Photographing Airports
Patrick Smith, a former pilot, writes
about his experiences -- involving the police -- taking pictures in
airports:
He makes sure to remind me, just as his colleague
in New Hampshire had done, that next time I'd benefit from advance permission,
and that "we live in a different world now." Not to put undue weight on the
cheap prose of patriotic convenience, but few things are more repellant than
that oft- repeated catchphrase. There's something so pathetically submissive
about it -- a sound bite of such defeat and capitulation. It's also untrue;
indeed we find ourselves in an altered way of life, though not for the reasons
our protectors would have us think. We weren't forced into this by terrorists,
we've chosen it. When it comes to flying, we tend to hold the events of Sept. 11
as the be-all and end-all of air crimes, conveniently purging our memories of
several decades' worth of bombings and hijackings. The threats and challenges
faced by airports aren't terribly different from what they've always been.
What's different, or "too bad," to quote the New Hampshire deputy, is our
paranoid, overzealous reaction to those threats, and our amped-up obeisance to
authority.
Posted: Wed - February 22, 2006 at 03:31 PM