Air travel and dehumanisation

We had a wonderful weekend in England. London is a fantastic city where I’d like to spend more time. But our departure from Stansted airport did much to cement  certain views I’ve held about air travel for some time now.

Modern air travel is cheap and quick. It also used to be fairly simple but in the last year or so, it has become an increasingly complicated way of travelling. The trouble started with check-in. We joined the queue for our flight shortly after check-in opened. We spent about an hour and a half queueing because of the ineptitude of the woman at the easyJet desk. She was phenomenally slow and left her post for nearly half an hour after claiming that a passenger with dark skin didn’t have the correct documentation. His Spanish passport was eventually, grudgingly accepted and the queue continued to shuffle on at the rate of one passenger served every five minutes.

A sign by the check-in desk warned passengers to allow at least 40 minutes to clear security – making clear that the onus is on the passenger to make sure that (s)he gets to the gate on time. In this case, though we had joined the queue as it began, we cleared security with about 10 minutes to spare. At least five passengers toward the end of the queue checked in but were then delayed in the security check phase. They were kicked off the flight and the flight’s captain gave us a patronising lecture about leaving enough time to get onto the plane. Perhaps he didn’t know that the five passengers whose luggage had to be removed from the flight were delayed because of one of his own colleague’s ineptitude.

Next, we approached the security check. This is the biggest recent change to modern air travel. Apparently, current rules (introduced in the wake of various terrorist attacks and attempts), insist that every passenger be put through a series of humiliating trials which test whether they’re a terrorist or not. Herded like cattle on their way to the slaughterhouse (or at the very least, the dipping tank), passengers wait in line until shouted at to proceed. Queues appear and disappear as stewards marshall people this way and that like shepherds call sheep. Belts must be removed, jumpers and jackets too. Personal possessions are laid out for all to see in black metal trays for the x-ray.

Next, we are forced to walk guiltily through a metal detector so inefficient that it failed to detect my wedding ring, 2lbs of coins and bulky metal watch which I had elected not to put through the x-ray. The girl in front of me had three bottles of sun cream which were confiscated, obviously because they might have been used for the production of high explosive. After the indignity of dressing myself again in public, I was herded down the next roped-off passageway only to be told to remove my shoes. By this point, I was getting really annoyed. “For Christ’s sake!”, I said as I pulled my trainers off – all the while being told by the woman at the shoe checking desk that I should ‘move out of the way’. This woman obviously noticed my irritation and said to me in a very obviously challenging way, “You seem very angry, sir”.

That short sentence made it clear that the exhibition of emotion of any sort was suspicious and deserved being challenged. I have no doubt whatsoever that if I had remonstrated with her over that fact that only half of the passengers were being screened in this way (the rest were allowed to just walk straight past), I would have been questioned – and probably by one of the police officers armed with huge semi-automatic rifles.

My problem here is not with security per se. I’m aware that there’s a small number of people out there who want to blow aeroplanes up. I’m also aware, however, that 50% of passengers could just walk through the shoe-checking phase. That I carried loads of metal through the metal detector without it noticing. That I could buy a tennis racket or bottle after security which could realistically be used as a weapon on an aeroplane. That it’s by no means inconceivable that a terrorist network could infiltrate airport shops and make sure that a bottle of water, perfume or shampoo that actually contained the ingredients for explosive were placed on shelves for the right person to buy. In short, I don’t believe that the security in modern airports is particularly effective. It still contains multiple holes which could easily be exploited by a committed terrorist cell.

In truth, I believe that these security checks we all have to undergo are part of a campaign of psychological warfare, the object of which is not to protect us but to cow us. The series of controls act more than anything else as steps in a process of dehumanisation and humiliation which never fail to conjure up the feeling of the emotions we might experience as we queue for access to the camps.

5 thoughts on “Air travel and dehumanisation

  1. That bit about the bottles has always amazed me.
    You can’t bring a nail file in your hand luggage but you can bring a bottle of wine. I have seen what sort of weapon a broken bottle can be.

  2. The reason that they search every other person is so that if they see someone who’s suspicious looking (i.e. like he might be a bit foreign) they can stop him (and let’s face it it always is a him) without him saying ‘you’re only doing this because I’m a Muslim’.

    Stopping everyone would take too long so they just stop people who they might have reason to suspect, plus enough other people to allow them to deny any accusations of prejudice. I think this is an entirely sensible policy.

  3. Joe – why prevent people from taking more than one bag through security when loads can be purchased and carried on afterwards? Why allow the sale of glass bottles and sports equipment which could easily be ‘weaponised’? Isn’t all this precisely the same thing as the advice on board the plane of what to do in the event of ‘a landing on water’? It’s hogwash and probably doesn’t save any lives.

  4. The no-more-than-one-bag-thing may be stupid but as far as I know it has nothing to do with security; it’s just a way to save on space/get more money out of passengers. I’m sure the perfume you can buy after check in has been checked to make sure it’s not explosive.

    The wine bottle thing is certainly an anomaly but I’m sure that you’re well aware that sun cream is not banned because the bottles themselves might be used as weapons, but because a band of terrorists planned to use the contents of small liquid containers in order to blow up ten transatlantic flights. Not allowing similar containers on flights may well save many lives (although I’ve always been successful in smuggling my contact lens solution and suncream in my hand luggage. Perhaps they should be more thorough).

  5. Well said. Half the airport checks are nothing but symbolism to try and make out that we’re secure and that the airport is doing a great job. It’s complete bollocks and it makes you wonder where it’s all going to end – anal cavity searches?

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