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Would you refuse a full-body ‘naked’ scan at the airport? (Poll Closed)

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Total Votes: 1,062
4 Comments

  • StuNew - 14 years ago

    This was always going to happen, of course. Put young men, some may say ANY man in charge of what is essentially a photo shoot similar to Glam mags, and you'll get this behaviour. If the Government really wish to drive home this measure they MUST satisfy the public that personal integrity is a must, in employees operating this machinery. Why not make the post exempt from the Sex Discrimination Act and call it a Female only post, or have two operators, one of each sex to correspond with the gender of the passenger? The first two respondants above need to wake up to the real risks or perhaps they don't intend to fly again or even. are they fanatics themselves? GET REAL, government, BAA and you two!!!!!!!!!! I want to get where I'm going and I want to arrive back to my family.

  • Ken Baker - 14 years ago

    To 'Hattie Nuff' (very clever). My clearly defined medical purpose is that I do not want to be blown up, maimed, shot or stabbed. I am sure, that given the chance, those murdered in the Twin Towers or in London would seek the protection that a full body search might offer
    To 'Bluejay' My Human Rights include the right to freedom of travel without fearing for the safety myself and of those I care about. The 'pat method' is not suffuciently effective and can miss items secreted away in the more
    'personal areas'.
    Please, please, stop blaming 'the West' for the fanatics who have no respect for themselves or others.

  • bluejay - 14 years ago

    it's a matter of modesty and privacy. it's against human rights and i think people should be given the right to opt-out for the pat method because it's more than enough to detect anything that is one hiding under private clothing.moreover, it's just a drama created by the west merely to control and to interfere with the people's privacy.

  • Hattie Nuff - 14 years ago

    It's not a question of modesty or privacy. It's a question of unnecessary exposure to radiation. The only time one should be exposed to x-rays, or any other radiation for that matter, is for clearly defined medical purposes.

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