Thursday, April 12, 2007

Another Way to Miss a Flight

As Harper's reports, the playpen sometimes denies those who disagree with the bushbaby access to their flights at times - or at least displaces their luggage. So watch out what you say or write or maybe even read and just keep hoping you can board your next flight!

Harper's Magazine
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Tales from Stasiland: Making the No-Fly List
by Scott Horton, April 9, 2007


Meet the latest addition to the Bush Administration's Enemies List: His name is Walter F. Murphy. He is the McCormick Professor of Jurisprudence emeritus at Princeton University, and perhaps the nation's leading scholar working on the frontier turf between public law and political science. He's also a retired Marine Corps colonel, wounded in combat
for his country and decorated for valor under fire.

Over at Balkinization, Mark Graber treats us to Prof. Murphy's first-hand account:

On 1 March 07, I was scheduled to fly on American Airlines to Newark, NJ, to attend an academic conference at Princeton University, designed to focus on my latest scholarly book, onstitutional Democracy, published by Johns Hopkins University Press this past Thanksgiving.
When I tried to use the curb-side check in at the Sunport, I was denied a boarding pass because I was on the Terrorist Watch list. I was instructed to go inside and talk to a clerk...
I presented my credentials from the Marine Corps to a very polite clerk for American Airlines. One of the two people to whom I talked asked a question and offered a frightening comment: “Have you been in any peace marches? We ban a lot of people from flying because of that.” I explained that I had not so marched but had, in September, 2006, given a lecture at Princeton, televised and put on the Web, highly critical of George Bush for his many violations of the Constitution. “That'll do it,” the man said.

Murphy relates that he did eventually get a boarding pass and caught his flight. An attendant warned him: “they're going to ransack your luggage.” On the way back, his luggage was “lost.” Writes Murphy: “Airlines do lose a lot of luggage and this 'loss' could have been a mere coincidence. In light of previous events, however, I'm a tad skeptical.”


So it's not just a speech in a cornfield that can cause you delay when flying as long as bushbabies and their playpens are still around.

1 comment:

  1. And Stasiland was a designation for the GDR under the control and permanent spying of the secret police there. Stasi = Staatssicherheit = "State Security" : all rather fitting for Mr. Bush's concepts of the world.

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