Back to business --
Kilarin wrote:Is insulting Shneier's hair style the best you can do? And being published by the ACLU certainly doesn't disqualify him.
It wouldn't bother me if he had a nose-ring. Its just easier to profile people like Schneier when they wear pony-tails.
He has a privacy-before-security, liberal agenda. This fact is born out in his publications for the ACLU and elsewhere. Schneier argument against the use of ethnicity as a component of overall homeland security is (1) driven by his privacy agenda, and (2) just plain silly by any standard of common sense.
The fact that he makes the hearts of liberals everywhere go pitter-pat is unimpressive to me. He is apparently using his notoriety for code-writing brilliance as a platform for opining on subjects for which he is not qualified. And for the sake of argument, I presume he
is the world's foremost software code cryptologist, as you believe him to be. Again, I have a damned good locksmith, but I wouldn't rely on him for counter-terrorism advice. I've made this point to you a few times now, it's really not all that subtle. I hope you're just feigning ignorance.
Kilarin wrote:Can you point to any study or examples showing that ethnic profiling has been successful?
Israel. Second time I've answered the question.
Kilarin wrote:Where are the experts backing up your opinion?
Ahh, I'm not the one trying to disprove that which most people hold is simply rational: if Muslims are attacking your country, you should be able to use that fact as a component to enhance your counterterrorism program.
Besides, I've already pointed you to Israel, a nation who systemically profiles as part of its counterterrorism. You chose to ignore that difficult fact. To my knowledge, there hasn't been a hijacking of an El Al flight in about 30 years.
Take a look at Rafi Ron. He was former Security Director at Ben Gurion Airport and chief in charge of security in the Israeli Airport Authority. He was in charge of all aspects of the Israeli airport security including security assessment and risk analysis, security planning and development, commanding all security operational units, identifying, negotiating, purchasing, and implementing new technologies, et cetera. In addition, he was in charge of more than 2,000 security personnel who were working at Ben-Gurion Airport.
Currently he is the Chief Executive Officer of New Age Aviation Security and directly in charge of the professional side of the company's performance. He is also a member of ACI's (Airports Council International) World Standing Security Committee and a member of GASAG (Global Aviation Security Action Group), which was initiated by IATA (International Air Transport Association). He was a paratrooper officer in IDF (Israeli Defense Force) who took part in multiple combat activities; and he served as one of the early EL-AL sky marshals. He also served as a Chief Security Officer in Israeli Embassies in various parts of the world. He spent twenty years in Israel's Prime Minister Office as an operational intelligence and special operations officer and retired at the U.S. equivalent rank of full Colonel.
Ron testified before Congress in 2002 regarding Israeli method profiling -- which I think is probably the state of the art. Its policy does not exclude race, ethnicity, nationality or anything else, as far as I know, as a component of profiling.
Ron believes random checks are useful but only to a point --
Rafi Ron testifying before Congress wrote:I oppose the idea of random checks as a main method. As an additional method they are okay. But as the main method they are completely wrong because as it was described earlier, they lead to cases like this morning's case, where a decorated second world war General, 84-years old, which I think we all agree is not only a waste of time, but if I look at this incident this morning, I would assume that probably between seven to ten people were involved in this incident, in dealing with all the implications of this incident.
These ten people should have been looking for the Richard Reids of this world, and not wasting their time in dealing with an unintelligent decision to confiscate the Congressional Medal from a Second World War hero.
Kilarin wrote:Mr. Schneier is undeniably one of the worlds foremost computer security experts.
And when the topic of
computer security comes up, I'll take notes. His opinion isn't worthless to me. It's just not authoritative or probative in this context -- despite your weak offering that somehow physical security and computer code-security are all the same. Please.
Kilarin wrote:Can you name any cases where ethnic profiling has caught a terrorist?
Can you name any jihadists who aren't Muslim? Say, this question game is fun....
Kilarin wrote: And, to get down to the brass tacks, would ethnic profiling have prevented any of the airline terrorist attacks that we are aware of? Would it have stopped the terrorist who flew planes into buildings on 911? Nope. Box knives weren't prohibited, that's why they carried them.
You might be right, back then. We're not talking about back then, we're talking about now. You also continue to deploy narrow, facile reasoning. Here, you assume that the only criteria for profiling is racial or ethnic. Can you imagine using other criteria - say, what's with the maps and how come there's more than one of you carrying boxcutters on board?
Kilarin wrote:What about the shoe bomber? No one had thought to check the lining of a shoe yet, so he would have sailed right through . . . . Ethnic profiling would not have stopped the shoe bomber.
Oh really?
Rafi Ron, testifying to Congress in 2/2002 wrote: Richard Reid flew to Israel by El-Al [in July of 2001], before he boarded the American Airline flight from Paris. Through profiling he was singled out and checked from hair to sole. He was found out clean and was allowed to board the aircraft. That information was conveyed to the air marshal on board and he was properly seated, not very far from the air marshal so the air marshal could keep an eye on him during the flight.
Gee I wonder, when Israel profiled him, whether they considered the fact he was (1) Muslim, and (2) looked for all the world like all your favorite jihadists? D'ya think?
Kilarin wrote:Ethnic profiling would (probably) not have stopped the "liquid bomb" terrorist.
Your credibility on these kinds of predictions has recently been undermined. You might want to wait a bit before you offer any more.
Kilarin wrote:Banning nail clippers is a specific (and silly) defense that is more like leaving your front door wide open.
I'm not part of the nail-clipper debate. I think the Israeli-style profiling is where we should be heading. I'll bet you'd agree with a good bit of it, if you took the effort to look at it.
BD