Pictured : general sentiment
after the long haul. At least the Shakespeares carry their own bags.
In 1990,
11.1 million Americans had passports, according to the US State Department, or about 4% of the population (I recall an investment banker at First Boston in a panic because he had to go to Mexico for a deal and did not have his documents). Now,
109.8 million have a pp, or 34% of US citizens (I got mine in 1980). The change, of course, for security : Americans scrutinised by USA Patriot Act signed into law by
el presidente in 2001 in response to 911. It allows roving wiretaps, searches of business records (
including libraries) and doing surveillance of "lone wolves" - individuals suspected of terrorist-related activities not linked to terrorist groups. The irony : the Patriot Act led by
the Republicans who otherwise want Big Government off our backs.
So I am not surprised then, passing through US Customs, to find a digital hand scanner (this has been a feature, along with cameras, since 2008). I ask the agent who gets finger printed ? and , for now, it is foreign nationals. Soon, though, it will be
any one using an airport : in fact, this would occur now but there is not the budget to tag and track every American. I note that this is an invasion of privacy and the agent replies happily:
"only if you are a bad guy."
USA Patriot Act acronym :
Uniting (and)
Strengthening
America (by)
Providing
Appropriate
Tools
Required (to)
Intercept (and)
Obstruct
Terrorism
Act of 2001
We connect in Dallas. Madeleine:
"Gosh, I've never been to Texas before."