader) what's reasonable because your don't giver us enough information.

    What's in your lab? Anthrax? Small pox? Ebolla?
    What's in your building?
    Why do you bring anything larger than a lunchbox when you know it's going to be searched?

    Get back to us at your convenience

    --
    "Where's my other sock?" - A. Einstein
  105. be careful by userunknown · · Score: 1

    or some faithful GW followers will call you unpatriotic.

  106. Rant by bckspc · · Score: 2, Insightful



    I work in the Empire State Building.. now the tallest building in New York. Every day I have to walk through metal detectors, empty my pockets of cellphone, PDA and keys, put my bag through an x-ray machine, open my laptop and show security it's a real working laptop.

    Like the poster, at first I didn't mind, but after weeks and weeks of this it's become a major hassle. If I want to leave the building for any reason at all I still have to wait in line to be hassled by the security goons. And now they're letting tourists back in to visit the observatory at the top. How long must we endure this daily harrassment? Until we've stopped bombing Afghanistan?

    Oh, and my favorite are the posters in the lobby that say 'no knives or cutting instruments of any length are permitted on the premises.' So.... we don't try and hijack the building and fly it to DC?

  107. Discourage searches.... by Alsee · · Score: 2, Funny

    You could always sprinkle mysterious white powder inside your bag,

    --
    - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    1. Re:Discourage searches.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Try this. Go buh-bye for a long long time!

    2. Re:Discourage searches.... by Alsee · · Score: 1

      Try this. Go buh-bye for a long long time!

      Are you suggesting that someone be arrested for having white powder in their personal belongings?

      You better be careful you don't spill talcum power in your gym bag!

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  108. searches are necessary! by benny_lama · · Score: 1

    It is all about tactics. For lack of a better word, 'terrorists' prey upon the every day routines and lack of scrutiny. The only way to combat that tactic is to implement measures that give you multiple chances of finding that one thing out of the ordinary that alerts you to an attack. Searches and checkpoints give security forces that ability. How much time does a search take out of your day? Five minutes, maybe a max of ten? I think that is a small price to pay for increased security to allow you to carry out your important research. Consider the bigger picture and stop whining.

    --
    "No Comm, No Bomb"
  109. The solution is simple. by schon · · Score: 1

    Take everything you need (clothes, etc) to work, and lock it in your filing cabinet/locker/etc

    This will get searched once. (OK, you'll have to move it out of the building once in awhile for laundry, so it'll get searched once per laundry cycle.)

    Then show up for work naked every day.

    If someone complains, tell them you are just complying fully with the search policy. If they don't like it, they don't have to look at you.

    Civil disobedience, baby!

    (and I'm only half kidding with this.)

    1. Re:The solution is simple. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nice. So when they fire you for sexual harrassment, you won't have any clothes. Great plan dude.

  110. After the crap that happenned.... by kevlar · · Score: 1


    ... I don't blame them for searching. The NIH is a nice intellectual target. Just be glad that someone is watching out for you, because I guarentee if you were on one of those plane's you would've been asking yourself "didn't anyone check these guys to see what they had???"

  111. I would put it more strongly... by dsfox · · Score: 3, Funny

    Wake up! You should be *happy* they are doing these searches. They are protecting you.

    1. Re:I would put it more strongly... by Kvasir · · Score: 1
      Wake up! You should be *happy* they are doing these searches. They are protecting you

      I'm sorry but there is a limit where reasonable protection of your right to the free enjoyment of life encroaches on your other liberties.


      Efforts to prevent terrorism are quite certainly valid as a form of protection of your liberties: you can't enjoy freedom of speech when you are dead, but any encroachment of your liberties must be justified, it must be reasonable, and must be the minimum encroachment on your rights that is required to achieve the objective or protecting said rights.

      That is the OFFICIAL legal situation in the United Kingdom under the Human Rights Act 1998. It is also why Jack Straw's talk of derogating from the Human Rights Act in order to pass anti-terror legislation is idiotic: there is no need to do so as limits to rights are allowed by the act.


      Although I do not know the legal situation in America, I feel that this is well thought out theoretical standpoint. I am willing to accept that certain rights, for eg: right to privacy, are infringed, if and only if this is necessary, and the minimum necessary infringement, to protect my life and liberties more generally.

      Again however, I am not and would not be willing to submit to random searches that will have no effect on protecting my freedom and my life but merely encroach thereon in an unnecessary manner.


      Again IANAL-yet, but will be soon.

      --
      this signature is a virus, please make me your .sig so I can continue to spread :/
    2. Re:I would put it more strongly... by dsfox · · Score: 2

      Well, I'm sure it is all very funny in the U.K. But your post doesn't really say much -- what is the minimum necessary infringement? Who is to say and how do they know? Utterly meaningless. On Septermber 11 the minimum jumped way up over here.

    3. Re:I would put it more strongly... by supagoat · · Score: 1

      > On Septermber 11 the minimum jumped way up over here.

      I'd say multiple searches per day plus car searches is too far.

    4. Re:I would put it more strongly... by Peaker · · Score: 3, Insightful

      As an Israeli, I know that this should be moderated insightful, and not funny.

    5. Re:I would put it more strongly... by Brummund · · Score: 0, Troll

      Yes, you Israelis are probably the worst terrorists on the face of earth right now. Of course you should be searched.

      It's just a pity US & GB are bombing Afghanistan and not Israel. Seriously.

    6. Re:I would put it more strongly... by Dreamline2112 · · Score: 1

      Protecting me?

      It's an illusion of protection at best.

      At my shop, they have a 1980's era x-ray machine. Up untill about a week ago they were scanning everything that was brought into the building, food, laptops, media, film.

      Finally TPTB posted a sign stating that the above items shouldn't be scanned. Great, just great. After coming back from 911, I specifically asked if the machine was safe for my laptop, cameras and breakfast.

      I just love that radioactive coffee. It's better than Jolt. And 2 rolls of photos I took of ground zero were damaged. Oh well.

      DL

      --
      You're only immortal for a limited time
    7. Re:I would put it more strongly... by Dun+Malg · · Score: 1

      I just love that radioactive coffee.

      Sorry, but this is one of my pet peeves.
      Irradiated != radioactive
      It's ignorant comments about "radioactive food" that have kept radiation-sterilized foods with indefinite shelf lives from being available. If it wasn't for morons like you thinking an/or saying that freakin' X-rays (are your teeth radioactive from your dental visits?) made your coffee radioactive, I'd be able to eat steak every night of a two week backcountry hiking trip. I blame YOUR KIND for all those crappy freeze dried dinners I've had to eat.

      --
      If a job's not worth doing, it's not worth doing right.
    8. Re:I would put it more strongly... by ppanon · · Score: 1

      Irradiated != radioactive
      True, it depends on the class of radiation, and few among the public discern between alpha, beta and gamma radiation and their respective effects. But as far as I know, the reason why radiation does work for sterilizing organic items like food is because it disrupts chemical bonds (causing free radicals), preventing the continued operation of bacterial (and viral?) machinery. Of course cooking causes chemical reactions too. The question is which preservation technique for food causes more damage to your body when the food is digested: irradiation, cooking, preservatives, or combinations of the above? We don't completely understand all the long term dietary effects, so some people would prefer to stick with what we've historically used.

      I suspect that what's healthiest would vary from food to food. But decisions regarding food preservation techniques are unlikely to be made by the manufacturers on the basis of healthiness, but more likely on the basis of cost. This is why some people would prefer to have the information on the package so they can make an informed decision. The luddites can just blindly avoid it and eat freeze-dried crap or else get food poisoning instead.

      --
      Laissez lire, et laissez danser; ces deux amusements ne feront jamais de mal au monde. - Voltaire
    9. Re:I would put it more strongly... by Martin+S. · · Score: 2

      As an Israeli, I know that this should be moderated insightful, and not funny.

      What is 'insightful' about propagating the propaganda of totalitarian control freaks ?

      If I was modding, I would have modded that post 'troll', because I refuse to accept that any slashdot poster could be so stupid.

    10. Re:I would put it more strongly... by Rogerborg · · Score: 2
      • As an Israeli, I know that this should be moderated insightful, and not funny

      It seems like everybody is knee-jerking on this one. Do you have a reference that shows statistics on how well the tight security in Israel has caught/discouraged terrorists?

      --
      If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
    11. Re:I would put it more strongly... by Rogerborg · · Score: 2
      • You should be *happy* they are doing these searches. They are protecting you. [My bold]

      Sure, I'm happy about you searching Bob to protect me, and I'm sure Bob's happy about you searching me to protect Bob. But who's searching you?

      I'd be OK about this as long as everybody gets searched. Management, executives, visiting politicos and dignitaries, the security guards themselves (sign me up, I'll do it), visiting police and federal agents, everyone up to and including George W. himself.

      There cannot be one rule for them and another for us.

      --
      If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
    12. Re:I would put it more strongly... by Peaker · · Score: 2

      Totalitarian control freaks?

      Bags may contain bombs. There is nothing wrong with taking a look to verify they are not a bomb, unless you value your bag content privacy above the life of you and others.

    13. Re:I would put it more strongly... by Peaker · · Score: 2

      It seems like everybody is knee-jerking on this one. Do you have a reference that shows statistics on how well the tight security in Israel has caught/discouraged terrorists?

      Yes, in the last year, I personally know of 3 cases, where bag-searching FOUND terrorist attempts, and minimized casualities.
      In one case, the terrorist freaked out and bombed himself in the enterance, killing a few people, rather than the many inside.
      In another case, a terrorist woman's bag was identified suspect and she left it and ran away, it was a bomb.
      And ofcourse there are MANY many cases you don't hear about, where the bag searching counters the attempts themselves, as terrorists are in much bigger danger of being caught with no success.

    14. Re:I would put it more strongly... by Peaker · · Score: 2

      Yes, you Israelis are probably the worst terrorists on the face of earth right now. Of course you should be searched.

      You are quite an ignorant fool (or maybe a troll?). The searches are particularly aimed against Palestinian and arab terror.

      It's just a pity US & GB are bombing Afghanistan and not Israel. Seriously.

      Huh? Bomb Israel? For what purpose exactly?

      Go learn some history, and some facts about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, and about fundamentalism, its relation to terror, and its foundation in arab countries. Then come back.

  112. Biological Warfare and Idiots by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The country (U.S.A.) is currently under a biological attack from terrorists and you are upset by extra security at the National Institutes for Health? Cry me a fucking river.

    And don't belittle the real scientists by calling what you do science. I'm sure lab technician is more appropriate given your level of intelligence and reasoning.

  113. The rules of security by Apreche · · Score: 2

    There is a rule of security I came to realize, however I doubt I am the first to do so. As you increase security of anything, you cause more work and generally make it more of a pain in the ass, for those people who are being kept secure. For example, a home alarm system, you have to rush into your house and type the code to turn the alarm off every time. Firewalls you either block your user's legitimate activities or leave holes open.
    Today as you live your life see how many things you do daily that are for security. You lock your car, your house, your windows. If you wanted to be as secure as possible you would spend all day doing security related tasks. Can you think of any security system that doesn't create a hassle for someone?

    --
    The GeekNights podcast is going strong. Listen!
  114. IANAL ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But - I'm a citizen. Since when did the lawyers start running our democracy? Oh - yeah, you're right ... right after the 5th Law and Order spin-off series was started ...

  115. IANAL by Nezer · · Score: 1

    But it seems to me the wording of the 4th amendment prevents illegal search *AND* seizure, not *OR*.

    This would imply, to me anyway, that a search in and of itself is legal as long as no seizure of goods took place.

    On a similar note, something I've thought about in the past, if I were to urinate in my employers toilet does my urine then become my employer's property and can they legally test it for illegal substances without my consent? Does my disposal of urine on thier property constitute consent? Is it rightly thiers seeing how I just threw it away?

    Yes, these kinds of things keep me up at night.

    Get yourself a civil rights lawyer or contact the ACLU for advice. Ask questions here about how to setup Apache to handle 5 billion requests a second.

    1. Re:IANAL by aurispector · · Score: 1

      I'm pretty sure the search and seizure rules apply only to law enforcement. Employers can probably do just about anything they want in this regard, so long as the employees will put up with it without quitting. Since employers have numerous ways to coerce employees into doing things they would rather not, especially in weak economies, I don't see any way around it.

      IIRC the bodily waste issue has actually been examined in cases where people were suspected of swallowing drugs or other contraband wrapped in plastic. The decision was that since the poop was being "thrown away" there was no legal problem with the authorities searching it. (How'd you like to do that job?) I think similar decisions had been handed down about searching the contents of trash cans.

      --
      I have mod points. The reign of terror begins now.
  116. welcome to New America by Dr.+Awktagon · · Score: 2

    Yeah there's going to be a lot of shit going on. Here's another bizarre story: Novel Security Measures. In my mind I imagine a group of ten terrorists sneaking by with sacks of plastic explosives, while "Security" goes through this guy's Harry Potter book.

    I also see the subtext here: Do you look different? Act different? If so, you're going to be suspect. And I don't mean, do you look Middle Eastern, I mean, do you have black hair? Listen to weird music? Read books with pictures of dynamite on them?

    You thought Zero-Tolerance bullshit and picking on geeks and gamers was bad.. that's nothing!

    But of course, you don't have the God-given right to fly in an airplane, go to work, walk on the street, or leave your house at all, right?

  117. go ahead and refuse by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You can refuse to searches you have every right to. However, they also have every right to refuse admitting you into the building.

  118. Fucking Retard by mosch · · Score: 1
    In case you didn't notice, it's perfectly legal for an employer to institute security based on more than just trust that you promise not to do anything wrong, and that you'll keep your automobile 100% secure while it is off-campus. The NIH is a high-profile institution, and there are certainly people who would like to both smuggle things into, and out of it's doors.

    There's nothing that forces you to go to work each day there, nor is there any reason for them to endanger the public, and their employees, by making the assinine assumption that nothing bad will happen there, because they only hire Good People(tm).

    Suck it up, deal with it, and forget that afternoon joint you liked to smoke under the lab hoods.

  119. american lies by any1 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    You think the american people are the only ones that gave up our rights a little at a time, the terrorists that attacked took our freedom/rights on sept. 11th. the best one is the people that keep complaining about the excessive searching are the first ones to complain about the fact that most of those terrorists on the 11th didn't even belong in this country at the time. My personal thoughts, this country should be on lock down, we are fighting a war both abroad and at home, which should put us all on military lock down. I, as an american who lives in NYC, feel that I am willing to comply with the american government and any searching party, with reason of course, to any delay or search of my belongings. These attacks might have been done by foreign terrorists, but the last american terrorist attack was done by one of our own, MCVEIGH. Until the smoke clears, the safety is 99% ensured, we should all just put up w/ this and maybe even thank those that are doing such a good job trying to prevent the next terrorist in succeeding. Just my 2cents, you can either take it or toss em, the choice is yours.

    --
    what is the definition of a coward? a man who thinks twice about fighting a lion. what is the definition of a braveman?
    1. Re: american lies by Inthewire · · Score: 1

      First, I agree with some of what you say...however:

      but the last american (emphasis added) terrorist attack was done by one of our own

      Technically, embassies and warships (as well as other property) are considered to be extensions of the United States. The embassy bombings and attack on the USS Cole (as well as other, lesser offenses) were perpetrated (reputedly) by foreign terrorists. Thus, the last assault on America (prior to the current events) was not planned by Americans.
      And didn't McVeigh renounce his citizenship?

      --


      Writers imply. Readers infer.
    2. Re:american lies by Doomdark · · Score: 2
      There are two problems, however:
      • It's not clear if many of the security measures being added help at all. In many cases only thing at is clear is that liberties are being taken away. Sounds like a good deal?
      • Even though people assume the changes are temporary (which they of course should be), in too many cases that's not really defined. Whopsee, how convenient will it be that the laws that were thought to be temporary (until things get back to normal) end up being permanent. Just like bad code, "temporary fixes", bad laws tend to linger around.
        In one previous thread someone pointed to terrorist laws UK enacted on early 70s, temporary ones, that are still in use. :-/

      Most people would agree on added restrictions, but really, people shouldn't give blanket promises a la "do whatever, and I do mean whatever, to get those bastards".

      --
      I like paying taxes. With them I buy civilization -- Oliver Wendell Holmes
    3. Re:american lies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Until the smoke
      clears, the safety is 99% ensured, we should all just put up w/ this and maybe even thank those that are doing
      such a good job trying to prevent the next terrorist in succeeding


      No offense, but 6000 people died in the towers; fewer than 15,000 injured; fewer than 20 with anthrax. Compared to 300,000,000-that's 99.99% safe.

  120. Don't put up with it! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I recommend that you refuse to be searched tommorow morning and find a new job outside of a national lab, I don't want my tax dollars paying a whining idiot. The folks at the nuclear facilities or the THINGS THAT KILL YOU factory put up with searches, and I hardly think that they are unreasonable.

    On a side note, I hope this guy means that he works on the trash cans and floors at a national lab, because I don't want to belive that our scientists are this thick.

  121. charge number by Sideways+The+Dog · · Score: 1
    If you're like me, when faced with annoying procedures, just ask for a charge number. Specify that this is a company required transaction, and you wouldn't want to charge your time inappropriately. For your line of work, that's probably illegal, and depending on how your time is contracted, it may even be illegal to work overtime unaccounted. If they won't give you one, tell them you'll have to speak to HR/ accounting/ whoever tracks charge numbers.

    While I personally don't mind searches and don't bother, I've used this against the time card police, usually with ironic results.

    --
    "Love is never saying you're too proud." -Tonic
    1. Re:charge number by Kartoffel · · Score: 1

      We've been having big delays getting in and out of my local federal facility, too. As a contractor, my employer has lots of charge codes, but there didn't seem to be anything specific enough in our timecard system.

      What did I charge for time spent getting searched and those long waits at the gate? MISCELLANEOUS NONPRODUCTIVE. Management understood exactly where I was coming from and they've been really nice about the additional hassles. They did ask me to remove the extra time charges before sending the timecard in to HR, however.

  122. The US Constitution... by Ellen+Ripley · · Score: 5, Insightful
    ... it's not perfect, but it's better than what we have now.

    wiredog said:
    You have a right to refuse searches... and they have a right to fire you for doing so. You don't have to work there, so the searches can be considered voluntary, or a condition of employment. You're working for the Federal Government, which is definitely a target for attacks these days.
    You're talking about the Federal Government as if they were a private business. They're not. The U.S. Federal Government is constrained by the U.S. Constitution -- de jure, if no longer de facto post Marbury v. Madison -- and has to follow a tougher set of rules than a company in the private sector.

    More to the point, we crazed philosophers who believe in the American ideal of freedom believe in the Constitution as a higher standard to live up to. The Feds are supposed to be the champions of freedom, not a bunch of control freaks cowering in their offices who just can't stand the idea that there might be something scary in that big bad world out there and wishing that darned Consitution wasn't in the way of making things oh so *very* much safer.

    Ellen
    1. Re:The US Constitution... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nope, doesn't work that way. You are only entitled to protection if you are REQUIRED to be there. Since this is a place of employment, working there is a privelage (doesn't matter how you look at it, it's still a privelage to go somewhere and get paid), and if you don't like some of the downsides, leave.

      Now, it's not as simple as just leaving, since this IS your job, and other companies, expecially high-profile companies, won't like to hire someone who leaves because they didn't like a new security policy. And if you sign a contract that says anything, vague or otherwise, about personal privacy in the workplace, there's nothing you can do.

    2. Re:The US Constitution... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The proabition against unreasonable searches and sezures is a limitation on the police powers of the government, not on it's ability to set terms of employment. Sep. 11th changed the definition of "unreasonable". War usually does, and make no mistake, we're in a war. Even if Congress hasn't quite declared it. I wish they would, the most important legal ramification is that when the war ends, the expanded police powers go away automatically.



      The highest security places have been doing this for a long time. Since you have the choice to go work for some other outfit with less security concerns, it's just a condition of employment. Either resign yourself to it or look for a different employer.

    3. Re:The US Constitution... by exick · · Score: 1

      Nope, doesn't work that way. You are only entitled to protection if you are REQUIRED to be there. Since this is a place of employment, working there is a privelage...

      Well since you aren't required to be in your house and it's a privilege to live there, you won't mind the cops coming over and rummaging around through some of your stuff to make sure everything is ok, right? Great, they'll be right over. However, if you change your mind, maybe you should find somewhere else to live.

      I've never heard of the stipulation that constitutional protection is only given when you are required to be somewhere. No one in this country (the United States) is required to be here, yet we all have rights guaranteed by the constitution.

      I'm not saying they shouldn't have some extra security in our federal buildings. I just think you need to come up with a better argument for it than "You don't have to be there, so they can do whatever the hell they want to you."

    4. Re:The US Constitution... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Jeez... are you guys that blinded by your idealogy? The Constitution is a basic set of rules that protect everyone in the country. However, additional contracts can supercede it if you agree to it. As a condition of your employment somewhere, your employer can ask many things of you. If you don't like it, leave. It doesn't matter if that employer is Bill Gates, Citibank, Uncle Sam, or your next door neighbor. If you decide to work for someone, then they can set the ground rules of that employment as long as there is no crime committed. By working there and submitting to a search or drug test or whatever, you are consenting to the search, which therefore precludes it from being unreasonable. If you find it unreasonable, then quit. You won't be arrested for it, but your employer won't be required to keep paying you.

      By the argument used a post or two back, anyone in the US military shouldn't have to submit to a search. How much sense does that make? Right, lets just open the gates to anyone who wants to come one... after all, if you are in the armed services, you work for the US Government, and you shouldn't have to be searched since the govt. is required by the Bill of Rights to not allow unreasonable searches. Right... if you think that sounds like a reasonable idea, well, I don't know who let you out of the assisted care home.

      Oh, and by the way, the place I work now, well, we've been submitting to car searches since Sept 11, as well. I think it's a good idea. Will I let them come to my house and search it? No.

    5. Re:The US Constitution... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >

      and you will STOP them in what way if 'they' decide to do so??

    6. Re:The US Constitution... by sjax · · Score: 1

      It could be argued that it is a matter of national security that the National Institute of Health remain open in a time of an anthrax scare and potential biological terrorism against the United States. The government consitutionally has every right to do as it feels is neccesary when it is felt that the security of the free state is in danger, which includes overlooking civil rights in some cases.

      I'm not saying that I neccesarily believe this is such a case, but I would say there is a strong argument out there for this position.

    7. Re:The US Constitution... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What's your point? Me, I would get a lawyer, and I would hope my friends and family would get word out about my plight.

      What would you do if the US Army sent some special forces commandos to your house, kidnapped you, killed all your friends and relatives, and locked you in solitary confinement at Ft. Leavenworth? Get a lawyer? Post on /. asking how to deal with it?

      I understand that freedom is bought with eternal vigilance, but I get tired of all the self-righteous prigs that fail to understand that compromises are made for a society to function. And don't give me any of that "he who sacrifices freedom for security deserves neither" idealist crap. Ideals are great as abstracts, but learning how to apply them to real life seems to be a facility many folks are lacking.

    8. Re:The US Constitution... by jjsaul · · Score: 1

      Though you are correct that federal employees in general have more rights than private sector employees, the original poster doesn't work in just any government office.

      (s)He works as a scientist at the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, MD. Do you see a connection to current happenings? He does not specify what his job is, but the NIH lab there was one of the first responders to the Ebola outbreak (among lab monkeys) in Reston, VA in the 80's, indicating that they in part specialize in epidemic diseases. Under those circumstances, the public policy side of the equation weighs a little heavier in favor of security than it would if he was just a statistician in Cincinnati specializing in obesity figures.

    9. Re:The US Constitution... by Ellen+Ripley · · Score: 1
      The proabition against unreasonable searches and sezures is a limitation on the police powers of the government, not on it's ability to set terms of employment.
      Here is what the Constitution actually says on this issue:
      The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.
      In brief, you can't search someone without probable cause sworn in front of a judge, and you have to say what you're looking for.
      Sep. 11th changed the definition of "unreasonable". War usually does, and make no mistake, we're in a war. Even if Congress hasn't quite declared it.
      Assume for discussion's sake that being in a state of war justifies the dimunition of fundamental civil rights. Congress hasn't declared war. Are you proposing that we should surrender our civil rights based on a state of war that hasn't been legally declared? Should we surrender our civil rights based on the general feeling that we are at war?

      (This leaves aside two issues whaich are relevant to the current 'war' and, presumably, somewhat relevant to this thread.

      One, as a legal issue, can a state of war be declared against a terrorist organization? This isn't the U.S. against Afghanistan. It's the U.S. against some particular segment of the Afghani population, not the Afghani government and military.

      Two, as a practical issue, these military actions are not going to benefit us. They will provide propaganda ammunition to the functionaries whose job is to show dead children, point west, and say "The U.S. has killed our innocent children!" Unfortunately, people who are foolish enough to think that they have wisdom enough to make decisions for others -- politicians, in this particular case -- are mental children, so "he started it" is considered good reason to do incredibly stupid things. The only benefit of this is to the politicians who get to pose as strong human beings and say "I defended us against our enemies" the next time they're running for office.)
      I wish they would, the most important legal ramification is that when the war ends, the expanded police powers go away automatically.
      And here's the really scary part. The people who have the power to take away our civil rights in a time of war are the same people who decide whether or not we're in a time of war.

      These people have no legal authority over us, and they never have:
      ... to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed...
      Ellen
  123. Grow up people by poloace · · Score: 0, Troll

    It's time to wake up and stop worrying so much about the inconvience of being searched. Yes, I understand the concerns about your civil liberties. Remember though that many liberties are balanced against each other when dealing with the Constitution. Most cases in front of the Supreme Court are about striking a balance between clashing liberties. In my opinion, the right to LIFE as stated in the Bill of Rights, outways the issue of searching your belongings as you enter and exit a government facility.

    If we want to be safe in our country, we need to think about this: would you be pissed about the government letting some terrorist into a facility with a bomb or some Anthrax and killed some of your co-workers? would you be pissed if a terrorist stole some biological materials from a government facility and used them to kill your family? If the answer is yes, then you have to have searches. If the answer is no, then you're a liar. ;)

  124. there's one way to fight this... by passion · · Score: 2

    band together to resist these laws. there's power in numbers, join the ACLU

    --
    - passion
    1. Re:there's one way to fight this... by bwt · · Score: 3, Insightful

      band together to resist these laws. there's power in numbers, join the ACLU [aclu.org]

      What laws are you talking about? This is nothing more than a trade.

      All trade involves each side giving up something it has a right to. Employment is just another form of trade and when it is "at will", either side can terminate the employment relationship at any time for (almost) any reason. You can quit if you don't like the searches, or you can voluntarily agree to allow yourself to be searched and they can voluntarily agree to pay you.

      If the employer (who may be the US government) deals with items that are potentially useful to terrorists, I think it would be negligent for such a company to not implement security measures that stop such material from walking out the front door. That means they can do one of three things: A) not do business at all B) do business safely, with inspections of employees C) do business unsafely and risk liability damages is something happens.

      They are probably being responsible by choosing B.

  125. Security upgrade by Animats · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Maybe you could get them to upgrade to an AS&E BodySearch system. Until recently, these backscatter X-ray units were used mostly in prisons, but they're now being deployed much more widely. Each scan imparts a radiation dose of only 2% of daily background, so a few scans a day are OK.

    They're very impressive systems. Check out the pictures. Detects both weapons and drugs. Price is about $120K, and the machine is rather bulky (12' high), but that will come down when the new model comes out.

    It's still an invasion of privacy, but it only takes three seconds.

  126. Easy way not to have your bag searched by weeble · · Score: 2

    Do not take a bag and it will not be searched.

    Leave work at work and leave home stuff at home; you will be amazed how wonderful evenings can be when you stop taking work home.

    --
    Slashdot Beta should die a painful death.
  127. A Solution by Mr_Blank · · Score: 1

    I do not like the idea of being personally searched. I don't like the idea of people with 'authority' looking at me with an eyebrow raised when I walk around. I am not a crook. I got nothing to hide. When I read the US constitution and I got the crazy idea my innocence would be assumed, and people wouldn't be out to prove me a bad guy without cause.

    Is the cause for searching ME that someone else blew up a building? Is the cause for implying my guilt that someone else found exceptions to that 'thou shalt not kill' rule? People have always found those excpetions, so why impede my liberties and freedom from undue percecution, procecution, and processing?

    Yesterday I wanted to cut through an alley as a short cut to the bus stop. A guy dressed like a cop (but not a cop) stopped me and told me I couldn't walk through the alley. What the f^@k? Didn't my taxes buy that darn alley? How dangerous the world has become that a plain old guy walking through an alley instead of on the sidewalk down the street has to be stopped by rent-a-cop!

    Anyhow to get to the point, my solution for unreasonable searches is to carry nothing: No coat if I can help it, no backpack, no pocket knife (sorry grandpa), no nada except keys to get in the door where I am headed and bus fare. It does not keep me from being searched (like a common crook), but at least the searches go faster. As long as people feel 'unsafe' I know there will be searches, but the really ironic part is that that the searches make me feel LESS safe!

    I am biased towards those with bias against me.

  128. I work for the Feds, too... by BenEnglishAtHome · · Score: 2, Informative

    ...and I've been subject to search for years. Lately, for understandable reasons, things have gotten ridiculous. Our guards won't even let you go thru the metal detector with your hands in your pockets. What can you do about this rampant over-reaction? I dunno. I'm searching for answers, too. But I do know that there are a few things to keep in mind.

    1. 18 USC 930 defines a weapon and what is prohibited from being brought into a federal building. Don't bother reading it. It's being (illegally) ignored these days and has been replaced by the whim of the contract security guard service, the Federal Protective Service (FPS), or whoever guards your front door.

    2. Vehicle searches are the same deal as personal searches. As soon as you get on govt property (the parking lot), you're subject to search. Someone like me who frequently has a rifle or two rattling around in the trunk has to remember when they can go into the parking garage and when then need to park across the street. If you don't like having your car searched, find parking somewhere off govt property.

    3. Talking to your Union can help, depending on the Union and the attitudes of the FPS execs in your location. In some cases they can get local management to encourage the guards to lighten up. In other cases (such as mine, unfortunately), the FPS execs seem to get a personal thrill out of telling the agency executives to piss off. At the very least, try to get your Union to negotiate with management an agreement that people will not be disciplined for arriving late to work when the searches get really bad. Such an agreement (or at least the willingness of the Union to bring it up) will help management understand that there's a real price in lost productivity to be paid by going along with excessive searches.

    Personally, my biggest worries aren't at work but at the hastily erected "security check points" some businesses are putting up. They aren't doing pat-downs, but some are installing metal detectors. I'm not looking forward to the first time I get trapped and have to go thru the magnetometer at some company office or other public place that lacks the state-mandated signage necessary to prohibit carrying a concealed firearm. I'll be perfectly legal to be armed but the guards will go ape-shit, anyway. Sigh.

  129. Re:No, the first known biological attack was... by agent+oranje · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    off-topic, but...

    actually, the first biological attack recorded in history was using smallpox against american indians. blankets infested with smallpox were given to the indians as a sign of good faith by the united states. and then the indians got smallpox and died, clearing the way for the settlers.

    evil, ain't it?

    --
    -agent oranje.
  130. Rights by Stultsinator · · Score: 2, Insightful
    First of all, regardless of whether or not you believe there are "universal" Rights, every person has boundaries that they want to protect. If you are the only person who objects to being searched then I'd say that you are out of place there and look for a more satisfying job. However, some would say, along the same lines as equal opportunity arguments, that you should have a right to work there and that everyone should protect that right.

    So I guess the first thing you should do is decide whether or not you like working there and if you would want to take action to continue doing so. If you decide that you want to stay and change the policy, find out which of your co-workers agree with you. At the end of that exercise you'll have a pretty good idea what sort of force you can put behind change (either you have a lot of people who agree with you or you have a choice few who have political power.) Also keep in mind who opposes you.

    Then act.

  131. Searches and my dad by The+Diver · · Score: 2, Informative

    My dad, a retired defense contractor, fixed this problem over 30 years ago. His searches were on the way out of the company, not on the way in. He took his lunch in brown paper bag. He never carried a briefcase. He never took work home and only a few times, that I remember, did he work overtime. During the Gulf War, I worked for the Federal government and we had searches. I learned from my dad and to this day, I do not carry any thing to or from work. Other than a brown paper bag. I have never been searched.

  132. which one!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    i did as well and i'm just curious which one. which state it was in would suffice (idaho here)

    1. Re:which one!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      D1G in NY - I'm pretty sure it's shut down now.

  133. Get a clue by john82 · · Score: 1

    So you're a "scientist" at NIH and don't see the need for "draconian" measures like a mandatory search of your belongings.

    1. Go back and read the docs you signed when you went to work there. This is a condition of your employment at the facility.
    2. We haven't yet determined the origin of the Anthrax used in New York, DC, and elsewhere. And you wonder why you're being searched at NIH?
    3. Perhaps you missed the part where people are DEAD.

    The mind-boggling part of this is your reaction. This is not a fourth amendment issue, this is LIFE and DEATH. That's much higher on the priority list.

    1. Re:Get a clue by AshPattern · · Score: 1

      I guess "Give me liberty or give me death" just took a flying leap off the philosophical cliff.

  134. Re:Fellow Trolls... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My Fellow Troll,

    I forgot about troll tuesday when I setup a new troll account. After watching my Karma fall to -6 in about 5 minutes I was banned.

    I will be with trolling with my brothers next tuesday.

    May you always walk the path of your dreams.

    -gebyyznfgre

  135. Re:No, the first known biological attack was... by dorzak · · Score: 1

    I think you can go back even further, to soldiers lobbing body parts of leprosy, plague victims, and enemy dead during sieges. Now that goes back a LONG ways.

  136. Your lab? by kingpin2k · · Score: 1

    You're going to work in your lab, eh? Get real. That's no more your lab than me climbing into a Northwest 757 makes it my plane. You agree to their conditions each time you accept their paycheck. If you're not comfortable with those arrangements, then there is probably someone who will be. They don't force you to come to work, do they? If so, that would definitely cross the line. Bottom line: Nobody will come and search your home without a warrant. Once you step outside, you're subject to being photographed, watched, etc. Entering a building you don't own subjects you to searches, etc. Heck, you work for the NIH...I'd be worried if they didn't search you.

  137. Pure selfishness by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I am amazed at the narcissism of this creep. Why does he think that he is so damn important that he can't play by the same rules as the rest of the citizenry? Not only do these searches make our country more secure, it helps to calm the fears of those who live in his community by demonstrating that the NIH is being extremely cautious to insure that dangerous pathogens have not become contraband.

    My advice to this guy is see the movie "Sergeant York", about a guy who had misgivings but came to realize his patriotic duty to play by the rules.

    1. Re:Pure selfishness by SirSlud · · Score: 2

      > .. it helps to calm the fears of those who live in his community by demonstrating that the NIH is being extremely cautious

      Um. People feel more scared when security is visibly higher. Any vigilence above and beyond what is neccessary only propogates fear, not a feeling of security. Fear is only a perception .. an emotion, that has, at best, a tenuous connection with reality. Simply consider that hundres of thousands die every year because of their drunk-driving neighbours, and only a handful have died from anthrax; and yet still people think drunk-driver checks along streets are major inconveniences, while everyone is willing to lay down and subject themsleves to whatever is neccessary in order to stop a few anthrax carrying letter senders.

      I'm not arguing that these searches in particular are superflous, but your claim that increased security, both visible via your own experience, and to a larger extent, as broadcast by the media, only serves to furthur entrench fear and mistrust in the public psyche at large.

      Would you really argue that daily searches of employess, since the first bombing of the WTC up to Sept 10th would have made all the WTC workers feel more secure? Hardly .. I'd imagine the vast magority wern't even thinking about it very often, for the simple practical reason that fear is a perception, and not a defence against any actual possible event. Just don't forget that superflous vigilence can only add to the fear. True, eventually the fear will subside into routine, but again, it only demonstrates the disconnection of the human mind with the reality of risk and gain.

      Anyways, obviously, there is a line. Should we search every kindergarten student? The simple issue is that he and you are at odds over what constitutes reasonable and effictive vigilence, and seeing as he works there and you don't, I'd imagine he has a clearer picture as to the possible or perceived threats against the government. In fact, he may know alot more that you nor I know that backs up his claim of the searches being superfluous.

      --
      "Old man yells at systemd"
  138. NIH is now like NORAD by N8F8 · · Score: 2

    The NIH, like it or not, is the US's central asset in fighting biological terrorism. Just like NORAD is central to missile defence/offence.

    --
    "God fights on the side with the best artillery." - Napoleon, Marshal of France - speaking truth to power
    1. Re:NIH is now like NORAD by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      erm - no it isn't the CDC is. NIH does stuff like cancer, diabetes, childhood diseases, neuroscience, addiction, and mental health. Not much chance of any of those being used for bioterrorism really, is there?

      Take a look at www.nih.gov for a clue as to what we do

  139. No, you don't have to submit to searches by Silver+A · · Score: 2

    You do not have to submit to searches at every turn.

    It's easy: Quit. Tell your supervisor, your department head, other important people in the heirarchy, and your congresscritter that you are quitting because of the unreasonableness of the search policy.

    Less drastically, tell your boss that if something doesn't change, you'll quit - that you can't be productive and creative if you're constantly being treated as a criminal at work.

    There's security, and there's security. Some level of increased security is appropriate under the current circumstances, but the constant searches sound ridiculous. Can't they maintain a "secure perimeter", where they search coming in and going out, but allow people to move freely within?

    1. Re:No, you don't have to submit to searches by praedor · · Score: 1

      Government facility, government employee (GS-level, probably GS-12 or 13). You do not have the same rights as Joe Blow at taco bell.

      --
      In Bushworld, they struggle to keep church and state separate in Iraq as they increasingly merge the two in America.
  140. Refuse searches, get Anthrax, then sue... by SexPig · · Score: 1

    Already people are criticizing that action wasn't soon enough regarding the post-office outbreaks. How soon before the postal workers who were infected (or not infected, "I suffered trauma.") sue? If there was a major outbreak on this fellow's campus he'd probably be standing in line waiting for the nose swab and discussing how it could've been prevented.

    --
    "...and generally behaved in a manner one can only describe as despicable." - February 27 2001, Michael Sims
  141. Dear God ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I really hope this particular NIH scientist is just exhibiting some absent-minded-professor cluelessness about the world outside their lab.

    I mean, come on, you work in a government bio lab and there's a bio war going on!

  142. Who watches the Watchmen? by e.a.kendrick · · Score: 1

    Everyone has so far said that the searches are reasonable, given the circumstances. Maybe they are, on paper. But out of the following, who would you trust:

    1. An educated scientist who has been working for your company for years.
    2. Some young security guard on minimum wage recently recruited through an agency to support your improved security.

    To increase the level of security you need to increase security staff. But you are at risk of introducing an "undesirable" element - be it criminal or just sadistically minded.

    More effective would be a security review of all employees, with background checks (if not already performed). Once done your greatest risks are third party (incl. new staff + security), and the "turning bad" of existing employees. Draconic security measures do not give a satisfactory return on the former, and have a detrimental (morale sapping, hate inducing) effect on the latter.

    And, if you don't increase the staff, but increase their workload, then you are skimping on security elsewhere. Even if you are not deliberately reducing security elsewhere, over time "security fatigue" sets in due to overwork.

    At the international airport I use, security fatigue set in on the third week after 9/11. Immediately after the bombing security was incredibly high, which continued for two weeks. On the third week security was non-existent: staff were no longer paying attention. My bag went through the scanner, but no-one looked at it, and my associate got through security without a valid ticket (accidentally). By the fourth week the airport had returned to more sustainable levels of security.

    1. Re:Who watches the Watchmen? by sirgoran · · Score: 1

      On a side note:

      Disgruntled educated scientists can steal a bio-agent just as easily as your young security guard on minimum wage. Face facts.

      Everything has a price. No exceptions.

      That includes criminal elements and diligence.

      Goran

      --
      Carpe Scrotum - The only way to deal with your competition.
  143. Apparently the message hasn't gotten out... by mystery_bowler · · Score: 2

    If you are American, there are not just people who want to kill you, there are people who are still trying to kill you. All of you. As many as possible in the most horrific fashion possible. And there is no means too vile or deplorable to consider.

    Perhaps I should put this another way. I am a parent. I have a family. If I can't directly protect my family against the types of weapons that anti-Americans would willingly use , then I expect my government to help with the protection. If one of the ways of coming close to having protection is by searching people who are coming into and going out of government facilities, so be it. If our government can only protect us by exercising more power in the area of surveillance, so be it.

    The alternative, of course, is to leave our intelligence forces as emasculated and impotent as they have been for the last 10 years. And we all saw how effective they were on Sept. 11th.

    Keep bitching and moaning about your rights being chipped away. But think about the alternatives in a world where someone wants you dead. Wouldn't you want law enforcement to be able to find out who wants you dead so that they can be stopped? For the safety of my family, I know that's what I want.

    --

    My sigs always suck.
    1. Re:Apparently the message hasn't gotten out... by ethereal · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Yes, the message is loud and clear: once it's all about the children, it's no longer even remotely about freedom. Thank you for betraying the way of life that was your children's birthright; you may now scurry back to your hole in safety.

      Personally, I don't have too many problems with this particular topic, since some sort of search does seem to be a reasonable approach in this instance provided that its done equitably and professionally. (Where I work the searches are done haphazardly, so as to provide the appearance of security without the actual security benefits - now that's annoying). And, it's optional since you could choose to work somewhere else.

      But I'm sick of hearing from folks who would rather trade my freedom for their security, by allowing civil liberties of all people to be infringed in the interest of the "war on terrorism". There is no security in this world, pursuit of it is illusory at best, the best that we can do is stand up as free men and women for what we believe in, and be willing to fight and die for those things if necessary. Anyone who tries to tell you otherwise is selling something, Princess.

      --

      Your right to not believe: Americans United for Separation of Church and

    2. Re:Apparently the message hasn't gotten out... by mystery_bowler · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Just for the sake of continuing the debate...

      First of all, let me say that taking away civil liberties, especially those dealing with privacy, leaves a really bad taste in my mouth. Also, just as a point, living in a free society is not a birthright. It is something fought and suffered for.

      That being said, I'd like to remind you that we are now living in a time where there are people who not only want badly to kill us but are willing to die so long as we, the relatively innocent masses, are killed as well.

      Given that our government have many, many surveillance techniques at their disposal, wouldn't you think it to be prudent that they use said techniques in an effort to prevent more heinous acts like these from happening to our citizens?

      And yes IMHO, once it reaches to the next generation, it does become more important. My generaion is dead to me, now. Once we have children, it becomes almost obvious to me (in a very primal sense) that I'm no longer alive for my benefit, but for that of my children. My productive, rather happy life is a great bonus, rather than the entire goal. As such, I see our children inheriting two different possible societies. In one, we (my generation and older) have had to suffer some temporary indignations in the hopes of keeping our nation strong. In the other, we still have an underpowered intelligence and law-enforcement community, or perhaps, no such community at all since the nation has shaken itself apart in fear.

      Apocolyptic? Sure. All I can hope for at the moment is that it's just the paranoia talking and everything'll work out just fine.

      --

      My sigs always suck.
    3. Re:Apparently the message hasn't gotten out... by raresilk · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Hear hear. Let's not forget that dead men have no rights at all. Before our Constitution, Bill of Rights, democratically elected republican government, and historical tradition of liberty could even come into existence, it was first imperative for our nation to accomplish a critically important task:

      Win the war against the British, who were actively in the process of slaughtering our liberty-inclined ancestors.

      Likewise, we are now faced with an enemy who so reviles our nation that he has ordered his followers to murder all Americans, wherever they are found. (don't believe me? read the fatwa.) If we fail to make it our first and foremost priority to win the war against Osama Bin Laden, and prevent his followers from continuing to murder us en masse, we will not be around to exercise the freedoms we so value. Do you think our grandkids will thank us for whining over bag searches at NIH during a goddamn war?!? No, they won't, because they'll be corpses too.

      I'm sorry, this is trollish language, but I can't restrain myself. If the original poster of this thread is representative of those working for our government and entrusted with keeping our nation safe, then there is no life or future ahead of us. The USA and the world will be passively handed over to the military dictatorship of Osama-stan by the spoilt, naive, soft weaklings in our government service, who would sooner have vials of Ebola walking out of the NIH, and into the hands of the nation's declared enemies who intend to use them to kill us all, rather than lose 3 minutes off their precious lunch break standing in an inspection line.

      We are at war. Get real. The people searching you are trying to save lives. The NIH itself exists for the purpose of trying to save lives. If you don't care about saving lives, work somewhere else. There is nothing unreasonable, invasive or unconstitutional about the searches you've reported, which are obviously directed at the public's safety as well as yours.

      * * *

      --
      No, no, no. This is not a sig.
    4. Re:Apparently the message hasn't gotten out... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      you are an ignorant ass too scared to evaluate the real issues for yourself. keep spouting the politically expediants, and thank yourself when your country "isn't the same as it used to be."

      asshole.

    5. Re:Apparently the message hasn't gotten out... by ethereal · · Score: 1

      I understand the government's desire to protect the nation, and I sympathize with the large majority of government and law enforcement personnel who are working only for good in our society. But there are those in power who (for whatever reason) desire more power and more control over our society, and they will try to get these things in the name of providing safety. Saying that we'll live with it for now because it will all be better in a few years would be a reasonable approach to take, except that there are those who would use the opportunity to change things so that liberty will not have a chance to return for our children or their children. Those are the real enemy of the American people and our way of life.

      I don't want to die, and I don't want anyone else to have to die because of restrictions on government actions. But more than dying I fear that some of the changes proposed in the interest of security will alter our society sufficiently so that we will never be able to return to our current level of freedom. I want to fight the good fight against terrorism; I don't want to encourage those who would use the opportunity to wage a more insidious war against the American people.

      So yes, better security on airlines will help. No, a national ID card system probably won't, for exactly the same reason that requiring identification keeps so many minors from drinking. Yes, better communication between law enforcement agencies will help secure the U.S. against external and internal attack. But indefinitely detaining immigrants and allowing the CIA to act against U.S. citizens with the collusion of foreign nationals will not. We can fight terrorism with the tools and laws that we already have; heightened surveillance in the U.S. will just terrorize the population without significantly affecting the terrorists themselves.

      --

      Your right to not believe: Americans United for Separation of Church and

    6. Re:Apparently the message hasn't gotten out... by spanky555 · · Score: 1

      ...we, the relatively innocent masses...
      NO, please don't mince words. We are not "relatively innocent". We are innocent, innocent of any wrongdoing that would justify any loss of life without any political discourse of any kind, without a declaration of war, etc...
      ...use said techniques in an effort to prevent more heinous acts like these from happening to our citizens...
      Nope, the best prevention right now involves striking so hard and in such a heinous way that we break the will of these people. Tactical nukes may come into play if this anthrax business continues/escalates. These people are made braver every time we do little or nothing in response to their actions. We've had SEVERAL attacks from the fingered groups, and we did next to nothing about it. The solution, IMHO, certainly doesn't involve us giving up freedom to keep our freedom.

  144. Yes by starkfist · · Score: 1

    I think for myself. and then find the best party to represent me (the Libertarian Party). I do not think what they tell me, nor adopt there beliefs to be excepted. I value privacy above all else far beyond the scope of the libertarian party. And I work toward changes in the party. But out of the 3 major party choices, and even the minor parties the Libertarian Party represents me best, thankyou very much. http://liberty-news.org/

    --
    http://undeadlinux.com
  145. Sticky Question by Mouse · · Score: 2, Informative

    The short advice to give you is most definately discuss the issue of search when entering buildings with a lawyer. The best group to contact in this case is the ACLU -- they are best equiped to answer these questions and take action if you so desire.

    The long of your question is that the NIH is a special case employer since they are the federal government. The Bill of Rights does not apply to private individuals and organizations, but it does (obviously) apply to the federal government and its agents. This precendent was recently verified in the von Bulow(sp) case. Now, government agency operate in a merky space with which the ACLU has a great wealth of experience. They have lititgated a number of cases on this subject.

    These types of searches are completely legal at a private company provided that the right was enumerated in a policy document or employment contract. There is not a private company that I have ever encountered that didn't give itself the right search anything and everything they wanted. Think of it this way, if they listen to your phone calls, read your email, and search your desk, they can search your person so long at its on their property. Also, bear in mind, that it is perfectly legal to sign away your Constitutional rights in a relationship through a contract -- a perfect case in point is private elementary and high schools.

    I hope that helps. Good luck.

    1. Re:Sticky Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      I actually asked this question to the ACLU several years ago. The ACLU said what other's have said: "You must play by the employer's rules. Period." I was surprised by the ACLU's response, but now I realize that the ACLU is much more reasonable than many of their screwy lawsuits would have us believe. Don't expect much sympathy from the ACLU on this one.

  146. And things will get much worse in the future. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    America was never bombed, never invaded, never attacked, so it was pretty easy to give freedom to the citizens. Now your government is facing the fear of an invisible danger that other countries are used to fight from much time, and is losing control over the rights it granted to its citizen.
    Instead of setting limits on everyone's freedom, a well trained and prepared government would try -at any cost- to fight terrorism without affecting its tax payers.

  147. Re:No, the first known biological attack was... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yea, I believe that the Black Death first entered Europe via corpses (that had died of the disease) catapulted over a city wall in Asia Minor. The Italians (some of who were helping the besiegers) carried it to their cities and it spread from there. I could be misremembering some of the details.

  148. a request by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    can i be a trolling karma whore like you?

  149. Chico and The Man? by red_crayon · · Score: 1

    Well, Chico Science, do you work with Bacillus spp. or other spore-forming bacteria in your lab?

    What is the biohazard level of your lab?

    Other labs on your floor?

    In your building?

    At the campus?

    I can't really imagine why they would be worried about security where you work.

    --
    "Never bullshit a bullshitter" All That Jazz
    1. Re:Chico and The Man? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm also a scientist working at the NIH, and the answer to all of the above is nil.

      This place is much more like a large university biology lab than the biological weapon manufacturing facility that most /.'ers seem to think. There is no secrecy requirement to work here - beyond possible commercial applications, all of our work is published in peer reviewed and easily available journals.

      Take a look at www.nih.gov to see what we actually do here and get a grip!

    2. Re:Chico and The Man? by red_crayon · · Score: 1

      I'm also a scientist working at the NIH, and the answer to all of the above is nil.

      Well, Mr. Anonymous, you obviously know nothing about biohazard levels, because any garden-variety lab that works with human-pathogenic substances is BL 1 or 2.

      If you have an autoclave, you have BL 1 at least.

      --
      "Never bullshit a bullshitter" All That Jazz
    3. Re:Chico and The Man? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't have an autoclave, I have a bunch of pc's.

      As for knowing nothing about biohazards levels - spot on, I don't need to - there aren't #any# in my lab, or even my building.

      re the anonymous bit, covers my ass when talking about my employer without the usual "my opinion not theirs" mumbo jumbo

  150. Odd advice, but oddly applicable by BenEnglishAtHome · · Score: 5, Funny

    During one stage of my life, I sported a shaved head, a weird beard, a gruff attitude, and clothes fit for a biker-zombie movie. (It passed, thank goodness.) I was also traveling in my job a great deal and apparently fit some sort of profile. I was singled out for by-hand searches of my carry-on baggage with some frequency. It was happening on 2 out of 3 flights and I just got sick of it. So I fought back. I only carried one bag, so right on top of my packed clothes, right where it would seem to jump out at you when you opened the bag, I started carrying the biggest, most realistic dildo I could find. The thing was more than a foot long.

    I still got searched. But the searches became a slightly different experience. I'll never forget one poor little old lady of a bag checker in Cincinnati who opened the bag, looked in, slammed the lid, and literally ran straight to a little service area behind the checkpoint and started frantically washing her hands in full view of everyone. I actually pitied her. Even those searches that were completed seemed to be much briefer than before. They were into and out of my bags in mere seconds. :-)

    1. Re:Odd advice, but oddly applicable by Monte · · Score: 1

      I started carrying the biggest, most realistic dildo I could find. The thing was more than a foot long.

      Either there's an oxymoron here, or you are one very, very lucky man.

      Even those searches that were completed seemed to be much briefer than before. They were into and out of my bags in mere seconds.

      A lightbulb appears over the heads of drug smugglers that read /.

    2. Re:Odd advice, but oddly applicable by drinkypoo · · Score: 1
      I started carrying the biggest, most realistic dildo I could find. The thing was more than a foot long.

      Personally, I'd worry that it would be seen as an investigation to do a rectal check. But then, that's not my cup of tea.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    3. Re:Odd advice, but oddly applicable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful
      A lightbulb appears over the heads of drug smugglers that read /.

      Am I the only drug smuggler reading this site?

    4. Re:Odd advice, but oddly applicable by spanky555 · · Score: 1

      All the B.S. directed at people flying should not even be happening. If terrorism on flights is to be truly eliminated/minimized, the solution(s) are pretty simple, IMHO:

      1. Crew is trained, and then issued, guns. The guns will be loaded with bullets that cannot penetrate the skin of the plane, but CAN kill wanna-be terrorists. Due some of the pantywaists in this country that view the Second Amendment as outdated, and somehow dangerous, this will be a hard thing to enact, politically. But in these times of moral clarity, gun purchases have been WAY up, so maybe not so tough as before. Also, I believe some aviation union was/is going to DEMAND that pilots be issued guns, or they will strike. Hmmm, seems I'm not the only one who feels this way. The ones closest to this do as well.

      2. "Impenetrable" doors to the cockpit. Makes sense, costs money. Now is the time to do it, though, while the country is up in arms. Not wait around for it to happen again.

      3. Take aggressive and decisive action against those that harbor, aid, etc. terrorists. Seems we are on the path to doing this. We need to get Saddam next. Maybe Libya, Syria, too.

      4. Long term, and much more difficult: wean ourselves from any dependency (oil) on these people. That way, when things like this happen, we won't
      need the approval of so-called "allies" like Saudi Arabia. We'll do what we want/need in order to retaliate and put down any more aggressors, and won't have to pussyfoot around about it. Switching to something else other than oil is something that is a big, big problem....but a determined and entrepeneurial country such as ours should be able to handle it, given the push....

  151. Clear plastic clothes for government employees! by wytcld · · Score: 2

    This will both ease entry into secure areas, and reassure the vigilant among us that you, as agent of government, aren't carrying, say, surveillance devices in your pockets.

    By strange coincidence, "Stand in the place where you work" is intoned by REM on my stereo just as I compose this, confusing the coherence of my reply.

    --
    "with their freedom lost all virtue lose" - Milton
  152. For crying out loud, look at where he work! by hawk · · Score: 2
    It's the NIH. National Institute of Health. Choose your favorite nasty. They have it in there.


    There *are* concerted efforts to use these type of agents against the public right now. Would you feel comfortable if people *could* walk in and out of NIH unchecked? Sandia National Laboratory?


    There are plenty of civil rights issues to worry about in the current climate. Searches by that particular employer are not one of them.


    hawk

    1. Re:For crying out loud, look at where he work! by marauder · · Score: 1
      National Institute of Health. Choose your favorite nasty. They have it in there.

      Reminds me of the Ministry of Truth...

  153. look at where you work by sam@caveman.org · · Score: 1

    You work at the National Institutes of Health. Presumably you would have access to biological agents. I for one am GLAD they are searching people leaving bio labs.

    A better question is, why haven't they had better security BEFORE?

    There are certain things you have to give up to work certain jobs. Working in a Bio Research Lab, you're going to have to deal with people checking your bags going in and going out - at least I hope so. Companies that have bio agents and are NOT doing this kind of thing would be very, very liable for the agents which found their way outside their labs.

    My advice for a good form of protest would be to come and leave from work completely naked. Of course then they'd still have to give random body cavity searches.

    -sam

    --
    burn the computers. go back to the abacus.
  154. Community isn't everything. by mkb · · Score: 1

    That is a bad question to bring to Slashdot. Hopefully you have a friend who is a lawyer. Go ask him or her. Perhaps you could even hire a lawyer to discuss your situation for a bit. If you bring a like-minded coworker, the two of you could split the cost. Let us know what you find. I'm sure many readers are interested in the answer.

    Slashdot is not a community of lawyers, and the legal advice you get here is worth what you pay for it.

    While I delight in the online communities that I visit-- including the mighty Slashdot --I am amazed at some of the questions people bring to online forums.

    Why do people ask random schmoes on the net for legal, medical, or other specialized advice instead of asking lawyers, health care workers, or other specialists? Why do they (not on Slashdot so much) ask questions that can be answered with a search engine in about five seconds?

    Slashdot kicks ass, but it isn't everything. Slashdot is a great place to find out about all manner of issues relevant to us as nerds. Would you post a question to Slashdot about how to fix your motorcycle? Or how to get your cat to adapt to its new litter box? Of course not. So why are you asking for legal advice?

    As Joebob Briggs says, I'm surprised I have to explain this.

  155. The answer by tmark · · Score: 2

    The answer to the question "In this climate of increasing security consciousness, how far can vigilance go before it becomes an invasion of our rights? " is, only so far as to upset a large number of their employees enough that they quit and cannot be replaced by employees who would welcome a more secure environment to work in. People are often told to "vote with their pocketbooks", and I would say that in essence the same advice applies here as well.

  156. KY jelly sodomy by MarkusQ · · Score: 2
    Before you pack KY Jelly, make sure sodomy is not illegal in MD

    There's no problem with KY jelly. Just take some grapes, a coconut, or a frisbee or something too, and tell them (with a straight face) that the KY is for the random item. If they make any suggestion of something sexual, act shocked and threaten to sue.

    -- MarkusQ

  157. more fourth amendment stuff by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Since I see that several people have already explained that the fourth amendment doesn't cover private companies, I'll add something else.

    The fourth amendment does allow things like drunk driver checkpoints. What is the difference between stopping you in your car and checking you to see if you are drunk and stopping you as you go into work to see if you are carrying explosives? Given the current Supreme Court and the current fascist climate, I doubt they would see a difference.

  158. Freedom v. Saftey by mattman858 · · Score: 1

    As a nation, we Americans have a habit of trading saftey and security for freedom and comvenience. We all want to be safe but we complain when we have to go through minor inconveniences like searches. I don't like being searched any more than anyone else, but I really hate feeling like I may be in danger. When you're being searched, try to think about the fact that they might find a bomb on somone else that would have otherwise killed you.

  159. No real choice by praedor · · Score: 1

    You work for a government facility, not a civilian company. Filling a, presumably, GS-level position you must accept that you relinquish limited rights, just as military members do. You can always quit.

    --
    In Bushworld, they struggle to keep church and state separate in Iraq as they increasingly merge the two in America.
  160. I can understand by sirgoran · · Score: 1

    Nobody likes to be searched/suspected of wrong doing if there isn't a "good" reason. But as several have pointed out, the person in question works for the NIH. Since nobody seems to know where the Anthrax is coming from, it would seem that searches would be in order. But I also know how if feels from a personal point of view.

    A former employer didn't trust any of her employees. She snooped e-mails, web usage, phone calls, computers, and desks of anyone who spoke of quitting or who had given notice. But then she was/is psychotic.

    The only thing I can offer is this. During this time of need, deal with it. If you don't like it, quit. It's that simple.

    Goran

    --
    Carpe Scrotum - The only way to deal with your competition.
  161. Get off your high-horse. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Everyone needs to be searched, why not you? Why are you so special? Darned idiot, get a life. Is your life so empty you need to contemplate on meaningless things.

  162. Dangerous argument by morcego · · Score: 1

    This is a dangerous, double-edged argument. Remember, the whole nation is actualy "Government" property. Follow my lead: the nation belongs to its inhabitants, the government represents the inhabitants. So, acording to your argument, the government can do random search at anytime, anywere.
    This is not a "corporation" or "job contract" problem. It's a civil rights (and liberties) violation. Expecialy if you did not sign any kind of document authorizing this kind of search.

    --
    morcego
    1. Re:Dangerous argument by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not "especially" but "only." If you DID sign such a contract as an article of employment,then that is your consent, and therefore you are not having your civil rights violated.

      Voluntary is not mandatory. Working is not manditory. Living in the US is not manditory. Following the laws of society is manditory. And as long as those laws are deemed constitutional, then you have to follow them. But as far as I know, there are no laws requiring someone to be employed, or requiring searches at the workplace. That is part of the employment contract, and an entirely reasonable provision, particularly somewhere like the NIH, which keeps dangerous bioagents around.

  163. Quoth Bob Black by Frank+Sullivan · · Score: 2

    "There is more freedom in any moderately deStalinized dictatorship than there is in the American workplace."

    -Bob Black, "The Abolition of Work"

    Look it up on Google. It's instructive.

    --
    Hand me that airplane glue and I'll tell you another story.
  164. Searches by kpenrose · · Score: 1

    You weenie! Complaining about subjecting yourself to some time-consuming searches when we have young men and women risking their lives to keep your butt free and your freedoms intact! Shame on you!

  165. Try this by natefanaro · · Score: 2, Informative

    I would say that you could talk to the head of the department there. If he is not behind this, then find out who is and express your concerns (or gripes) about the amount of searches, and find out if it really nessicary. I am sure that you could find other people that are not keen to the searches to join you in filing a complaint.

  166. New security procedures only cause fear & para by carpe_noctem · · Score: 1

    The current heightened security stance in this country strikes me as being nothing more than a paranoid counter-reaction. Keep in mind that if "terrorists" want to destroy institutions in this country, bypassing this temporary state of paranoia will be easily accomplished. Likewise, the implementation of new "security" policies only contributes to a fearful and frightening atmosphere. If you convince people (through forced searches, and so forth) that there are terrorists all around them and they are no longer safe at work, then this will feed into the fears of the general public. If we want to stop terrorism, it's not going to be accomplished by searching the cars, homes, and lives of our own citizens.

    --
    "Quoting famous computer scientists out of context is the root of all evil (or at least most of it) in programming." - K
  167. Very Impressive by dbCooper0 · · Score: 1
    I could "funny this up" with comments about breast implants and wagers between workers manning the scanner, but...

    The point obvious to me along that line is the images produced are as revealing as disrobing in a doctor's office - so IMHO it is a major invasion of privacy - even if it took 30 seconds.

    The persons subjected to such scans should be made aware of the clarity of the images, and if not comfortable with strangers/co-workers viewing them, be able to "opt-out", either by declining employment there, or doing business elsewhere.

    --
    db
    Cig:
    ôô
    /`
  168. Re:No, the first known biological attack was... by WombatControl · · Score: 2

    This is the first attack foisted on the US specifically. You're correct in pointing out that biowarfare isn't new, however this is the first time that the US has been hit with it. (In fact, the US has used biological weapons itself in the past - smallpox infected blankets given to various Indian tribes to wipe them out without firing a shot.)

  169. Where Do You Work? by Begin2See · · Score: 1

    Did you ever think that they're trying to protect US from YOU?

    You work at one place where the creation of biological waepons is certainly possible. I realize that the NIH is in the business of trying to prevent and cure diease, but that is one place where the tools (raw materials, expertise and equipment) are available to create and modify the genome of any of the worst scourges on the planet.

    Maybe right-minded individuals won't even consider the possibility of doing something like that, but you have to admit that there are a large number of foreign nationals (here legally, I might add) working there. Have all of them been background checked? Is it possible to monitor the actions of all employees all the time when working with infectious agents?

    Since only a small amount of biological material is needed as a seed for weapons production, it's obvious that the invasive searches are necessary and right for the public.

    As many other posters have said, if you don't like it, quit!

  170. Searches will be used as intimidation by mikosullivan · · Score: 3, Interesting
    The motivation for searches like this is initially honest enough: 5,000 people were killed and the administrators and executives don't want it to happen again.

    The problem is that they can't keep it up: searching everybody all the time becomes a serious drain on resources (financial, emotional, and otherwise). So eventually the searches have to be more selective... and how do you think those selections are made? First, the higher-ups will opt themselves out of searches. Oh, they won't write out a memo declaring themselves unsearchable, but security will know who butters their bread and won't choose to search the big guys. Ask any corporate security guard: everybody thinks security shouldn't apply to them, and the higher up the stronger the perception.

    Then searches become based on random quirks. That guy acts looks weitrd, that woman's carrying unusually bulky bags. Sometimes the quirks may be valid red flags... I'd be suspicious of unusually bulky bags myself. But many of them will be based on random and unbased imaginings.

    Eventually the searches are punishment. They become an overwhelming temptation when the powers-that-be realize that searches are not only demeaning but accusatory: "John gets searched a lot, they must suspect him".

    The public has the perception that searches are only used to search for the bad guys. This is a dangerous perception. Left unchecked, searches are used for harrassment, fishing trips, and general amateur spying.

    Freedom is our Strength. We need to protect freedom and the strength of America.

    --
    Miko O'Sullivan
  171. How to prevent searches by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Obviate the need for them by wearing completely transparent clothes.

  172. That's why Sep 11th happened by Martigan80 · · Score: 0

    That is why the terrorists got on the plane! Because the Air Line company wanted to please people such as yourself; people that threaten to take thier money else where because of 5-60 minutes of "waiting". Ask the 4K+ dead people if security is too much. America's immagration laws are so lacks anybody can come in, as we have seen. Do you realize that not only did people get killed, but the "WORLD" economy got knocked off track! This effected the whole world, so why should the complaints of a few thousand matter?

    --
    This SIG pulled due to lack of funding. (This damn war is costing too much!)
  173. Glad its being done by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    stop your whining. NIH has some pretty deadly diseases and test rats that are highly deformed. I am glad to see that they are stepping up security. Although its a pain trying to get through old georgtown road when there is a 20 car pile up for an exit

  174. Goes with the territory by guyo26 · · Score: 1

    Hate to say it, but that's the shakes these days. Especially working where you do. Other people have posted it, but you probably agreed to it in your contract, and if you don't like it, then quit or leave the country [as another person wrote]

    People love to bitch until a search like that prevents something harmful from happening. Free speech is great, America is great, but don't bitch and complain that people are trying to keep you and us safe.

  175. Unreasonable seaches... by chinton · · Score: 4, Insightful
    When defining the term unreasonable has to be defined based on where you work. If you work at 7-Eleven the most harmful thing you could smuggle out would be, say a twinkie. Nasty as it may be, I don't think a twinkie dust poses a serious health risk. Working at the NIH, however, what could you smuggle out? Anthrax, probably. Smallpox, probably. The Plague, probably. All things more deadly than the afformentioned twinkie.

    To summarize: Is it unreasonable to search a 7-Eleven clerk coming and going from his job? Yes. Is it unreasonable to search an NIH employee coming and going? Much tougher call, but I would rather see them err on the side of caution than to let Osama get out with the Super Contageous Ultra Ebola virus.

    1. Re:Unreasonable seaches... by tswinzig · · Score: 2

      Nasty as it may be, I don't think a twinkie dust poses a serious health risk.

      You, sir, have obviously not ever swept up after a disastrous Twinkie explosion. A horrible experience which I myself have not yet had.

      --

      "And like that ... he's gone."
    2. Re:Unreasonable seaches... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      FYI

  176. Put up with it or get another job by owlmeat · · Score: 1

    Good luck using the 4th ammendment here. It won't work, chump. You got 3 choices: 1)Leave 2)stay and put up with it 3)oranize a union and strike. I don't see "whine to slashdot anywhere on the list.

    --
    They stab it with their steely knives,

    But they just can't kill the beast.

    1. Re:Put up with it or get another job by SirSlud · · Score: 2

      Actually, if you read what I wrote (what a novel concept!), you'd understand that I wasn't commenting on the Ask Slashdot poster at all. I was only commenting that additional security actually /increases/ public fear, not decreases it, according to the parent post of my reply. But hey, your trolling is appreciated none of the less! :)

      Love, sirslud.

      --
      "Old man yells at systemd"
    2. Re:Put up with it or get another job by jeff4747 · · Score: 1

      This isn't some dude who's hacking out some code and can do so anywhere. Scientific research, especially in biotech, is very different. "Leave" doesn't just mean throwing away years of research this person has done at NIH, but also means he wouldn't be able to get another job cause he just "up and left". Close-knit community and all. This, of course, also makes your solution #3 not work, 'cause you need a large mass of unhappy workers to make a union. And even if he can get everyone at NIH to get interested in unionizing, he'd still get tossed out without his carrer.

      Which brings us to doing #2, which he doesn't want to do.

      Btw, he COULD make a 4th ammendment argument that the extreme level of searching is unwarrented. These are people who have been working in their labs for years and thus don't really need such extreme scrutiny. After all, if the NSA doesn't bag-search all their employees every day, why should NIH? Especially since the nasty bacteria and viruses are at the CDC in Atlanta.

  177. quitting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I would assume you have the option to quit. I mean how is it different in the regard that I have to wear a security badge to work. If you were forced to do it. As in no chance to find another job or to quit, I could maybe understand your argument.

  178. Constitution Does Apply by rossz · · Score: 2
    Title 18 Sec. 241 of the United States Code.
    Conspiracy against rights

    If two or more persons conspire to injure, oppress, threaten, or intimidate any person in any State, Territory, Commonwealth, Possession, or District in the free exercise or enjoyment of any right or privilege secured to him by the Constitution or laws of the United States, or because of his having so exercised the same;

    or

    If two or more persons go in disguise on the highway, or on the premises of another, with intent to prevent or hinder his free exercise or enjoyment of any right or privilege so secured - They shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than ten years, or both; and if death results from the acts committed in violation of this section or if such acts include kidnapping or an attempt to kidnap, aggravated sexual abuse or an attempt to commit aggravated sexual abuse, or an attempt to kill, they shall be fined under this title or imprisoned for any term of years or for life, or both, or may be sentenced to death.

    Emphasis is mine. For everyone who keeps saying the Constitution does not apply. I say, the Constitution ALWAYS applies. If it didn't, then what good is it?

    --
    -- Will program for bandwidth
  179. Take a Hint: by paul.dunne · · Score: 1, Offtopic
    THERE IS POWER IN A UNION (JOE HILL) (1913)
    Tune: "There Is Power in the Blood" (L. E. JONES)

    First published in the 6 March 1913 edition of the Industrial Worker "Little Red Songbook."

    Would you have freedom from wage slavery,
    Then join in the grand Industrial band;
    Would you from mis'ry and hunger be free,
    Then come! Do your share, like a man.

    CHORUS:
    There is pow'r, there is pow'r
    In a band of workingmen.
    When they stand hand in hand,
    That's a pow'r, that's a pow'r
    That must rule in every land --
    One Industrial Union Grand.

    Would you have mansions of gold in the sky,
    And live in a shack, way in the back?
    Would you have wings up in heaven to fly,
    And starve here with rags on your back?

    If you've had "nuff" of "the blood of the lamb,"
    Then join in the grand Industrial band;
    If, for a change, you would have eggs and ham.
    Then come! Do your share, like a man.

    If you like sluggers to beat off your head,
    Then don't organize, all unions despise,
    If you want nothing before you are dead,
    Shake hands with your boss and look wise.

    Come, all ye workers, from every land,
    Come join in the grand Industrial band.
    Then we our share of this earth shall demand.
    Come on! Do your share, like a man.
    [from www.fortunecity.com/tinpan/parton/2/power.html, but it's doubtless all over the place]

  180. Give up your right? Why stop now? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When you consent to work, play, drive your car, you trade your rights for the privledge. At work you give up your right to free speech by not say exactly what you think of So and So's secretary, in a movie theater you do the same, as well as the right to free assembly. You loose the right to the pursuit of happiness by obeying the speed limit signs on the interstate going to work (or at least I do), so I ask why should your job be any different?

  181. Not a good idea by Monte · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Just this week someone got fired at my company for a little joke involving some dairy creamer spread on a co-worker's desk. No warning, no stern lecture, no "mark on your permanent record": terminated. Escorted to the door by security, "we'll mail you your personal items".

    A company-wide memo went out saying (distilled from the corp-speak and legalease): "We just fired someone for being a smart-ass. Don't be a smart-ass."

    This is not the best time to be pushing the boundries of pranksterism.

    1. Re:Not a good idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just this week someone got fired at my company for a little joke involving some dairy creamer spread on a co-worker's desk.

      Well, first of all, that's a little worse than this.

      But more importantly, do you really want to be working for a company which would do that in the first place? Sure, the market is tight and everything, but if I was the recipient of such a company-wide memo I'd probably start the job search that day.

    2. Re:Not a good idea by Monte · · Score: 1

      But more importantly, do you really want to be working for a company which would do that in the first place?

      If this incident had happened 6 months ago, I'd definitely be doing a "WTF?" - but right here right now whoever thought this would be funny and not have repercussions ain't real bright IMO. So no, I'm not overly worried about working for a company that fires idiots.

    3. Re:Not a good idea by oasisbob · · Score: 1

      That may be true for some items, you have a point. I would agree to stay away from bringing mysterious powders, things that look like bombs, guns, or *anything* having to do with recent world events.

      So bring a bag full of bananas, silk flowers, or any other pseudo-sexual items. There is a difference between funny/gross and threatening.

    4. Re:Not a good idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      C'mon, that is a completely different kind of prank.

    5. Re:Not a good idea by Exantrius · · Score: 1

      People are getting arrested for that... Hell, someone at my college put laundry detergent in an envelope and sent it to a friend... They shut down half the frigging school! (well, mail and food services at least). They called the FBI and everything... People are tense from this. Yes, it's absurd, but, well, some people are stupid...

      In my opinion this has no bearing on bringing a tupperware container full of dog droppings, or anything *NON* current eventish (nothing remotely identifiable as a white powder, no baking soda either...)

      But hell, have fun with it, The worst thing they can do if it's all in good fun is fire you, and, well, if it's an innocent prank, they shouldn't even think about that... It's your stuff... If you decide to bring a tarantula to work (as long as they allow pets), by all means, shove 'em in your bag... I'd warn the guard if you do something that might hurt him...

      Hasta luego,
      /Ex

    6. Re:Not a good idea by sminra · · Score: 1

      Prankster powders are definitely out of style.

      In germany, people are getting three-year sentences for mailing prank powders. They shut-down the building, call-in the detectives and the spacemen. I can see some justification because the disruption can be very expensive.

      I don't recall the exact law that is being violated, but Germany is a country in which threatening or even insulting someone is a punishable offense. I kid you not. Giving someone (esp a govt. official) the finger can be very expensive.

      ...and the Germans mock the americans for their "blue laws"...

      "Good grief." - Charlie Brown

    7. Re:Not a good idea by Lilior · · Score: 1

      As far as NIH is concerned -- it is almost impossible to fire someone.

      You move them to a job that they will want to quit instead. It becomes difficult to do that though; because it is also difficult to move someone into a job that they haven't been trained to perform; and it is almost impossible to forcibly move someone to a lower pay grade level.

      I can't say I know exactly why -- I just know that my mother has complained about having to get rid of a total incompetent that she couldn't just fire, because of the rules and regulations concerning it.

      She is at the highest level you can be without senatorial or presidential appointment -- so those rules and regulations must be pretty hard to break.

      --
      --Lilior
  182. Look around, Chico by fobbman · · Score: 3, Insightful

    You work in a federal building, in a very federally-present city. These are times of war, and you are working in a highly sensitive building.

    What alarms me more than your feelings of loss of rights is that you weren't always subjected to at least an occasional search.

    Welcome to federal employment. Those of us who share your employer accept the responsibility, knowing full well that it comes with the job.

    1. Re:Look around, Chico by gumbo · · Score: 1
      You work in a federal building, in a very federally-present city. These are times of war, and you are working in a highly sensitive building.

      For contrast, in the federal government building where I work, two blocks from the White House, I've never ever had my bag searched. If I forget my badge, I'll need to go through a metal detector and my bag will be x-rayed, but it's never been opened. If I have my badge, I just walk in after they glance at it.

      After September 11, they did close off all but two entrances for added security. Unfortunately, the security at the open entrances wasn't any different than it normally was, so the only effect was that it took longer to get in and out of the building since the convenient entrances were closed.

      I'm still hoping they're going to eventually say they checked key places in the building (mail room, ventilation system, etc.) for anthrax spores, but they've been completely silent about that so far.

      Gumbo

  183. What annoys me even more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is the "pretend searching". The bs search I now have to go through wouldnt find a fucking bazooka. They kinda peer at the bag, and hand it to me, if i beep in the metal detector, it kinda gets ignored. Prive security, the new useless workfare dumping ground.

    1. Re:What annoys me even more by acceleriter · · Score: 2

      You hit it on the head. If you're going to search, search. But don't insult my intelligence and endanger us all by just going through the motions.

      --

      CEE5210S The signal SIGHUP was received.

  184. No Right To Endanger Your Colleagues or Yourself by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting
    You have no right to endanger either your colleagues or yourself by knowingly or unknowingly bringing a weapon or similar device into the building. The searches are there to protect everyone's right to continue living, which seems to me to take precedence over your individual right not be searched.

    I've spent some time living overseas. In South Africa, your bags were searched, you were patted down and scanned with a metal detector before you could get into your favorite shopping mall. In the mideast, I checked underneath my car for bombs everytime I drove it, and couldn't get into my office before someone armed with automatic weapons popped the hood and trunk, opened all the doors and thoroughly checked everything inside, outside and underneath my car. Was it a pain? Sure. Was it necessary? Sure was. Did it violate my rights? No.

  185. comp usa and legal shit by Hadlock · · Score: 1

    when i was 16 i dimwittedly applied for a job at comp USA, quitting 4 months later. i got the "asshole's" (the guy who looks at your reciept and occasionally any large bags you're taking out of the building. we named him that) job, and people would continually bitch about it. management told me we had legal right to, as there was a (small) sign outside that said we reserved the right to search any and all bags/coats/ect when you leave, and by entering the building, you agreed to that. so i guess it depends if your building has signs or not, too. it might be unconstintutional b/c they initiated this after you started working there, and you/the building wasn't polled about this.

    the reason hemos let this one through is that it would (in theroy) generate a hella lot of page hits, as it's in connection to the attackonamerica shiznat, therefore raising revenue. kinda like that vi vs. emacs poll a month or so back.

    --
    moox. for a new generation.
    1. Re:comp usa and legal shit by Hadlock · · Score: 1

      oh yeah, as a side note, i also learned (by being the asshole) that by walking very quickly out the door while the asshole is checking someone else's reciept, you legally can't be stopped, or have your 'posessions', whatever they may be, taken or inspected, may it be a new g4 cube or the likes that is being held openly in your hand. 99% of shoplifters never get caught/prosecuted. none were ever caught/prosecuted at comp USA

      --
      moox. for a new generation.
  186. oh man by ReidMaynard · · Score: 1

    I gotta ask, what happened [please be general we don't want you getting in trouble.

    I work near RTP, NC; in the late 80's they had more than one employee come to work with guns and kill many people [two (former?) employees, on two seperate ocassions] besides the current anthrax type scare, what could be worse? [I'm wondering] a bomb in a breifcase maybe?

    --
    -- www.globaltics.net

    Political discussion for a new world

    1. Re:oh man by onepoint · · Score: 1

      The company is one of the most unique producers / manufacture of jewlery and gems. At times they are involved with the manufacture of synthetic ruby's ( without them placing a die within the solution NOBODY not even the experts can tell the difference ). They are commisioned special job to replicate works that go into museums.

      What happened to them, is along the lines of some of the bruce willis type movies.

      -Onepoint

      --
      if you see me, smile and say hello.
    2. Re:oh man by unitron · · Score: 2

      Are you both talking about an RTP company? One with ties to Cree? More details please.

      --

      I see even classic Slashdot is now pretty much unusable on dial up anymore.

    3. Re:oh man by onepoint · · Score: 1

      I wish I could, but I'm under a NDA and once you learn stuff that even is not covered on it, you still like to keep the faith. Also, one of the the owners is the guy that hires me to consult.

      But i've got to say this. Most people think that they have freedom in the office environment. the truth is that the employer has that freedom.

      Case in point. I was asked to review the e-mail policy of a firm. My final thoughts that were agree by their legal department ( this was another firm). Once the policy book states "all communication are monitored", & the monitors are in human resources & people that call in or out calls are advised of this fact (also signed policy pages from employees). The firm can review everything and anything at it's own pace and within legal "peace".
      Let me tell you, 1,130,000.00 buys one hell of a keylogger / and survaliance software.

      -Onepoint

      P.S. Unitron, I might know you ( very few people have their old handles or have unique names that reference Real research equipment) if you are from the New York area and you phreaked in the early 80's, where in the city would you eat ice cream ( thier was only one phreak spot just give out the areas name ). and is the 555 ic ( I wonder if they still make that timer chip) the best chip from that age.

      -onepoint

      --
      if you see me, smile and say hello.
    4. Re:oh man by unitron · · Score: 2
      I read your post and the reply about Research Triangle Park a little too quickly and was thinking the company involved was maybe the one run by the brother of one of the guys who started Cree Semiconductors (the silicon carbide blue LED guys). The brother's company, whose name escapes me at the moment, makes synthetic diamonds (moisonnite?).

      unitron is short for university electronics, a nomme de get free catalogs and trade mag subscriptions. I'm a life-long NC resident and spent time in the RTP area circa 1970-75 and 80-81. The NE/SE 555 timer chip is a Signetics product (originally), probably still in production by somebody somewhere (GE, RCA, Sylvania ECG and NTE used to make them as part of their replacement semiconductor lines). I never used one to do Touch-Tone (I think you can use 566s and 567s for that) or any other phone company tones, but I did rig up a pulse width modulation speed control for a Dremel 260 with a 555 and a horizontal output transistor.

      I think some Asian company has unitron.com, haven't looked in a while, but I picked up a Windows 3.1 OEM set and book on eBay a few months ago with the unitron brand on it (the "t" is white where the rest of the letters are black, interesting effect). No address for the company in the book, unfortunately, and I haven't gotten around to loading it to check out the splash screen yet.

      --

      I see even classic Slashdot is now pretty much unusable on dial up anymore.

    5. Re:oh man by onepoint · · Score: 1

      Gee, your going to make me pick up some old magazines to look at the 566 and 567 ic. If i recal right Unitons were the "standard" equipment in your research lab ( i think they were electronic scopes )

      but anyway, Synthetic diamonds have a specific pattern that shows up under x-ray. Also I'm told that there was an alignment specific to synthetic that does not exists in natural dimonds.

      well good talking to you.

      also since your in the north caroline region you most likely fish so

      tight line

      -Onepoint

      --
      if you see me, smile and say hello.
  187. union yes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    this is what unions are for.
    to protect the workers rights. you as one person will do nothing, but if you organize you can do anything.

    Anarchy\\Peace\\
    Property destruction != violence

  188. This isn't about the Constitution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I am continually amazed by /.'ers who don't understand the basic concept that the first ten amendments are a set of limitations on the scope of GOVERNMENT. If I tell you to shut up, it in no way affects your first amendment rights, because I'm not part of the government. If the local paper refuses to print your letter to the editor- tough shit- they don't have to. The first amendment simply says that the government cannot keep the paper from printing your letter, or force them to print it.

    Likewise, your place of work may or may not be part of the government. If it is, then you might possibly be in luck. Otherwise, you're most likely screwed. In either case, you need to talk to a lawyer.

    The point I wanted to make is this: unless they are somehow employed by the government, a private entity cannot, by definition, infringe on your Constitutional rights. Read the amendments sometime, you might like them.

  189. RE:Unreasonable Searches When Going to Work? by mislead · · Score: 0, Troll

    First of all, the NIH should be a private org. making you a freeloader living on the taxpayer dole. Rights? Yes, you have a right to get another job.

  190. Private Property by hether · · Score: 1

    Its private property and you are working there voluntarily. I don't think you really have any rights in this case.

    Not that I agree with what is happening to you, but you have to understand it comes with the job. In your position for such a high profile place it was probably even addressed in your contract somewhere or in the employee handbook.

    I encourage you to peacefully protest it, such as file a complaint and encourage other dissatisfied employees to do likewise, but remember that nothing is likely to happen as a result. I'm sure that the extent of the searches will eventually calm down once things are under controlled with our so called, but not declared, war.

    --

    Most people would die sooner than think; in fact, they do.
  191. A few thoughts by catseye_95051 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    (1) You work for the government, there are special laws regarding govt activities and security may well be par tof them.

    (2) Some wise jurist ocne poinetd out the approximate observation that "During war, the law is suspended." I am afraid that, whetehr you've realized it ro not, you are at Ground Zero. We are beign attacked with disease, the national health infrastructure is thus a very strategic target.

    (3) Given that yo uare at ground zero, if Iw ere you I'd be HAPPY about the tightened security. Would you rather have your private self and private posiessiosn blown to private-bits by a bomb someone snuck in?

    This is a terrorist war. They don't march up in pretty unfirms and say "okay, pleas esend your amry otu to fight." They hit by stealth wherever they think it will most harm our infrastructure.

  192. The mere appearance of security... by txguy1 · · Score: 1

    is a substantial component of security. Even if the guard may be unable to identify [name of bioweapon], the fact that searches are being conducted will tend to discourage risk-averse opportunists. During the L.A. riots, for example, some of the National Guard units were carrying unloaded M16 rifles. The presence of these troops probably discouraged some looting that would have occurred, even though looters were not actually under the threat of gunfire. Another example is speeding motorists that slow down for the empty police car parked next to the road.

    As for the posters that are advocating that you screw with the guards by putting unusual objects/substances in your belongings, please don't. Save those passive-aggressive tactics for telemarketers or for persons who are attempting to search you to protect property rather than life. I submit to you that under the current circumstances (new anthrax cases appearing), plus the fact that your employer is a logical target for attack/infiltration, the searches are reasonable.

  193. Reminds me of comments I've heard about Israel by ReidMaynard · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I read some American's comments about traveling (especially by plane) in Israel. The police ask questions and watch responses, sometimes checking responses [ie, where do you work, then calling your employer and confirming/description, etc]

    It seems the security the original poster is talking about is the dumb "search everyone/everywhere, but don't think to much" type of security. Seems a smart operative could bypass this [mailing things in/out of building for example].

    --
    -- www.globaltics.net

    Political discussion for a new world

  194. Privacy, the workplace and the consitution by The+Bungi · · Score: 1

    Just as employers have a legal right to monitor and read your email and network traffic, they have the absolutely legal right to search you once you enter their premises, even if in this case the employer is the government. Ditto for using "covert" surveillance within the workspace and so on.
    The search in the context and manner as you describe does not infringe on your constitutional rights at all. It is not representative of the "unreasonable search and seizure" protection clause(s).
    Now if you're not comfortable with them then your only recourse is really to quit and go somewhere else, though I doubt that would be a very effective statement on your part.

    Given the state of the world right now, this inconvenience you and your colleagues are going through is hardly cause for constitutional alarm.

  195. Now I look like a fool! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "I'm a scientist, not a lawyer, so I'm a little beleaguered by the fact that since 2001-Sep-11, I have been forced to submit to searches AS I ENTER AN AIRPORT. I FLY AS PART OF MY JOB and have been shouldering the burden of increasingly draconian security measures. Most recently, they've instituted a policy of 100% bag/package searches AT THE GATE. Initially it didn't bother me, but after having my bag searched on my way to TO THE AIRPLANE, I decided I'm not comfortable subjecting myself to searches of my personal belongings at every turn. I want to know if I have a right to refuse searches? And why should it be considered acceptable for me to relinquish my Fourth Ammendment rights so I can go work on in my lab?"

  196. Here was my solution by CyberGarp · · Score: 4, Funny

    I used to fly around the country on business non-stop for months at a time. I got sick of the "heightened" security searches after TWA800. Fat lot of good those did, look where we are today.

    So anyway, in New York I stopped in a store that sold plastic crap made in Taiwan. I bought a ton of it (you know, plastic apples, plastic toys, plastic nick-nacks) and even bought some expanding foam fruit and bunnies. Then I packed my brief case till it was completely overloaded and had to sit on it close it.

    Then when the airport search came. They ask to see my carry on bag. I said "you don't want to see my carry on bag." They said, "Sir, if you don't hand me that bag, you're not getting on your plane." So I did. When opened it and plastic toys exploded out in all directions. I said, "Happy now, look at the mess you made." While the security guard was still in shock. I closed my briefcase and walked on through. The other guards just started laughing.

    --

    I used to wonder what was so holy about a silent night, now I have a child.
    1. Re:Here was my solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Washington, Patton, York, all these men are secondary to your brillance.

      I hope I get a chance to cause problems for someone doing thier job.

      Then I can be just like my hero.

    2. Re:Here was my solution by Chris+Y+Taylor · · Score: 2

      I know a guy who has a different version of that story. He was carrying a Heckler and Koch MP5 in his check in baggage. For those who don't know what an MP5 is, it is not an even better way to swap sound files than an MP3... a very scary looking submachine gun ( http://www.mp5.net/home.htm ). Anyway, this guy trains SWAT teams on submachinegun use; everything is properly licensed and permitted. He was flying across the country to teach a marksmanship class. He takes the luggage up to the counter like he is supposed to and delcares to the person at the counter that he is transporting a firearm in his luggage and needs the proper forms. The airline clerk hands him the forms and says that he needs to visually inspect the firearm to make sure it is unloaded. "Certainly," my friend replies but he suggests they step into the airline office to do it privately. The clerk replies that they can't do that, and he needs to see the firearm right there. "I think that is a bad idea" my friend warned, but the airline clerk was insistant. So, right in the middle of a crowded airport he unzips the bag, pulls out a full-auto MP5 and loudly racks the slide back to show the clerk the empty chamber. Of course EVERYONE within sight freaks out and dives for cover as my friend and the clerk are standing there checking the gun in. After a few seconds everyone realized that it was not some sort of attack and started to carefully get up off the floor. Well, airline regulations do say the clerks have to inspect the firearms to see that they are unloaded... but he really should have taken my friends advice and done it in a more private place.

      Fortunately this took place before Sept. 11. Now, I would be worried that nervous security guards would mistakenly open fire.

    3. Re:Here was my solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ..pulls out a full-auto MP5 and loudly racks the slide back..

      he really should have taken my friends advice and done it in a more private place.

      Also, your friend shouldn't have acted like an idiot. Showing the empty chamber isn't that hard to do without anyone else but the clerk noticing. Please, don't pull stunts like this to show off what a macho guy you are.

    4. Re:Here was my solution by Jboy_24 · · Score: 1

      I see your point, because the increased security after TWA800 failed to stop the WTC bombings we should do away with all security at airports what-so-ever. I'll leave it as an excersise for the reader to continue the logic to rape/murder and getting rid of police.

      Look, yes getting searched is annoying, yes your joke was funny. However, before anyone else tries this let me tell you, if I was the guard and someone pulled that on me, they're getting ALL there cavaties searched.

      Why? Because THE PURPOSE OF YOUR ACTION WAS TO AVOID GETTING SEARCHED, there is NO GREATER RISK then the person avoiding getting searched.

      In fact, the idea that they didn't make you clean all your crap up, and that they let you through at all, seems to make me feel that your story is completely fabricated.

    5. Re:Here was my solution by Twanfox · · Score: 1

      I do believe that his story was not intended as a way to get around getting searched. I do believe that his story was intended to be a form of public feedback on the intrusiveness of the searches. While yes, searches are sometimes necessary, it would be nice to believe that the constitution still holds some weight as it concerns illegal search and seizure. Or is that unreasonable?

      So now, because a handfull of people (24 ish or so, if that) decided to take plastic knives onto a plane and the pilots stupidly GAVE control over to the terrorists and did not fight to take it back (in this instance, gave is a loose term to imply they didn't try to keep control of a flying bomb), the entire flying population is going to be held to intrusive searches, body cavity (How did this plastic knife get into your bowels, Mr Passanger?) and the like. Are they searching checked-in baggage too? Are they strip searching people to make sure they don't have a plastic knife on them? How 'bout a pocket knife? This is a real good way to preserve the freedom this nation is supposed to be known for, isn't it?

  197. Searchs and Security by thetechweenie · · Score: 1

    I can only assume that this will become more common in our everyday lives. It's not enjoyable, but it's probably going to be this way for a while. Some companies (biomedical research, atomic research) should have had strigent security before. I don't beleive that people should loose rights that the constitution grants us, however some of these things are for the greater good of every human alive. It's too bad that Russia can't follow suit. I think that the US is probably a last resort for terrorists to try and obtain dangerous materials, but I guess it's a possibility. I don't even want to think about all of the hazardous materials that the Russian's have lost. I think it was just a few months ago that /. ran a story about Microsoft SQL loosing track of Russian plutonium or something like that. Until we have a better handle on what the terrorist currently have at their disposal, this is only going to be more common. At the local Walmart in my town, the State Attorney General, and the Police and Fire Chiefs, made them remove 300,000 rounds of ammo, and several pounds of black powder. As a hunter, this is an inconvience. It doesn't make any sense to me, as New Hampshire is 15 minutes away, and has very lax gun laws. I guess this is just a hysteria that will have to die down.

    --


    Um, this is my sig.
  198. 4th Amendment by darf · · Score: 1

    I think the fourth admendment only protects against search and seizeure by the government. Your employer is a different matter.

    If you resist your employer, they will probably just terminate you (if you are an employee at will).

  199. Putting Searches in Perspective by Morgant · · Score: 1

    It is important to remember to ask the right question. Your asking us to tell you how much you should be willing to take. We can't do that. Only you know how much you're willing to take before it becomes less a security factor and more a nuisance.

    Just remember, before you go off the deep edge and decide you just can't take all the searching anymore, that security hasn a lot to do with state of mind. You obviously don't seem to be very afraid of attack, even giving the relavent circumstances, however try to give thought to the fact that maybe the guy behind you is scared out of his mind. Maybe it takes all his will power to show up to work in the morning and knowing that each person is checked very carefully as he enters and leaves the building is the only thing that keeps him from going over the edge. Or maybe your privacy is being violated in the name of security and you have a right to complain about overzealous search measures.

    Either way, try to remember that a lot of the security measures are taken as much for the mental effect as the actual physical safety which means that it is important to appeal to the man who is the most afraid, not the least.

    //Morgant

  200. That's not 7-11 right? by BLKMGK · · Score: 5, Interesting

    National Institute of Health, not 7-11 right? It would be one thing if the material and information you were handling were non-threatening and your place of "business" didn't provide a nice ripe target but... it DOES! Frankly, if I worked in such a place and they DIDN'T have such searches I'd be unhappy.

    We're presently living in a time where folks think it's funny to grind up Life Savers and leave them on desks to see the reaction. We're living in a time when sicko' mislead idiots send postmarked mail purporting to be from 4th Grade Elementary schools with ANTHRAX in it! We're living in a time where perfectly innocent people floating down a river minding their own business are getting buzzed by crop sprayers squirting only God knows what on them. And you're upset because someone is asking to poke through your things?! You're serious?

    The place where you work is supposed to be concerned with public health, yes? What better place to spread something nasty to scare the public you're supposed to be worried about? It's quite possible that this has occured to your management and rather than sitting on their hands waiting to see if it occurs to someone else when employees start dropping dead they've chosen to take steps to protect both themselves and YOU. I'm surprised that yu're not just a little bit more appreciative of that fact. While they may be simply trying to cover their butts and protect themselves thay ARE also protecting you and making it that much harder for someone to commit some sicko' act. Perhaps six months ago when a few thousand other folks were still breathing and the idea of a plane crashing into a tall building was a Hollywood fantasy I'd have had some sympathy but right now I'm having a pretty tough time generating much of it. Believe it or not we're all in this together and it's not just about YOU. Bend a little and realize that what you give up in comfort provides a little comfort to your co-workers! I face shotguns and worse coming in the gate, while that would obviously freak you out I am happy that those folks are looking out for myself and my coworkers. I can only hope that they won't be needed!

    Don't like it? Then quit and go work someplace that's a less interesting target like 7-11. There you've only got to worry about a gun in your face and a demand for mere money....

    --
    Build it, Drive it, Improve it! Hybridz.org
  201. Stupid Searches but legal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah they can search you, but it's pointless.
    Walking out with a few milligrams of disease sample
    is easy unless they strip you and give you a BCS.
    You're probably vaccinated against anything dangerous
    you work with so you could safely walk out the door with
    a small vial of smallpox shoved up yer butt...

  202. Whiners by rjamestaylor · · Score: 1, Flamebait
    I am so tired of hearing about whiners complaining about increased security in the past few weeks since the most horrific attack against our civilians took place on our own soil. Moreover, it appears that someone is contiuing attacking us with biological warfare weapons (through the mail and, possibly, using test runs of crop dusters in Mississippi). Someone was just arrested in Frankfurt with a Bio Suit to protect them from Bio agents and atomic radiation along with bomb making materials. A 1/3 pound of C4 was found with 1000 Feet of blasting cord in a bus station locker.

    We are under siege and tensions are high. Put up with the inconveniences.

    Save the fight for real rights abuses, not just inconveniences.

    --
    -- @rjamestaylor on Ello
    1. Re:Whiners by Boomer2 · · Score: 1

      "Save the fight for real rights abuses, not just inconveniences."

      Interesting idea; but it ignores a timeless reality. Ever heard of how to boil a frog? You don't dump it into a pot fully boiling. You put it in cool water and slowly raise the heat. (PETA wackos: I've never actually done this.)

      The point being: We don't lose our freedoms in a lump sum. They do it slowly so that folk lik you will say, "It's just a little inconvenience.". Loss of freedoms must be opposed at all steps because it is assaulted at all points.

      Hey, I'm not out protesting every weekend; but I write scads of letters to Congress, get involved in lots of groups, and spread 10% of my cash to groups fighting fights I believe in.

      Don't be lulled into complacency...or stay there as most Americans are. Push back immediately, or you may find you've lost the battle before it starts.

      "All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing." (Edmund Burke)

      "Those who desire to give up Freedom in order to gain Security, will not have, nor do they deserve, either one." (Thomas Jefferson)

    2. Re:Whiners by rjamestaylor · · Score: 2
      Interesting idea; but it ignores a timeless reality. Ever heard of how to boil a frog? You don't dump it into a pot fully boiling. You put it in cool water and slowly raise the heat. (PETA wackos: I've never actually done this.)
      Do you know how to loose credibility? Yell "wolf" at every passing doberman. Yes, Dobermans are inconvienent, but that aren't wolves. I consider stories like this one little boys crying wolf.

      Complain about DCMA, SSS*, etc. But checking your backpack? Sheesh!

      --
      -- @rjamestaylor on Ello
  203. It has *always* been in effect... by LittleGuy · · Score: 1

    Check around for little innocuous signs that probably have been obscured on the bulletin board, or check with your Admin Services Office. Government facilities have *always* had a form of "by entering this facility, you consent to a search of yourself and your effects" policy.

    Also, check to see if there are various levels of security awareness for your work facility and be familiar with them. I wouldn't be surprised at the heightened levels at a government site.

    --
    Mod Karma -1: I sed bad wurds. If I cep my mouf shut, I wud be at riyses.
  204. 4th Amendment protections don't apply at work by jordandeamattson · · Score: 1

    The reality is that 4th Amendment protections against "unreasonable search and seizure" apply against the Federal Government - and, via the 14th Amendment which incorporated these protections, against the states.

    In addition, it could be argued that in searching those attempting to access a public facility during a state of war (which, don't kid yourselves, is the state in which we currently find ourselves) that the Federal Government is not acting unreasonable, but rather appropriately to meet its obligations to "provide for the common defense and insure the general welfare".

    As others have noted, you are free to not be searched. Of course, this will mean terminating your employment with this agency and agreeing not to attempt to access this building. Freedom, doesn't mean the unfettered right to do whatever you want. Choosing to exercise certain rights can mean paying certain costs.

    1. Re:4th Amendment protections don't apply at work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So private facilities mean that all constitutional rights are moot? I guess that admendment concerning slavery doesn't apply at work either?

      Also, legally we are not at war. Just because the press and the DOJ are foaming at the mouth doesn't negate the fact that congress hasn't made a legal declaration.

      Accepting the loss of rights of others removes your right to complain when you lose yours in turn.

  205. Suggest your own solution by Technarian+Shad · · Score: 1

    You have to admit, it is the company's right to want to secure the workplace. But rather than be all ticked off about your rights, go half way with them. Take as little to work with you as possible. Suggest to management to install lockers at work, so you won't have to keep bringing stuff in and out.

  206. I have to get Searched too! by Jboy_24 · · Score: 1

    I hope you find an answer to refuse those searches and still keep your job. I am in the same boat as well. I work for the Red Cross, where I am in charge of maintaining the blood supply for the city of Los Angeles. Again, since sept 11th my work life has been hell with searches. And when an Al-Qaida operative was captured with plans to our building, the searches have been espicially harsh. It takes over 15-30 minutes of my day to go through these searches, I could be catching up on Slashdot, or the Onion during those periods!

    Well I could continue on, but hey, you work for the national Institute of Health in Bethesda MA, which currently has quite a bit of anthrax going on. You are probably getting quite a few samples from the Congress, embassy's and such being in that are area. I suspect the searches will only intensify. Why? Becasue you are at a target. If I wanted to shock the world, what if I smuggled in some Ebola and contaminated a few senator's samples with it?

    If we are going to comment about 'unreasonable' searches, I want to talk about the guy at PetsMart getting searched because his paranoid manager fears Al-Quida antraxing petfood etc etc. The 'I work at Pantex (they build the Hbomb warheads) and have to put up with cavety searches on the way in AND out', doesn't get much sympathy. Even if all your doing is maintaining the email. All jobs have pros and cons, one of the cons about jobs that affect everyone in general is that when there is a WAR your personal freedoms get a little squashed. This, i don't believe, in epedemic, yet. I work on some government projects myself, mainly ecommerce, and there has been NO change in my freedoms. Why? Because until Osama's plan is to make every car pass emission controls, (or maybe not pass ... geez the US would grind to a halt) I don't think he's gonna be contacting me. But if he did, I'm sure the security would tighten around here, after the FBI, CIA and the rest of the world stops laughing.

    In summary, either start to lube up in the morning 'AFTER' the shower and learn to enjoy it, or find another job. The war will be over before you know it. We just have to wait for the new OJ roadrage trial to start.

    BTW--- THE FIRST PARAGRAPH IS A JOKE. I DO NOT KNOW OF ANY PLANS FOR THE RED CROSS, I MADE IT UP.

  207. actually by ReidMaynard · · Score: 1

    you could have a little innocent fun with this...suggested items for purse/briefcase
    1) sex toys
    2) dozens of loose ping-pong balls
    3) dirty laundry
    4) barbie dolls
    5) Ken Dolls, dressed in Barbie's cloths
    6) one big peice of cheese
    7) more sex toys
    8) condoms, hundreds of them
    9) *dirty* comics
    10) dozens of those stupid "moo like a cow" toys
    11) tooth paste, sans tooth paste tube

    --
    -- www.globaltics.net

    Political discussion for a new world

  208. Deal with it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm sick and tired of hearing people complain about getting searched at the airport or other places. If you work in a sensitive area (and for the gov't) you should expect things like this.

    As for profiling individuals, anyone who has a problem with it that is of Middle Eastern Origin or is a Muslim, should EXPECT things like this after the horrendous crime perpetrated by fanatical members of their religion/background.

    It is NOT racist, nor is it too much to ask of citizens who care about the safety of their fellow man. Anyone who believes differently is not dealing with the gravity of this situation appropriately.

    You can always quit under protest (it won't matter) and go somewhere else.

  209. You're not going to like this, but by Don'tBAWank! · · Score: 1

    Many federal "rights" do not apply in the employer-employee relationship.
    Shocking, but it has been that way for eons.

  210. Be Glad you do not work in a diamond mine. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I understand the searches are a bit....uncomfortable.

    Also, remember it is being done for YOUR protection.

    And if you have a desire to die, get a parachute, your weapon of choice, and go jump with the Rangers.

  211. The 4th ammendment does not apply by gelfling · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Laws about unreasonable search and seizures do not apply in the context of being employed by and in the normal operations of government on their own facilities. OTOH if they demanded to search your home they'd need a warrant (one would hope, more or less as it relates to criminal investigation). If they stopped your car off premises they'd need a search warrant or a criminal complaint or arrest warrant. But while you are on site they own your ass and there is nothing you can do about it.

  212. Are you paid for it? by aozilla · · Score: 2

    One simple solution is simply to treat the time you spend on the searches as part of your employment time. If you are required to work from 9 to 5, and you spend 30 minutes being searched on your way to your car, start leaving at 4:30.

    --
    ok then your [sic] infringing on my copyright! Could you as [sic] me next time before STEALING my comments for your own?
  213. Luke Skywalker Philospher by Drath · · Score: 1

    I believe Mark Hammil said in Wing Commander 4, The price of freedom is eternal vigilance. He then got into a knife fight in a space bar as i recall.

  214. Quit.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you don't like the searches at a government facility, you have every right to quit your job and do something else.

  215. Checks... and balances by igaborf · · Score: 2, Insightful
    "I spend about $250 a month with you guys, would you rather have me walk through without showing my receipt, or would you rather have my money go somewhere else?"

    Of course, they could just eliminate the checking altogether to protect your "rights." But then that $250 will become about $300 because they'll have to raise their prices to cover the increase in undetected shoplifting. What's that you say? So let them do less invasive security? You mean like hidden cameras watching your every move, as most department stores have?

    But then, maybe you're willing to pay the extra cash to subsidize theft in order to avoid the trauma of having your receipt checked. Trouble is, most people aren't that well heeled. They'll opt for the competition -- the one that still has receipt checking and consequently lower prices, and your no-recipt-checking store won't be around for long. Retail is a low-margin business.

    "Tough," you say, "if their prices go up I'll just shop somewhere else." But of course, that somewhere else faces the same problems as Fry's. (Actually, is there anyplace else like Fry's?)

    So, you see, all the alternatives are as bad or worse. I suggest an alternate plan. Next time, hand your receipt to the checker and say, "How 'bout those Giants?" (Okay, 'Niners.) Have a conversation with him. Discover that he's a human being, too. In short, stop acting like such an insufferable prig.

    1. Re:Checks... and balances by the_quark · · Score: 2

      Well, first of all, being an insufferable prig is a specialty of mine, so I see no reason to change on just this issue. :)

      More seriously, I started dodging the Fry's guy out of a total frustration about all things Fry's. The problem with Fry's is that in terms of "getting what I want right now," there isn't anyone comparable. I felt that Fry's had wasted so much of my time that I had to do something to "strike back at The Man." :)

      My point with all of this "civil disobedience" is that, if I can simply walk past the checker, it's not an effective shoplifting detection device, because I rather expect shoplifters don't bother slowing down for them, either. All it does is waste everyone's time, and I'm very opposed to that. Also, I very strongly suspect that the point isn't as much to find shoplifters as it is to discourage collusion with cashiers (having a friend as a cashier who charges me $1 for a $100 item).

      For the record, I do actually usually stop for the Best Buy guy, precisely because there isn't a line, and it's not significantly faster to go around him (and I don't feel like Best Buy has wasted the best years of my life). I do think the Best Buy guy is particularly unneeded, though, because they have an electronic shoplifting detection system. Again, I think the main goal isn't shoplifting but collusion. And surely the checkers must know that it's possible to simply walk around the receipt-checker, so why waste all your customers' time?

      Fry's, on the other hand, usually has a line, and I'm not interested in waiting there for any amount of time for what is an obviously ineffective shoplifting protection mechanism. Not to mention that I've gotten totally sick of Fry's motto: "The More You Spend, the More We Make You Wait!" The problem is, if it's Saturday and I need a HD to replace one that failed in production, I don't have much choice but to go to Fry's. But I have come to view shopping at Fry's to be a sort of game, where the goal is to minimize the time wasted. For example, if they have two left on the shelf, they're actually out of stock, because, dollars to doughnuts those two have been bought and returned (and re-shrink-wrapped!) five times because they don't work.

      As for more "invasive" security - I have no problem whatsoever with that. My problem is them wasting my time on something that is so obviously ineffective. Best Buy and Fry's both already have security cameras, and I am perfectly free to not shop there if I have a problem with that.

  216. The most distrubing thing... by tthomas48 · · Score: 1

    is the number of ./ers that were psycho-militant about freedom a few weeks ago, and who are now talking about "reasonable" searches. Either you believe in the liberty afforded by the United States Constitution or you should leave and go to another country like England. Their airports feel free to strip search you, and yet they still have quite a terrorist problem. Laws will not fix this problem. Not electing frat boys who allowed arms to be sold to foreign nations that overthrew legitimate governments and then started sponsoring terrorists might.

  217. Free Society by cubicle · · Score: 1

    Look we live in a free society as long as it doesn't interfere with someone else's freedom. So as long as there are nuts running around blowing things up and hurting people, you will have to accept searches as being an everyday part of life.

    Why because the rest of us have the basic right to live and if we did not search people who have access to high level goverment buildings we would be endangering lives needlessly.

    Sincerely
    Cubicle

    --
    To err is to be human, to really screw up takes a computer and a human.
  218. The Law Says It Is Not Unreasonable by Salatir · · Score: 1

    Gelfling nailed it, more or less. Although the Constitution applies to all things, the Supreme Court has found that, in a situation as described above, a person has no reasonable expectation of privacy to deny a search and seizure. The phrase "reasonable expectation of privacy" is key, to any 4th Amendment analysis. Like it or not, it has been determined that a person at the work place has no reasonable expectation of privacy b/c he/she performs within an observable environment. That is why a company is completely entitled to see your computer activity, internet activity, check phone numbers called, etc. Examples of situations discussed by the Supreme Court: 1) U.S. v. Katz (a pivotal 4th Amendment case): person within a phone booth making a phone call was found to have a reasonable expectation of privacy and, hence, a wiretap on that phone to relay the content of his call was deemed unconstitutional. 2) Planting a location tracking "beeper" in a car without a person's knowing: deemed Constitutional, as a person driving a car is driving in "public" places, and therefore has no reasonable expectation of privacy. 3) "Pen registers" (the tracking of phone numbers (and with the right warrant, content of those calls) dialled, by getting a register of all calls from the phone company): deemed Constitutional, due to the fact that a person dials OUT and submits information to privately owned companies and mediums of communication (ie the lines). 4) Thermal imaging of houses: Deemed unconstitutional without a search warrant, as it detects details of the goings on inside a house, without actually being inside the house to see. Kyllo v. US (decided this summer) raises the possibility that only technology that is not reasonably accessible by the general public would be limited to such an analysis. Remember,the focus is on "reasonable expectation of privacy." The question to ask is: "Should you believe that what you do in the workplace is privately known only to yourself?" The answer to that question, says the Supreme Court, is no. Sorry, but those searches are legitimate and legal. You can deny the search, but to do so, you won't have a legal leg to stand on - ESPECIALLY in light of heightened national security concerns from 9/11, coupled with you working at NIH (or any gov't entity, for that matter). And yes, I am a lawyer.

  219. Security is important! by Ceinwyn · · Score: 1

    I'm happy about the 100% bag searches. Especially when working for a government agency. I'm glad to see security is not just concerned with what you could be sneaking into these buildings, but also about what folks could be sneaking out with, that is equally important.

    Is it that unreasonable of your employers to make sure your not theiving sensitive information, or even worse dangerous substances?

  220. Dude, ya think they're gonna find your pot? by aquarian · · Score: 1

    Fuckin' A, man.

  221. NIH has toxic stuff and by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    wouldn't like to have it removed from the premises...

  222. kiss your civil liberties goodbye by Wansu · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Your civil liberties are going the way of the dinosaur. That's what is shaking out from the 9/11 events and the ongoing Anthrax episodes. As a CEO recently said about privicy, "Get over it." You can count on more of this cavity search mentality because law enforcement basically has a blank check to do as they please.

    But are they going to check out people entering the US more thoroughly? Are they going to scrutinize the immigration non-policy we have today? Are we going to continue to subsidize big business's insatiable appetite for cheap labor by increasing the already excessive H1-B quota? So far, I've heard little discussion of it.

    If native Americans are to lose civil liberties then it's only fair that the immigrants who aspire to citizenship bear some of the burden too.

    --
    Wansu, th' chinese sailor
    1. Re:kiss your civil liberties goodbye by Boomer2 · · Score: 1

      Good call.

      We as American citizens are subjected to more scrutiny than believable; and everyone says, "Deal with it".

      Look crossways at an foreigner, though; and they crucify you.

      Don't even consider enforcing immigration laws or hammering the employers who hire the illegals, though. That's just plain mean.

      Take a look at your local newspaper. Do they call illegals "illegals"? No, they're probably "undocumented laborers" or "transient immigrants" or whatever, despite their breaking our laws. But don't enforce them. That would be just mean.

  223. a few things you could do by k9-quaint · · Score: 1

    Contract Anthrax, make sure it is the skin variant as this has the greatest visual impact.
    Enlist in the Army/Navy/Air Force/Marines, this will cut down on the number of times they search you as you will not be working there anymore.
    Die in a terrorist attack, I doubt they will dig you up to search you.

  224. Screwed up Priorities by Chris+Y+Taylor · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "And why should it be considered acceptable for me to relinquish my Fourth Ammendment rights so I can go work on in my lab?"

    If it was "your lab" then you would have a point, but it isn't. Good grief, you work at N.I.H. in Bethesda, MD; you should be upset if they DIDN'T search you!

    If it really bothers you, then quit and start your own lab, then you can take whatever stupid risks you want.

    As for some of the "have fun with it" suggestions for putting gross things in your briefcase; I would be careful about that. I'm sure most of these people have never worked in a secure facility and have no idea how little of a sense of humor a good security force is supposed to have. If you still want to "make it fun" that is fine, just be careful how you do it. Putting that creative mind to some positive use and doing a little "cross functional teaming" with the security manager could make it more tolerable and also improve security. For example, get together with some of the folks you work with, and the supervisor of the security guards and suggest ongoing "tests" of the searchers. A good security force needs to be audited at irregular intervals anyway; and if the supervisor has the co-operation of some non-security employees, that can make it easier. What I recommend for audits is to use dice. If I need to audit a dept. about once a week, I roll a 10 sided dice (you do have some of those left over from D&D, don't you) and if it comes up 9 or 10, then I do an audit that day. That way, the audits occur about the right frequency but are not predictable. The supervisor could even add a carrot along with the stick and offer some small prize (a "quality" pen or a gift certificate for a box of donuts) to whoever finds the employee trying to smuggle the test item through. Of course, there would have to be more employees in on the audits than just you, or else they would soon figure out to just search you thoroughly, and the whole point is lost.

  225. I work at an airport... interesting searches... by abh · · Score: 1

    I currently have a part time job as a ramp agent at an airport in a metro area. I'm on the airfield, driving, working with planes, etc.


    On the way into work, they use a handheld wand metal detector on us. We're not allowed to bring any sort of cutting instruments onto the airfield (this is assinine... I can walk up and touch the airplane engines but I can't have a mini leatherman). They also search all bags/backpacks/lunchboxes. It's a pain in the arse but probably a good move in light of recent events.


    What makes it all hilarious, but not really, is that we get an even more extensive search on the way out to make sure that we're not stealing anything... you can sure tell where the priorities of the company lie.

  226. Dildoes and the "boundaries of pranksterism" by No+Such+Agency · · Score: 2

    Arguably, spreading a white powder on a co-worker's desk in these times is pretty serious - and a STUPID prank. The hazmat could be called in, you could have all been quarantined etc. I assume the person fessed up, and that's how this was all averted, right?

    Now, carrying a foot-long ass-widener of a dildo in your bags, that is a little harder to characterize as anything other than funny (it was one of those ones with the balls molded onto the base, wasn't it, you pervert!). There's probably no rule at ANY airline, company or gov't agency saying you can't carry a rubber phallus in your briefcase, after all. You could go a step farther and wrap the thing in a copy of the US Constitution, if you wanted to really drive the point home (so to speak, heh).

    --
    Freedom: "I won't!"
    1. Re:Dildoes and the "boundaries of pranksterism" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If it's a foot long, you could possibly use it as a club to hijack the plane. Definitely contraband.

    2. Re:Dildoes and the "boundaries of pranksterism" by Monte · · Score: 1

      Now, carrying a foot-long ass-widener of a dildo in your bags, that is a little harder to characterize as anything other than funny

      Two words for you: Sexual Harassment. People have gotten sued for things as minor as complementing the way a co-working looks in her dress, I imagine dropping a sex toy in your bag when you know there's a chance you'll be searched by a female security person could get your rear canned.

      I don't want to come across as a stick in the mud, but I don't want to see somebody get fired trying to be funny in a time when sense of humor is at a premium.

      Perhaps a briefcase chock-full of ping-pong balls and/or marbles would be a relativley safe way to make your point...

      ...and then act really pissed when they spill'em all over the floor. "My collection! You bastards!"

    3. Re:Dildoes and the "boundaries of pranksterism" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Arguably, spreading a white powder on a co-worker's desk in these times is pretty serious

      So stop pouring cocaine all over my desk!

  227. thomas jefferson...the whiner by Rai · · Score: 1

    "those who would trade freedom for security deserve and shall have neither."

    1. Re:thomas jefferson...the whiner by limejuice · · Score: 1
      "those who would trade freedom for security deserve and shall have neither."

      That would be Benajmin Franklin, genius.

      --
      Daniel J. Kelly
    2. Re:thomas jefferson...the whiner by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The price of freedom is eternal vigilance... THAT WAS JEFERSON YOU BEVIS!

  228. freedom vs. security by Rai · · Score: 0, Redundant

    "those who would trade freedom for security deserve and shall have neither." -thomas jefferson

    1. Re:freedom vs. security by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Thats Benjamin Franklin.

      just thought I'd let you know,

      Case

  229. Before you question the searches by flatrock · · Score: 2

    Before you question the searches, make sure you are prepared to answer a simple question. Why do you really need to take your personal items into work. If your employer has real security concerns, then they should be allowd to be able to make reasonable searches. If you're not comfortable with being searched, then you might need to find different employment. In the United States you have a right to be protected from unreasonable searches. This ins't a case where the government or your employer wants to search your home, or spot check you as you are walking down the street in public. You have the option of not working there. You even have an option of not bringing those personal items with you to work.

    1. Re:Before you question the searches by Karl+Cocknozzle · · Score: 1
      This ins't a case where the government or your employer wants to search your home, or spot check you as you are walking down the street in public. You have the option of not working there. You even have an option of not bringing those personal items with you to work.
      You either failed 8th Grade Civics or don't live in the United States.

      Two points: No employer has any business searching my home for any reason. Period.

      Second: The government does NOT have the automatic right to "spot check you as you are walking down the street".

      Arbitrary "spot checks" are unconstitutional. If the officer has reason to believe a crime is being committed he can question you hoping to find "probably cause" to search your person. Of course, if he arrests you on the basis of the conversation, he can automatically search you (for "his safety") for weapons before putting you in the police car.

      It's a fine distinction, but it is completely untrue that the government (or anybody, for that matter) has the right to "spot check" anybody on the street.
      --
      Who did what now?
    2. Re:Before you question the searches by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just to clarify: "This isn't a case..."

      The poster was saying the same thing ("Arbitrary 'spot checks' are unconstitutional...")

    3. Re:Before you question the searches by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, just off the top of my head, I need to bring my personal items into work so that I am not completely naked.

      And no - I'm not kidding. I'm 100% serious. Where do you draw the line between what's "necessary", and what's "unnecessary" as far as personal items go?

      Women need feminine hygine products - but ya know, you could hide some contraband in those - better not allow those in... (I can't wait to see that tried - there'd be knocked out guards everywhere).

      I need my PDA. But I suppose it could have some formed plastic explosive between the LiOn battery...

      What about the watch? It could have the back removed and be filled with toxins...

      The gist is that the searches are assinine. They don't do a damn thing to prevent an attack. Any determined attacker is going to be in on the attack with the guards, or is going to drive a truck into the building, or some other crazy shit...

      When I was in college, one day the anti-theft system in the library died. They wanted to search my bag before I left and I promptly told them that simply because they failed to maintain a system designed to prevent theft, didn't mean that I automatically gave up my rights against unreasonable search. I flat out refused to allow them to search my bag. They called the cops. And ya know what? I still didn't allow them to search it. They had no probable cause and I was allowed to leave, along with the 500 other people who were watching what was going on and subsequently refused to be searched as well.

      Illegal searches without probable cause are prohibited by our Constitution (by which WE formed the Government and gave them certain powers) for a number of reasons. The point is refuse to be searched - always.

      To the Government: Don't Tread On Me!

  230. stubby pencils? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    While, in general, you make good points - they fail here. We aren't talking about daily searches of one's person for office pencils and paper clips. We're talking about the NI-fucking-H. Just like it is not unreasonable to ask that someone operating heavy and dangerous equipment that could severely harm other people to take a drug test before granting that person employment at your company, asking someone who works at a facility that may contain dangerous and extremely deadly elements (ebola, anthrax, chicken pox, plague, anyone?) to render their packages for search on entrance and exit is also reasonable.

    This has nothing to do with (as far as my support) "oh my god, terrorists! september 11th! we must give up our rights!". This has everything to do with the fact that a person could carry a gun inside and forcibly take supplies or could sneak supplies out that could harm massive populations.

    Working at a music store and being forced to undergo a search of your clothing and your bags every time you leave after work, however, is another thing. But we're not talking about CD's or office pens here, are we?

  231. Doesn't have to be in contract by _damnit_ · · Score: 1

    My former employer had contracts with the defense department. My employment contract mentioned nothing about agreeing to searches. However, near every main entrance, there was a sign warning that all bags were subject to search. I recall that there was a reference to a federal code at the bottom of the sign. So,(and IANAL) I believe it is federal law in some cases and you may not have any choice in the matter. Your car may be a different story.

    --


    _damnit_

    It's my job to freeze you. -- Logan's Run
  232. Re:thomas jefferson...the Straw Man by rjamestaylor · · Score: 2
    These are not violations of freedom, though.

    If they were arresting people for protesting the war or writing critiques of our government, or firing people who "looked" like a terrorist, or prohibited people of certain faiths from flying, ... these would be violations of freedoms and rights.

    Having your backpack searched -- and not for anything but for weapons, etc. -- is an inconvenience.

    These are called REASONABLE searches. Perhaps not before September 11, but definitely afterwards.

    --
    -- @rjamestaylor on Ello
  233. What? by edibleplastic · · Score: 2

    You're working at the National Institutes of Health and you don't want there to be bag searches? Can you think of a terrorist wouldn't want to attack there? Do the reports that the capitol is filled with Anthrax not bother you? Let me ask you something: you are working in a high profile government lab dealing with health issues, and you don't want to be hassled with having your bag searched? Sure, fourth amendment and all that, but can you honestly say you would rather trade your bag searches for the possible threat of Anthrax or whatever else the terrorists decide to use next? I know this sounds like trolling, but you have to realize that there is the very real threat of your life being at stake. Who would have thought that software comapnies would have been targeted, but they were! Put your pride aside now, so you can live knowing that nobody is walking in with Anthrax to your very tempting lab.

  234. Do nothing if you want to lose your rights by njdj · · Score: 2, Insightful

    after having my bag searched on my way to my car (which was also thoroughly inspected) after work, I decided I'm not comfortable subjecting myself to searches of my personal belongings at every turn. I want to know if I have a right to refuse searches?

    Of course you have; you shouldn't need a lawyer to tell you that. The owner of a building can refuse to admit you if you refuse to be searched before entering it. But by allowing yourself to be searched on the way to your car, you're giving up your own rights and helping to diminish everyone else's.

    Rights are not something that are handed out for free. If you want them, you have to defend them. This will cause you trouble and inconvenience. Read about how the signatories of the Declaration of Independence fared.

  235. Re:f1rst anal by mikesd81 · · Score: 1

    Just one question..... What the hell is the point ?

    --
    That which does not kill me only postpones the inevitable.
  236. It's WAR out there - Stop whining and grow up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Your 'feelings' don't mean squat compared to the 5,000 bodies laying at the bottom of the WTC rubble, or the postal workers who have died due to inhalation Anthrax while simply doing their job.

  237. Searches by dragoness.ai · · Score: 1

    if you happen to live (or visit) Israel for example, or for that matter, any other country outside your little north american realm, you will be bound to realize that searches are a common thing.

    it is "normal" to be searched, whether or not you work in the university, a hospital or even entering a supermarket. it might not be pleasant, but it does not make it unreasonable or any less normal.

    i am more worried about the cornea scans and the fingerprinting - that stuff already tresspasses into my own realm of privacy and maintaining anonimity. having to put my fingerprints on record so i can fly on a plane is bloody ridiculous. that, my firend, is not normal.

  238. Inspections by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, it seems to me that if they have established the right to radomly inspect you bodily fluids (read: pee) then you probably don't have a LEGAL leg to stand on...

    jik-

  239. what's really annoying... by maxpublic · · Score: 1

    ...is that so many people jump up and claim "hey, the Bill of Rights only applies to the feds; your employer can do whatever they like to you." No doubt an urban legend in law as it seems to be widespread and generally accepted.

    It also isn't true. The Fourth Amendment, for those who can't be bothered to read the Constitution or the attendant papers written by the people who actually crafted it:

    "The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized."

    Please note that nowhere does it say "but this only applies to the feds" or "corporations are exempt". In NONE of the papers written on the Constitution by the Founders does it specifically separate rights based upon who violates them, e.g., bad for government but okay for business. In fact, the it *never even occurred* to the people who wrote the Constitution that anyone would make such a distinction.

    You see, the Constitution is the highest law of the land; these rights apply AT ALL TIMES. Or they did until our government started arguing for exemptions (e.g., mandatory drug testing).

    Our government and courts might exempt certain entities from the provisions of the 4th Amendment; the 4th itself does no such thing nor was it supposed to be open to exemptions of any kind. The guys who wrote the thing specifically claimed that these rights couldn't be abridged, not by the government or anyone else. The fact that they are makes the exemptions ILLEGAL until such a time as the Constitution is amended to eliminate or change the 4th Amendment.

    Max

    --
    My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
  240. are you under 110 stories... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...of the world trade centers? did you die in fireball after your plane went head on with a building? no, you're still alive and bitching. i'm sure the people that died on sept 11th wish there would have been more security in airports. and when something big happens reguarding bio-terrorism and they find that it was stolen from a us lab we're all going to be wishing there was more security there. we dont know what is going to happen next but if we dont try to stop it just because we dont know exactly where its going to happen then we didnt do all we could.

    1. Re:are you under 110 stories... by Boomer2 · · Score: 1

      Nice try; but I'll bet that the brave firefighters and police who died that day would wish they died unnoticed when they look down from Heaven and see how much of our freedom we've lost.

    2. Re:are you under 110 stories... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i dont think so

  241. And THAT is acceptable to you? by MadCow42 · · Score: 2

    Do you really want the security guard to see your huge hardon every day as you get scanned, because you have a thing for women with handcuffs?

    Maybe you're homophobic, and the guard is looking a little too closely at your scans...

    Really, that's TOO invasive for my tastes, no matter HOW you look at it.

    You wanna know the detail is shows? Go look at the link he provided, there's images.

    MadCow.

    --
    I used to have a sig, but I set it free and it never came back.
  242. The system still works by spam_and_egcs · · Score: 2
    Article IV of the United States Constitution states:


    The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.


    In a nutshell, this is saying that you can not be searched without consent unless a warrant has been issued that specifically states the (a)location and (b) the purpose. But, I'd imagine your employer can search your personal effects because you did consent - likely either through your contract (go back and read the fine print) or by entering the building. The latter is the case here, where there is a little sign in the lobby that basically says entering the building gives your consent to allow security to search your property.


    (begin rant)
    I'm tiring of all the conspiracy-theorist rhetoric flying around to instill FUD. You can be part of the solution, or part of the problem. Did you vote in the last election? When was the last time you wrote your representative? The newspaper outlining your objections in detail so others may read it? In short, have you exhausted the considerable assets you have at your disposal, guaranteed by the Constitution? Our system works, and it works well if you use it. The problem here is apathy and general ignorance. So do something about it. This country has become what it is because capitalism has allowed us to be limited only by our own potential. Likewise, if unchecked capitalism becomes self-centered and materialistic, and it is the job of our government to counter that with the voice of reason and justice. Instead of bitching about how big business is giving it to you up the a$$, start supporting legislation to reform the process and get big money out of the picture. Support bills like S479 and HR1482, that are trying to appropriate funding so that the voting process is modernized and uniformly administered. Hell, write your own and have your Senator or Representative sponsor it. You're a victim only if you are willing to be victimized. So take the immense power you wield as a member of this Republic* and do something about it.
    (end rant)


    *not Democracy, but that's another rant.

  243. Defense against madness? by mshomphe · · Score: 1

    For those of you advocating the "grin-and-bear-it" attitude, I have a question: Do these new searches and security measures actually improve security?

    I don't think it does: insane, murderous people will always find a way to get evil done. Humans are amazingly resourceful, and can find their way around pretty much any obstacle. When you build the proverbial "better mousetrap", the world may beat a path to your door, but you also make a smarter mouse.

    The solution is not beefing up security and making every citizen a suspect; rather, it is in removing the fertile grounds of madness.

    --
    She sat at the window watching the evening invade the avenue.
  244. do you understand what tacit consent is? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Also, just as a point, living in a free society is not a birthright. It is something fought and suffered for.

    uh, buddy? as long as tacit consent is the only requirement for native citizenship - what, actually agreeing with your countries form of government isn't required? - living in a "free society" can be considered a birthright, just as much as is citizenship. think about it.
    1. Re:do you understand what tacit consent is? by mystery_bowler · · Score: 2

      From your statement, I can only guess that you are somehow drawing a correlation between being a citizen (of the U.S., I'm assuming) and having the "birthright" to a free society. At least in the case of the United States, those born as citizens do enjoy the same freedoms as the rest of the citizens. In that kind of argument, I suppose you could say freedom is a birthright. But that's not what I'm intending to argue against.

      What I'm intending to say is that the world owes you, I and everyone else nothing. Freedom is not a given. Freedom is not a fundamental law of nature. Saying that I, by supporting my government's efforts to provide better security for my fellow citizens, am betraying the birthright of my children has no validity to me because I don't consider freedom something that is gifted upon birth and automatically assumed for life.

      As I said, I can see your argument. A given country allows the right of it's citizens to live in a "free society". When a person is born in said country, the person is given citizenship by default. Therefore, the right to live in a "free society" is a birthright. Good logic...except that the right to live in a "free society" came at (and will always come at) a cost. It may not be paid by you, so you'll never know about it and may even feel that freedom really is your "birthright". But don't be fooled.

      Our generation may well end up paying the price for the freedom of future generations. That's something I can live with.

      --

      My sigs always suck.
  245. What's the beef again? by rnturn · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Maybe it's been too long since I worked for a defense contractor where your briefcase was searching going into as well as out of the facility... but I don't see the problem. The company has trade secrets, etc., that it has to protect. Heck, the company I work for now used to have a policy where anyone bringing a camera on the premises could be fired.

    If this were happening while entering or leaving a public place, that's a different story.

    --
    CUR ALLOC 20195.....5804M
  246. One slight problem... by cr0sh · · Score: 2

    All jobs have pros and cons, one of the cons about jobs that affect everyone in general is that when there is a WAR your personal freedoms get a little squashed.

    America is not officially at War - Congress has yet to issue a Declaration of War.

    --
    Reason is the Path to God - Anon
    1. Re:One slight problem... by Jboy_24 · · Score: 1

      ok, agreed, currently the US is not at War. I take then that you feel that the Congress has to 'Officially' declare War on somebody/something/the air we breath, before there can be any limiting of rights at sensitive/vital government institutions? How do you feel about the institutions that even before Sept 11th 'vilolated' the employee's rights by searching them? Do you think that the janitors for the whitehouse should go unsearched unless Congress declares WAR?

    2. Re:One slight problem... by metachimp · · Score: 1
      Interesting that you might mention that. Congress has not, and definitely will not give a declaration of war. Instead, they handed over all their war making or breaking powers to the President. Now, we couldn't stop this war even if the majority of Americans wanted to. The war will go on at the pleasure of the President.


      It's funny, most people seem to have no problem with this whatsoever, but it frightens me.

      --
      The system has failed you, don't fail yourself. --Billy Bragg
    3. Re:One slight problem... by cr0sh · · Score: 2

      I wasn't really disagreeing with the searches, per se, but rather the statement that we are "at War". The public, as well as many people here on /. - actually believe we are at "War", and think "War" has been declared, when it has not.

      I do disagree with any violations of American civil rights as protected by our Constitution, in the name of needing to fight this undeclared "war".

      --
      Reason is the Path to God - Anon
    4. Re:One slight problem... by cr0sh · · Score: 2

      Actually, I have heard that they have 90 days, at which time they have to call back the troops, or formerly declare war. I don't know what the truth or source of this is, though.

      One thing that is interesting is that by not declaring war, in theory the US is not bound by the Geneva Convention (I think that is right) - thus all the rules on POW treatment, etc - are out the window for both sides.

      --
      Reason is the Path to God - Anon
  247. Pissed? Don't be! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I would be damn happy if I would have to go thru some checks. At least I would know I am a bit safe.

  248. Searches at the NIH and CDC by Deanasc · · Score: 2
    I just spent a couple of days driving into and out of Ft Detrick. That's the place where the USA's Anthrax bombs were manufactured and tested in the 1950's. Security was very tight getting onto the base for anyone with out of state plates. Trunks get opened and visually inspected but spare tire wells are not. Anyone with Maryland or Virginia plates were rushed through security (as far as I could tell in the time I waited for my Massachusetts plated car to be searched.) There was no search to leave the base.

    Having spent my summer in Israel where you don't get searched but there is a constant heightened vigilance against any monkee business, I have to say the USA is going about this searching thing half assed.

    What we need is better foreign intelligence, fewer foreign nationals coming here and getting treated better than we treat ourselves (Seth Greenberg in Boston can stop sucking up to any Saudi with a credit card) and a return to main street small town values.

    Go ahead and flame away.

    --
    I've hit Karma 50 and gotten a Score:5, Troll... I win!
  249. Re:Searches, Some prespective by Princess+Firefly · · Score: 1

    Can you imagine what people would have done 100 years ago if they weren't allowed to walk into their place of work without being searched? Revolt, that's what.

    Why do we have an ever increasing tolerance for having our freedom removed by the state? Partially due to the fear mongering we're exposed to every day (the recent corporate media coverage of the hijackings was a pretty good example). Fear and paranoia are very real and I understand why people would think that it's reasonable to give up their freedom in exchange for protection but we have to realize who's giving the protection, what type of protection their giving us, and why they are removing our freedom.

    The state has a lot to gain from isolating us from each other. Now we need protection against those "Whackos" at the place where we work. Who remembers the string of videos for kids in the 80's with the message "Never talk to strangers"? Communities question, discuss, and have the power to act. This is pretty threatening to the man. Safer for him if we're isolated and afraid of other people and if our personal freedom is severely restricted. "Terrorist" is just the buzzword of the day to further the public psyches' fear of each other.

    Remember everyone, good citizens go to work/school, drive their individual vehicle home, lock the door, turn on the alarm, and watch TV. Let the police take care of the criminals/activists/terrorists/illegal aliens/anarchists/immigrants/(insert flavour of the month here).

    The princess.

  250. Re:ATWGW: Already are in a big way! by stnls_steel_mouse · · Score: 1
    Since the FISA courts and their MO were publicized years ago, I have been troubled by how we are separating the residents of our country into citizens, who annoyingly have certain rights guaranteed to them by the constitution, and all the aliens living here, whom the government treats the way they would really like to treat the rest of us. I thought that the Declaration of Independence said that "... all men are created equal..." not, "all citizens".

    The newest revisions included in the USA act awaiting passage this very moment blur the lines considerably, reducing all citizens to potential victims of secret FISA warrants, black bag jobs, and surveillance of their communications and financial transactions as detailed in this write-up of the bill at ACLU.ORG

    More troubling by far are the sentiments echoed in this story at the Washington Post, which contain speculations by government officials about the need to apply torture to material witnesses and the justification for this torture due to the urgent nature of the investigation. Mind you, these are material witnesses, not indicted criminal suspects. The fact that they have not been indicted removes all Miranda rights protections from them, including right to counsel. The fact that they are not citizens removes any protections against unlimited detention. There are persistent but unconfirmed reports of the detainees in Manhattan being subjected to sleep and sensory deprivation, and reports that doctors are being called in to determine exactly the levels of "pressure" they can be subjected to, as well as recommending drugs to be used to assist in interrogation. These reports seem to indicate that the torture has already started, and is not merely being discussed. The participation of doctors in this kind of torture, even in a monitoring capacity, is directly against the Nuremberg Code, the UN Principles of Medical Ethics, and the UN Convention against Torture.

    As a nation, we are perilously close to returning to the days of the Cold War and before when unwitting human experimentation in mind-control and behavior modification was conducted in secret, when U.S. soldiers were drugged and in some cases driven to suicide in order to try out the very "truth serums" being discussed in the Post article, and when conscientious objectors were used as guinea pigs for starvation and cold weather exposure experiments not so very different from those that Nazi doctors were hung for at the end of WWII.

    Looking at things from a legal point of view, we are either at war with someone, or we are not. If we are at war, then aren't the people being held in Manhattan Prisoners of War, and subject to the protections of the Geneva Convention? If we are not at war, then this all devolves into a pure criminal proceeding where coerced testimony, "assisted interrogation" and the like are clearly unconstitutional and will poison any cases ever brought against these people.

    The corrupting influence at work here is the mixing of Intelligence activities and criminal proceedings, which are anathema to each other. Intelligence is the world of innuendo, hunches, and threads of circumstance where decisions to attack aspirin factories with cruise missiles can be made on the slimmest of evidence, or none at all. Criminal prosecution depends on rigorously documented chains of evidence, sworn testimony and eye-witnesses. Phrases like "beyond a reasonable doubt" seemed to appear frequently the two times I was a juror, once in a murder trial. Due to this difference, the FBI is not institutionally equipped to operate in the Intelligence community, and the CIA is psychologically unable to grasp the difference between rumor and evidence. Mixing the two as the USA act does will forever damage the integrity of our nation's government and reduce the United States to a totalitarian state the likes of which the world has never seen before:

    Every totalitarian distopia ever envisioned in literature (or occurring in real life, over time) has one attribute in common: the crushing lack of personal luxury for the masses. This has been at least a partial stimulus to any resistance against these regimes. The levels of affluence in most of the US, combined with the public's ability to have their attention monopolized by the most recent media craze, whether the Gary Condit affair, or the current Anthrax scare, makes us most susceptible to a gradual erosion of our rights. The frogs are being not so gently boiled right now and no one is complaining too much.

    Write to your Congress-Critters today!

    "I fear for the Republic"

    Tom Porter

  251. Unreasonable: Maybe. Illegal: Maybe not. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If your NIH facility processes DOD classified information then you are subject to search upon exiting the facility according to 32CFR159a.39

    The Atomic Energy Act of 1939 (I think) applies to those who who work in a facility with DOE classified information.

    If there is no such information at your facility, there may be some other justification or it could be that the searches are being done under the guise of good old fashioned paranoia which might not be legal.

  252. I am reminded of: by TheBishop · · Score: 1
    "We had a deal!"

    "I am now altering the deal. Pray I do not alter it further"

  253. Thousands of people die every day. by Behrooz · · Score: 1

    ...and thousands of people die every year because they drive or ride in automobiles.

    You're telling *us* to put things in perspective?

    Terrorism is one of the last things I'm afraid of, and I refuse to submit to restrictions imposed by the irrational fear of others.

    --
    "We have to go forth and crush every world view that doesn't believe in tolerance and free speech." - David Brin
  254. You forgot the first link by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The mechanics that fix them, the diesel that fuels them, for that matter the factory that builds them are all very vulnerable to personal weapons.

    So is the man who gives them orders.

  255. talk to your boss by wolske · · Score: 1

    your employers probably have every right to fire you if you don't comply. but if you are a quality employee and your position is important enough to require special skills that you posess, why would they want to terminate you? at the very least, raise the issue with your superiors. ask the guards what the policy is if you refuse, or what exemptions you might be able to get. it may be as simple as asking, or getting a few coworkers to rally together and collectively work to change the policies.

  256. Body Cavity Searches by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What! They aren't doing full body cavity searches? Time to break out the latex gloves and KY jelly. As one strip searcher was reported to have said, "They're all pink on the inside."

  257. Your serving your country.. It's our duty! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Stop complaining, and if you are not a citizen
    of the United States... leave! I work for a
    State agency and I don't mind the searches. We all
    need to do our part. I wouldn't mind if we let
    the army/police search for Arabs / terrorists in
    a door to door search. If that's what it takes then that's what it takes.

  258. Who was it that said .... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Who ever trades liberty for security deserves neither."

    The American people would do well to remember that

  259. The answer you seek... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There was a good article on this on Yahoo!.

    - AC

  260. Re:Who was it that said ; Bullshit, we are at war! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Dude.. we are at war. So yes liberties go out the
    door for a little while. We need to do our part.
    I have no problem providing my ID, allowing security to look through my stuff. I have nothing to hide.

  261. Reminds me of austin powers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How did this get in here? Somebody's pulling a prank on me! Honestly, it's not mine!

    1. Re:Reminds me of austin powers by nathanm · · Score: 2
      Honestly, it's not mine!
      Then they'd definitely search further. Remember, they ask if you packed your own bags, etc.
    2. Re:Reminds me of austin powers by gibodean · · Score: 1

      I have always wondered - what happens if you say "yes, it has been out of my sight since I packed it.", or "no, someone else packed it".

      I never have, even when someone else did pack the bag, because I didn't know what would happen if I did tell the truth.

      It seems like they're only asking so that you incriminate yourself if something is found on you.

      But, what are they instructed to do if you say that someone else has packed it, or had access to it ? I've always wondered.

    3. Re:Reminds me of austin powers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    4. Re:Reminds me of austin powers by gibodean · · Score: 1

      Thankyou,

      But those links just talk about what happens if you are a smart arse.

      I just want to know what happens if you tell the truth, and say that someone else did pack your bags.

      Is it illegal to tell the truth now ?
      It seems rather stupid to ask the question "did you pack your bags" if it's only legal to say "yes".

    5. Re:Reminds me of austin powers by B.D.Mills · · Score: 2

      Asking if someone else packed your bags or if your bag has been out of your sight is likely to subject you to some extra scrutiny. Accept this extra scrutiny willingly, it's for your safety. There is a small chance that while the bag was out of your sight, someone slipped a bomb or other similar device into it.

      --

      The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing. - Edmund Burke
    6. Re:Reminds me of austin powers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      At one time people used to give strangers packages to deliver to someone either already on board the plane or at the destination airport. These packages sometimes contained drugs or worse...
      It's for your own protection mainly.

    7. Re:Reminds me of austin powers by gibodean · · Score: 1

      So it sounds like if you say "yes", that they definitely x-ray your bags and stuff.

      I've had that happen to me once as a random check anyway. Saying "yes" probably just makes it a definite.

      Is that right ?

      I was worried that saying "yes" would mean you'd have to wait for hours for your chance for a body cavity search, and have to dump your luggage contents all over the floor to be picked through with tweezers.

    8. Re:Reminds me of austin powers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, some guy was arrested the first day the planes were flying again since Sept 11. He said someone else packed his bags and that it had been out of his sight.

      They may not have performed a body cavity search, but in prison you get the cavity probe instead.

  262. Sears Tower by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I work in the Sears Tower, and get everything searched every time I enter the building. If they weren't doing it, I would be finding another job in the suburbs right about now. Yes, it's ridiculous that we have to go through this.....no, it's not our fault. Blame it on the terrorist bastards. And when you go into a privately owned building, expect to follow their rules. It might be different for public buildings, but I don't think it should be. I think you're probably out-numbered on this. Most reasonable people are willing to sacrifice some personal freedom in order to preserve freedom as a whole. So basically, stop whining about it.

  263. No recourse by Johnboi+Waltune · · Score: 2, Informative
    The 4th Amendment only protects you from the government. If your company wants to search your bag to allow you access to THEIR property, then they are well within their rights. There are three things you can do:

    1) Put up with it. Where I work they do the same thing. So the security guard gets to see my sweaty workout clothes. Big deal. 2) Try to change the system. 3) Quit. I think #1 is the most reasonable choice. If they start doing body cavity searches, then by all means, investigate #2 and #3!

    --
    "The advanced societies of the future will be driven by competing systems of psychopathology." -JG Ballard
  264. convenience? by ecktech · · Score: 1

    We all agree trading liberty for security gives you neither, but trading security for convenience? That's absurd!

  265. IAAL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    IAAL (California Bar), the search in question, is valid, as it is not imposed on the personal property of the individual in question, the santity of his home, personal property and other related inheritence; thus the search in question, taken on behalf of a government entity, imposed not individualistically, but generally, conforming to all entities concerned, equally, is valid within all accepted federal and state/DC laws, the individual concerned should apperaciate that their other rights are being protected by this unquestionablly valid search.

    Thank you.

    1. Re:IAAL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      UAAL

      What's with u dudes and full stops (.)? Is there some sort of holy scaralagious assocaited with ending your sentences in a dot? Heh. ...

  266. Security Responses Worldwide? by oo7tushar · · Score: 1
    I was just wondering what type of searches people are facing these days. I know that here in Canada life is almost back to usual. We had a meeting today about handling suspicious mail (in reponse to Anthrax threats and all), but other than that we haven't had searches or the like on campus.
    I know that the airports have a lot more security now but how much? What are the major changes you've seen? I'm especially interested about Canada and how Canada is responding.

    Thank you

  267. "I'm tired of whiners!" mentality by dlakelan · · Score: 1

    I'm tired of the "I'm tired of whiners mentality."

    Yes, security is important, but so are rights. And the two go hand in hand, they are NOT opposed.

    I am more afraid of the National Guard at airports than terrorists. I am more afraid of the police and surveillance cameras than I am of anthrax. Why? Not because I'm a criminal, but because I don't have to be if the police have too much power! By the time they have their way with you, it's too late. Look at Rodney King, or the people whose assets have been siezed under anti-drug laws.

    No, lets get some REAL security, and REAL freedom at the same time.

    1) Stop illegally restricting the Second Amendment. The recent US vs. Emerson case completely affirmed that the second amendment gives citizens a right to keep and bear arms without needing the government's consent. In the majority of states non-felons can already carry firearms, but there is a complex morass of "permit" systems however. Change that to a national one time background check and issue a permit on demand for nominal (read $20 fee) good forever, until revoked by act of law (such as conviction of felony etc).

    Lets stop creating "designated target" zones by disarming our citizens at schools, government buildings, airports, on the streets and in their homes... Armed citizens and pilots would have prevented all the 9/11 attacks, at NO cost to liberty or government coffers. Search technology is expensive and considerably (orders of magnitude) less effective, it is almost always used to hassle petty criminals (simply because only 1 in a billion or more searches actually find terrorists).

    As for biological agents delivered remotely (ie. the mail). Bio agents can be neutralized by heat, light, and chemicals.

    Worried about the mail? Run it through rollers at 170 C. Cost to taxpayers? Minimal. Have a special class of heat sensitive mail (photos, packages, flammables etc) that is subject to different handling.

    No searches required.

    How about aerosol chemicals, food poisoning, water systems blablabla?

    The fundamental question to ask is: does the government have a truly valid reason to suspect you? If yes, they will have no problem getting warrants. If not, they shouldn't be able to search you.

    A "reasonable expectation of privacy?"

    The reasonability of privacy expectations in a public place is directly related to the unreasonability of allowing free access to that place.

    Is it reasonable to allow free access to nuclear weapons? NO. Is it reasonable to allow search free access to a football stadium? YES. You think terrorists will be stupid enough to try to sneak through searches with bombs anyway? Why bother. They'll find some better means to blow you up if they know about the searches.

    When it comes to searching employees of NIH, what do they expect to find? Those tiny microbes you've carefully hidden by wiping a billion of them on your left pinky? It'd take several days to grow cultures and detect them. Guns. Not a problem if citizens could have their rights back. Bombs? Don't kid yourself. Who would bother going through the search. Just park the car out front like at Oklahoma city.

    Lets get real people, the fact that a few terrorists attacked "designated victims" (read forceably disarmed citizens on an airplane) took control of an airline and smashed it into a building is NOT reason to give free reign to the government to probe our lives. It IS reason to stop creating "designated victims"

    Anthrax through the mail? Don't make me laugh. This is a minor procedural problem easily handled by sterilizing mail.

    It's impossible to prevent someone from turning common household bleach and ammonia into a chemical warfare agent. Get used to it. Searches won't help us be safe. Quite the opposite.

    --
    ((lambda (x) (x x)) (lambda (x) (x x))) http://www.endpointcomputing.com a scientific approach to custom computing.
  268. WHEN WILL THIS TRAVESTY OF HUMAN RIGHTS ENDS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Oh no the government why must you take away my right!

    Next thing FBI will is breaking in my house and taking away my mountain dew cans and putting oxy on my proigrammer pimples!

  269. Your Rights[tm] by lohphat · · Score: 1

    The US Constitution protects you from abuses from the government, not your employer. You are free to find work elsewhere.

  270. Canada VS States by Sandman1971 · · Score: 1

    I don't know about the US, but in Canada it is illegal for anyone, including your employer, to do body/bag/car searches without either your consent or a search warrant, in which case, the search would be performed by a law officer, and not your employer/security guard.

    --
    It's better to burn out than to fade away
  271. Stop moaning! by christophersaul · · Score: 1

    I live in the UK - am I being in fair in thinking that a large number of Americans do seem to moan and spout on excessively about their supposed rights! I find this ironic in a country where workers have so few rights, there's no state health care, segregation still existed in the 60s, etc, etc, etc.

    So what if you get checked at work? It so pretentious to say 'I'm a scientist, I'm surely beyond suspicion'.

    People in the UK have lived with terrorism for years, from an organisation sponsored and recently actively funded by numerous freedom loving citizens in the US. Thanks for that.

    We're used to the inconvenience of a little security. I've been stopped and searched by the police, I have my bag checked going into museums for goodness' sake.

    Who cares?

  272. Searches by hookskip · · Score: 1

    Change Employer and move on. If they ask you why you are leaving tell them.

  273. A sign of the times by q-soe · · Score: 2

    This is a sign of the time - increasingly the US and other countries are seeing the threat of terrorism as a clarion call to crack down on the genral community and most members of that community can see nothing wrong with that - they are scared.

    The actions of the terrorists in the US have led to a world paranoid about threats - the media hype the anthrax scare to the point where everyone is scared of their own shadow, security is tightened everywhere and now they are talking about deportation and imprisonment without trial indefinetly - thus the planks of the constitution and the democtratic legal system are being slowly pulled away in what may very well be the best of intentions.

    Your employer, government or not, can argue they have the right to search you and in the current climate they can do so as not many people will object - im not against searches in some ways but if someone has the proper access and id then why search them ? the fact is that locking down buildings and demanding searches wont stop terrorist attacks, they dond even need to be in a building for gods sake !

    The general population of the US and Australia (where i live) are the same - the man in the street (sheep) does not question the government and will follow whatever actions the government can make justifiable - the US president didn't even get 50% of the primary vote ?

    We need to make sure that the actions of our elected representatives are tempered with common sense and that they are held to account for ALL of them - the US constitution is a powerfull document - i have a copy on the wall of my office because even though im not an american i love the words and think that all countries should have such a document BUT if the government does not have checks and balances applied by the general populace they can ignore it with all too much ease by using the calls of public safety and national security - and brand anyone who does not agree a traitor = dont believe me - what about the McCarthy era ? the first, fifth and fourth amendments (and others) were trampled into the dust by the government and the people stood by and cheered.

    Always be aware that freedom is impossible to regain after it has been lost

    --
    I refuse to argue with Anonymous Cowards - if you want a discussion get an account....
    1. Re:A sign of the times by mami · · Score: 1
      Always be aware that freedom is impossible to regain after it has been lost

      What an idiotic sig and blunt lie.

    2. Re:A sign of the times by q-soe · · Score: 2

      UMM

      Its NOT my sig and i defy you to prove it to be a lie - once you give up a freedom you never get it back in the same form - you cant just hand over your rights and then say 'oh i didnt want to do that'

      --
      I refuse to argue with Anonymous Cowards - if you want a discussion get an account....
  274. No rights are being infringed by Sloppy · · Score: 2

    This is not a Fourth Ammendment issue. The search isn't something that is being forced upon you by law. It is something being requested by your employer, and if you don't like it, you don't have to enter their building and get searched. You have the freedom to say No, thus no rights are being infringed.

    --
    As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
  275. Its not that bad by Peaker · · Score: 2

    Living in Israel, we always had these searches, and its not that bad.
    People here are totally ignoring the fact that this truly does protect against bombing attempts.

    This is not so prevasive, and you'll survive a guy looking into your bag, to make sure its not a bomb.

    I understand the feelings people have about the indefinite arrests, secret searches, etc. But a guy looking through your bag to make sure its not a bomb?

    You'll live.

  276. Re:Who was it that said ; Bullshit, we are at war! by Mr.Spaz · · Score: 1

    Yes! We are at war, and must remain vigilant lest infiltrators tear us apart from within! Eastasia is in the grip of Emmanuel Goldstein and mus...er, I mean, Afghanistan is in the palm of Osama Bin Laden! We must root out the wrongthinkers before it's too late!

    In case you didn't catch the sarcasm; wartime is no excuse for the sacrifice of liberty. It may happen, but sustained government action and policy cannot be tolerated. Be wary of the myriad "Anti-Terrorism" bills hitting the floor of Congress. Some of the terms of these are downright scary.

  277. Re:No, the first known biological attack was... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I seem to remember way back in my history class about blankets deliberatly contaminated with smallpox being given to native american tribes. Perhaps "the first time US citizens..."

  278. Then quit loser by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you don't like your employer's policies, quit,
    you loser. They have a right to know what's coming
    into and leaving their property.

  279. 26Mb Log of net usage by NoWhereMan · · Score: 1
    Unless conspicuously stated,


    Do you know how easy this is? I recently had a boss confront me about 3 months worth of URL accesses. Fortunately, I have a tool available to me to keep them honest. Either party can extract their pound of flesh ;-)

    1. Re:26Mb Log of net usage by OSgod · · Score: 1

      And your still employed? If the company policy is clear and you are abusing a corporate resource (i.e.: using their bandwidth for non-business use) you should be out of there.

      Similar to if you made long distance calls on your company phone for non-work purposes. Perhaps a warning but then a "goodbye" is justified. The company is tracking every long distance call you make -- just as they track every web site you visit.

  280. the price of freedom by 20000hitpoints · · Score: 1

    What exactly is the price that you have to pay for the freedom to be able to come and go as you choose without being searched? Is it a price that only soldiers pay, like the people in our armed forces who died in WWII so that you can live in peace and enjoy that freedom? Or is it a price that some civilians must pay, like the people in the World Trade Center? Regardless of how you look at it, it's always a few giving their lives so that the many can have the object, the goal -- freedom, safety, security, privacy, the right to pursue happiness.

    However, it obviously doesn't make sense to say that "we all must die so that we can have freedom". Then who is left to enjoy the freedom? No one. Of course this doesn't make sense -- but so what?

    Well, "so what" is that, if we're not already there, we are quickly approaching an era when a single person can get off a plane at Chicago O'Hare Airport, walk out onto the sidewalk, release some kind of gas/germ/nanobot, or detonate some device, and kill ALL THE AMERICANS ON THE GLOBE, if not all the human beings. And there will be no one left to enjoy the freedom.

    That's why our definitions will have to change. That's why they are calling September 11th a "wake up call". The world is different now. America can and will fall and vanish as thoroughly as the Roman Empire vanished if it does not change with the times. But if America does change, and it puts in place measures and systems that block and defend against terrorism as effectively as we have defended against hostile nations in the past, then you could make a case that those people in the World Trade Center, the Pentagon, and the planes will not have died entirely in vain.

    --
    Don't post on slashdot. Get back to work.
    1. Re:the price of freedom by dlakelan · · Score: 1

      >Well, "so what" is that, if we're not already
      >there, we are quickly approaching an era when a
      >single person can get off a plane at Chicago
      >O'Hare Airport, walk out onto the sidewalk,
      >release some kind of gas/germ/nanobot, or
      >detonate some device, and kill ALL THE AMERICANS
      >ON THE GLOBE, if not all the human beings. And
      >there will be no one left to enjoy the freedom.

      We are not. And if we were, then no amount of searching people's bags and cars will help. if such a thing existed you'd never get remotely close enough to search for it.

      Now take a deep breath and stop spreading irrational fear.

      On the other hand, if you're the FBI, or DEA you'd love to have the power to search all kinds of things, and whoops he wasn't a terrorist, but look at these marijuana plants he's got in his garage... or Communist Party slogans (remember McCarthy?) or what have you....

      The fallacy is that searching people randomly will help. It won't. It will definitely harm us.

      --
      ((lambda (x) (x x)) (lambda (x) (x x))) http://www.endpointcomputing.com a scientific approach to custom computing.
  281. Poor victim - I feel your pain by mami · · Score: 1

    whining, because he has to scan his backpack. You are a scientist ? What do you have in your lab ?

    (my most bitter sarcasm I am capable of starts here):
    Some nice little pure biochemicals for referemce purposes by any chance ? Hey brother, can you spare a gram of Anthrax ? I kind of hate some guys, you would really do me a favour ? Makes my killing so much more efficient.

    Hey, here is the deal. I tell you how many sleeper interns you guys do have at NIH ? Then you can make a lot of money accepting the award money, ok ? At the side I get a bit of spores and other such niceties. Done deal ?
    (end of my most disgusting sarcasm I never wanted to write)

  282. morons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What is it about you morons that keeps you from realizing that in times of war certain liberties are suspended for the common welfare? The WWII generation wouldn't have been weeping about someone searching a bag to make sure the guy sitting next to you wasn't ticking away while chanting Allah Akbar. Be freaking grateful your government cares about you rather collapsing under the threat like all these other third world nations do.

  283. Searching by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm afraid you've come across our old friend 'catch-22'. Without searches the white hats can't establish if your not a security threat,

    N.B. Here in the UK we've incidences of complete innocents 'carrying' somebody's bag into a building/plane/train for them, its that politeness thing :), so even the good guys can can do the bad guys bidding. This is a serious point, it does happen.

    So given your predicament what do you do ? The world is full of 'trusting' souls who may agree to carry a bag/bomb through, you can work it out, a guy with an arm cast, a little old lady, etc.

    So, it sucks, I agree, but if you want security, it means checking EVERYONE, not just those with a dark skin complexion. I can remember as a child evacuating my boarding school due to an IRA bomb threat, you've got to do it. 99/100 your wrong, but what if it's real, how do you know ?

    That's how terrorism works, sorry but as Mr. Arkin said 'that Catch-22's quite a catch' :(

  284. Being searched by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is standard in the company I work for. We have security key cards used to get into the parking lot, then when we get to a door entering the building inside the door guards stand there they search your bags then you must swipe your keycard again to gain entry to the building and on the way out they search your bag and will not let you take any equipment out with proper paperwork. Get used to corporate america :/

  285. Re:thomas jefferson...the Straw Man by deaconblues · · Score: 1

    Fine. Read this and tell me that people aren't being prohibited from flying for weak reasons. http://www.citypaper.net/articles/101801/news.godf rey.shtml

  286. Re:thomas jefferson...the Straw Man by rjamestaylor · · Score: 2
    Fine. Read this and tell me that people aren't being prohibited from flying for weak reasons. http://www.citypaper.net/articles/101801/news.godf rey.shtml

    Thanks for proving my point. Fight THIS, not searching someone backpack.

    --
    -- @rjamestaylor on Ello
  287. One person that refuses is a suspect by Mandelbrute · · Score: 1
    One person that refuses is a suspect and marked for extra attention, the only way to get around something like this is if everyone refuses.

    Talk to your union!

    Not in a union? Then things get tricky; anyone that starts to organise people in the workplace to improve conditions is usually seen as a troublemaker. Going through various levels of bosses can work if everyone up the chain to the boss that has the power to make the decision is reasonable and approachable - otherwise you'll get ignored or marked as a troublemaker.

  288. Quit Whining by The+Other+White+Meat · · Score: 1

    The security guards are not out to get you. They are there to protect you, and the assets of those who employ them.

    Don't like going through security? Then quit.

    Become a freelancer, working for yourself at home. I hear that you can make $50K just for reading websites; or licking envelopes; maybe its making necklaces from beads...

    --

    --- Generation X: The first generation to have SIG lines inferior to their parents... ---
  289. Try READING by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    The guy is talking about going in and out of work.


    When do they ask about packing your own bag?


    Sheesh!

    1. Re:Try READING by nathanm · · Score: 2

      Right, but the example in the parent post was related to travelling and airports.

  290. This question sickens me. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Listen, if I have to put up with some security guards checking me out every now and then to ensure that 5000+ more people won't fucking die, then fine. Stop whining about the minor inconvenience. If there's one thing that this whole tragedy has taught me, its not to worry about a few more cops, National Guards, or private security guards in our lives. They are here to protect us. Your workplace's policy of searching you is to protect you (because you very much seem to be at high risk). Folks, it really is a different world now. I live in NYC. And I love my freedom, just like everyone else. But we can't complain about minor intrusions like this, because the minute we let our guard down, God forbid we could become easy targets again. Just admit that Bush is actually handling this correctly, and let's get on with our lives.

  291. Guess again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Times of war?


    There has been no deeclaration of war, get real.

  292. He is an attorney. Was: Re:And you ask /. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ditto.

  293. Shame on you! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A good punshiment for this guy would be to give him a roll of paper towels, and bottle of Windex, then lock him in the Brentwood, DC post office for a week. Tell him it better be clean or he goes to DC jail.

  294. In response to points raised... by Chico+Science · · Score: 1

    Working a government lab during an anthrax scare

    First and foremost, long before the events of Sept. 11th, I had given plenty of thought to the resources available for agents of destruction. Kind of a side hobby since I enjoy medical thriller fiction and macguyver =). The fact remains that if I were inclined to engage in 1) taking things from my lab or 2) bringing a weapon of mass destruction to the NIH, I can tell you right now not a single security precaution operating at the NIH (to my knowledge) would stop me from doing so. The security checkpoints, which abound, are staffed almost exclusively by hired security, not trained, capable individuals. I'm 100% certain I could carry an overt weapon, such as a gun, into high security areas. I've more than 100% certain I could do the same with a chemical/biological weapon (CBW). The state of security does not at all impart me with any sense of heightened protection except from all but the most incompetent persons.

    Why should I have anything to worry about being searched?

    Aside from feeling that I'm having my rights violated, I don't have a reason. That's why it wasn't an issue until I finally got fed up. What am I carrying? Notes, journals, text books. Here's the funny bit, it's also 100% standard to carry hazardous chemical and biological agents from building to building. Heck, that's how things get around. If I wanted to walk into the Clinical Center (one of the more high profile buildings on campus) with tubes of Bacillus anthracis, Yersinia pestis, or Clostridium botulinum, I could. I would simply put them in a cooler, on ice, slap a biohazard sticker on it and walk right over with my lab coat and id. Fact of the matter is, I've carried biologicals straight through checkpoints without an issue. But, when I carry a backpack, they want to search that. Should my CDs and notes be of national security?

    More importantly, that question is possibly the worst question to ask in a 4th ammendment issue. From cryptography to random street searches, it's foolish to ask why someone has something to hide.

    "Wake up! You should be *happy* they are doing these searches. They are protecting you."

    See the above responses. I'm 1) definitely not being protected and 2) that's the same thing the Justice Department has to say about other indiscriminate search efforts.

    You have a right to refuse. You also have a right to be fired

    OK. This is the part where the real legal advice factors in. Either way the law falls, I'm still bitter about this principle. I have a lot of rights. I also have a lot of reasons to depend on the Federal Government or my employer (which, lo and behold, are one and the same). We have a lot of privacy protections. The same protections that hold insurance companies accountable for screening people for genetic predispositions to diseases and charing them accordingly. It's their right to choose whether they insure you or for what price, but it's not their right to do so based on your genetic code. It's not AT&T's right to listen in on my long distance phone calls, even though it's their right to choose whether or not to provide me with LD service. It's a teenager's right to go to high schol. It is not the high school's right to ask the student if he/she has HIV and separate them from their classmates based on that. More directly related to employment, it's not the employer's right to involve themselves in your medical issues, unless your work specifically requires that. In my case, since I work with human clinical samples, specimens, and pathogens, it is in my best interest to be tested for infectious diseases and be properly vaccinated before starting work. This is not necessary for a secretary and I think people would find it extreme to require the same level of medical exam that I endured be given to non-lab personnel. It's not their right to ask me if I'm homosexual. It's not their right to ask me if I voted republican. And I contend it's not their right to search me, my car, or my personal effects without probable cause.

    Your privacy rights should not be contingent on your participation in society. They are contingent on probable cause and a warrant. Anecdotally, there are obviously examples in which this does not hold true. But I would like to cling tenaciously to every right to privacy I can and not give them up willingly.

    IANAL

    I was somewhat hoping some with legal experience in 4th ammendment rights issues (considering this is not the first time a privacy issue has been raised on /.) might be able to chime in. Unfortunately, trolling for free legal advice didn't pan out and I'll have to resort to my own devices. When/if I get more info, I'll report back in.

    Thanks to everyone for responding. Regrettably, I haven't been able to read as many as I'd like, and I'll try to get to more and respond more directly to comments. I appreciate your thoughts, particularly those of you supporting my idealism.

    Ciao, C.Sc.

  295. Re:Reality check! by greentoad · · Score: 1

    Wow..

    Take a reality check!!

    America is really screwed up if we are to take your comment at face value - ie. You seem to make out that it's almost a matter of fact that someone is going to rampage with a gun.

    To quote: "If the facility does NOT have the resources to spend on an armed response team" - the underlying mentality is scary...

  296. Wouldn't make more sense... by Bo'Bob'O · · Score: 1

    ...if they searched what you brought OUT? o.O

    > I work at the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda

  297. Re:Reality check! by Chris+Y+Taylor · · Score: 2

    "You seem to make out that it's almost a matter of fact that someone is going to rampage with a gun."

    No, but it IS a matter of fact that a business must take "reasonable care" to prevent security problems that could injure it's employees, customers, or visitors. Workplace violence is one of those problems. If a business does not take these steps, and something does happen then they are very likely to be sued for negligence. Even if they do take those steps, they can still be sued; but if the business can demonstrate that they exersized "due dilligence" then they have a chance of winning the case.

    I don't think it is a "matter of fact" that every house will burn down or have a flood, but that doesn't mean that people shouldn't have insurance. Is the underlying mentality of flood insurance scary, too?

    BTWIINAL.

  298. Define unreasonable... by OSgod · · Score: 1

    It will be up to a judge to make that definition. In the environment we live in today you might find that a search of personal effects -- especially in a federal target area -- is considered reasonable.

  299. You have the right to quit by OSgod · · Score: 1

    and you have the right to start you own business.

    You don't have the right to demand that you have a job from cradle to grave in the USA. Nor should you.

  300. Illegal to carry a weapon on federal property. by Chico+Science · · Score: 1

    It's illegal, even if bearing proper permits, to carry a firearm onto government property. I don't have the exact reference, but in one of the regular 'Security Updates' we get at the NIH, they specifically mentioned that.

    As for being at Ground Zero in a war. I'd like to remind you that so far, all anthax letters have been sent to media and politicians. I'm neither. Presently, I do not perceive a threat to my health or wellbeing, from planes, bombs, gunfire, or bioterrorism. No more than I did two months ago.

  301. blank by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    i dont think its "security consciousness", its fear consciousness, we're afraid. and because we are, the government passes new bills and such that will just limit our freedoms even more, saying its for security. its been happening for quite a while here now. and has it stopped the "attacks" from happening? will it? at least thats how im seeing it, i could go on and on.. i havent ever trusted a government that limits its people.

  302. Sheesh.. by Arjuna+Theban · · Score: 1


    Just get used to it. The rest of the world has been living with them for ages and noone died because someone glanced in their handbag/purse. If you think just how much more secure it makes your environment, you may realize the tradeoff.
    Before anyone jumps on my throat with the "civil rights til death" thing, try thinking about it for a change. I'm for my civil rights as much as anyone else here but I'd rather not die because of a fucking lunatic who brought a gun/bomb/whatever to where I am.

    Moderators: Modding down a post because you disagree with it is 1) wrong 2) bad karma 3) fucking stupid.

    ---

    1. Re:Sheesh.. by Oswald · · Score: 1

      Well, I'm late to this discussion (post #678, I believe), so I'll take advantage of this good luck: I agree with everything this person has said here and don't have to say it again.

      I'll add that I also have been searched going to work since 9/11, including one time having my car searched in order to be allowed onto the highway to get to the gate to have my car searched again. I don't mind a bit. IT'S GOING TO GET A LOT WORSE BEFORE IT GETS BETTER.

      This war is a buddy check, and it's already becoming clear that the American people have been deceived as to who their buddies really are in the Middle East. If the U.S. has the courage to look the truth in the eye and do what we have to do, this is going to be long and painful and change all of us forever. This is one of those stupid, horrible conflicts that simply boil down to us against them, and no opting out and no crying about what your team has to do to win. Just shut the fuck up, do your job and be glad you at least get to be on a team, instead of being some poor goatherder getting your ass bombed and shot at by all sides at once.

    2. Re:Sheesh.. by J.+Random+Software · · Score: 1

      To trash liberty in favor of safety is a slap in the face to all the brave men who died to give it to us. If you have US citizenship, you are unworthy of it.

    3. Re:Sheesh.. by Arjuna+Theban · · Score: 1


      I am not suggesting anyone give their liberty to another country. Your referral to the people who died to give us (you in this case, since I am not a US citizen, and even if I was, I would be unworthy of it, thanks to you). My only point was that being searched (by this country's police force) when entering buildings etc for the sake of the safety of one's own life is acceptable. I do live in the US, and I think -- no I know it makes the US a safer place at the moment. I have lost friends to terrorism back in my country, and you shouldn't have to before you figure out your priorities in life.

      On another note, if you do not want something seen/found on you, then don't take it to work/mall/etc where you will be searched.

      ---

  303. Hmmm read an atlas recently by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The NIH is in Bethesda, Maryland

    The CDC is in Atlanta, Georgia

    they are completely separate institutions, although both come under the umbrella of HSS

    if you live so close, trying looking around you before spouting nonsense

  304. NIH is not Armed Forces, right? by PaulBu · · Score: 1

    OK, but let us make a difference between a civilian institution and a military organization... The latter might not retain the BEST talent, but the most loyal one (and it gets court-marshalled when it stops being that loyal...) The former one should not expect civilians to be voluntary searched WHENEVER he superiors decide to do that.

    Yes, I'm not from the US originally and yes, my employer has rather close ties to the US defence, but (thanks God!) I've never got ANY unreasonable searches so far.

    Federal bureocracy maybe?
    PaulBu

  305. Right to unreasonable searches from GOVERNMENT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the constitution forbids government only

    Get them to start a policy where you become a trusted person on paper and can breeze through
    checkpoints upon proper credential access.

  306. It's hysteria... by thedesertfox · · Score: 1


    " They that can give up liberty to obtain a little temporary security deserve neither liberty nor safety." -- Benjamin Franklin




    Although I find this quote fairly accurate, and as said before, one must understand that there are acceptions to this. Especially in wartime. The reason as to why security is so tight is because we don't know who the enemy is, people were shocked to find out that the terrorists were people who they conversed and lived next to many years prior to 09-11-01. However, I must agree with Chico Science and find that having your personal belongings and car checked a bit on the absurd side. What are you going to do, manage to stash potentially dangerous biological warfare materials before even reaching your car??? But at the same time, most of the U.S. should realize that this is to a certain point, hysteria. Washington D.C. was not invaded since the War of 1812, and we have never been attacked by other nations with such a high loss of civilian life in our nation's history. These certainly would grant a certain level of humiliation, and anger that we don't want to see repeated. But still, we need to keep this panic in check, for fear it may go to far, and Franklin's quote will prove its point.

    --
    Los Angeles: 1,000 suburbs in search of a city.
  307. freedom by d0ggi3 · · Score: 1

    those who want liberty and security deserve no liberty or security at all

  308. Sheep deserve the slaughter by forest_rock · · Score: 1

    Unfortunately, a business can do most any legal thing to you that doesn't void some contract you have with them. This includes performing searches on its employees to making them wear costumes of famous chickens to work. It isn't fair and it doesn't make it right. Sure you could quit, but I'm assuming there's some non-trivial reason you haven't already (you may like/need your job). Everytime a search is performed for no other reason than there is a 1 in 100,000 chance that the person being searched is a criminal, they are making that person prove their innocence. It doesn't matter that these searches are performed by private business that can deny you employment, goods or services for non-compliance which is perfectly legal. It still isn't right to assume you want to break the law. That is the justification for objection to the search. The sheep that advocate this fear induced assumption of guilt, act under good pretenses, safety and protection, but are neglecting the fact that most people are still not criminals. Creating a police state because of a perceived threat (the current threat isn't really any higher than it was before) is not only irrational, but indignant to all law abiding people. You have nothing to hide, nor should you be made to prove it. "Actions don't make criminals, laws do." - Martha

  309. Not the only place by parvati · · Score: 2

    Mount Sinai/NYU in NYC has had this policy for years. I was a graduate student there and it bothered me to no end that I had to have my bag searched just to go to classes.

    I haven't been at NIH in several years, but I remember that, although IDs were issued, there was usually no one to check them. At Mt Sinai you had to get finger-printed and drug tested just to be *admitted* to the graduate school, and you weren't allowed in the research buildings if you didn't have your ID out and visible.

  310. I believe you by yooden · · Score: 1

    Nobody but a scientist would ask Slashdot for legal advice.

  311. Door Nazi's have no legal right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Under the california consumer code, you're interaction with the store ENDS when you give them money for merchandise.


    If you choose to walk right out, they can ASK, but the can absolutely NOT demand that you show them a receipt (or your wallet and pictures of grandma). You are finished.



    That said, they COULD stop you from leaving, detaining you while they call the police. Of course, if you didn't do anything, or act provably suspicious, they are looking at civil suits.


    Bottom line, they take your money, it's your stuff. I usually ask insistent door Nazi's if I can take a look at their wallet and their locker as well. It makes a point to the manager that got called over once (I asked if I could search his car - and suggested if they wanted to arrest me for shoplifting, they had better do it NOW or let me out. I've certainly been to that Frye's since with no problem).

  312. The poor scientist is beleaguered by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What about the 5000 under the WTC rubble, how beleaguered do you think they are about now? Quit bleating about your minor inconveniencies. This is a war you idiot. There are people here who want to attack and kill us. In Israel you get searched to enter a cinema or a shopping mall. You're supposed to be smart, try and learn a little self preservation.

  313. Draconian? by Performer+Guy · · Score: 2

    Quit acting like a spoiled kid. You don't know what draconian means. Someone looks in your bag before entering a building and all of a sudden it's draconian. That's simple security for your own protection and the protection of others. Next time thank the guard and move on.

  314. Re:and they have a right to fire you by Martin+S. · · Score: 2

    [You have a right to refuse searches] and they have a right to fire you for doing so

    In the UK, we have a concept of 'constructive dismissal', where an employer does something entirely unreasonable which forces you to quit you get to sue them through an industrial tribunal [court]. Surely the US has some similar protection? Talk to your Union Rep.

  315. Gun culture by shani · · Score: 1

    Except the US didn't really have a gun culture when the revolution occurred. After the Civil War is when we got our first real taste of guns, because the Union had bought so many and supplied them to its troops (the first arms modern dealers). This is also the first time the US had widespread banditry, from the war veterans with guns and time but no economic opportunity.

    Maybe if you read a book instead of American Rifleman once in a while you'd know this. And please don't equate gun ownership with free software. That pisses me off.

    1. Re:Gun culture by Brickhead · · Score: 1
  316. I face guns and do NOT work for the military... by BLKMGK · · Score: 1

    There are plenty of purely civilian sorts of places that require amed guards and precautions. Why should we feel that only the military should be well protected?

    As I type this there are a TON of pretty pissed off Postal workers who're finding out that they've just been chalked up as collateral damage. Sux huh? A gun at the gate or added search wouldn't have helped them in this case but I'll bet that if it could have they'd be mad it didn't happen, no?

    I'll grant that as a civilian he doesn't have to subject himself to a search, certainly not without having been warned beforehand, but geez it's NOT just the military that's under attack now - it's you and me! Bin Laden thinks that all US taxpayers are as guilty as the armed forces - that's a threat and the US populace needs to wake up to this fact. They don't call this a WAR for kicks....

    --
    Build it, Drive it, Improve it! Hybridz.org
  317. Make their search fun by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Cliff,

    Make it a pain in the ass for them to search your stuff (this also increases your burden but should prove effective over time).

    Insert into your briefcase, bag or whatever the following types of items:

    dirty underwear
    unwrapped food
    unwrapped condoms (used or new)
    greasy pliers
    Guns & Ammo Magazine
    100s of pieces of paper (receipts, junk mail, etc)
    100s of pieces of metal (nails, screws, etc)
    Hard Drive Accelerator
    OTC drugs (just empited out all over the place)

    Make it as painful for them as possible. Say it's just personal junk you carry around to do your job or that it's none of their business. Better yet, don't even answer their questions.

  318. Searching my own bag by Martin+S. · · Score: 2

    I think I had this checking in clerk last time I flew, because she asked me to search my own bag. Yes true!

    Firstly I was asked by the Clerk if I packed my Own bag ?
    Me: Er, Yes I replied.
    Clerk: Has you bag remained in sight since packing?
    Me: Er, no it's been in the boot (trunk).
    Clerk: Can you search it please.
    Me: Er really ?
    Clerk: Yes.
    Me: OK, doing so.
    As case leaves my sight, disappearing down the conveyor.
    Me: It's left my sight when do I have search it again?
    Clerk: Stern unamused look, that has my whole party in hysterics, and results in them all having to search their own bags.

    A dramatic reconstruction of a true story!

  319. don't be stupid by 20000hitpoints · · Score: 1

    When I stepped out the door of my apartment this morning, I smelled concrete again from the WTC, and it's more than a month later. If you were down here in the middle of what's going on, you would realize that the FBI has a lot more to worry about right now than your pot plants.

    --
    Don't post on slashdot. Get back to work.
  320. Entering vs. Leaving NIH by billstewart · · Score: 2

    Many corporations search bags (not usually thoroughly) when people enter or leave their buildings. They're mainly worried about people stealing stuff, and about people bringing in things they'll argue about the ownership of when they leave (laptops, etc.), and some are paranoid about cameras because people could photograph sensitive material.But you're working at the National Institutes of Health -- like DUH! When there's a biological warfare panic going on, it's not surprising they'd be especially worried about people bringing dangerous germs home from one of the places the government keeps them. You're lucky they don't make you shower on the way out the door.

    --

    Bill Stewart
    New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
  321. Do you realize how much money they would loose??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I shopped at an Office Depo store a while back. The website claimed they opened at 9am. The store window said 10am.

    By 9:45am, there were a bunch of us standing around outside, freezing our buns off, waiting for the store to open. I commented that it would be nice if they at least let us wait in their "airlock", between the two automatic doors. Another fellow commented that they probably weren't locked...

    So, we went inside. As more people joined us, they too came inside. I explained my reasoning as "It's easier to get forgiveness than permission." And went on to state that "if they asked us to leave, we would leave..."

    One fellow there, dressed in a very expensive suit (on a Sunday morning, no less) said:

    "They won't ask us to leave. Do you have any idea how much money they would loose if they did that!"

  322. Re:26Mb Log of net usage (My Netscape) by NoWhereMan · · Score: 1
    And your still employed? If the company policy is clear and you are abusing a corporate resource (i.e.: using their bandwidth for non-business use) you should be out of there.


    YES I am still employed. And in this case, abusing the government resource would be defined as clicking on the "My Netscape" button every morning. Even though you iconify the browser, it merrily updates itself all day long.