Ted Williams — not the late baseball great, but a formerly homeless, recovering drug and alcohol addict of the same name — received a second chance at life thanks to his announcer-quality voice.
A video displaying his talent — first posted at the Columbus Dispatch site — won him that chance. Soon he was headed to New York to appear on television and visit his mom, whom he had not seen in many years.
But, not so fast. Williams wasn’t allowed to fly.
The hold-up? Government control of airport security protocols.
You see, those who cannot “prove” their identity by displaying a government-issued ID are treated as terrorism suspects.
Sure, sure: It would’ve been easy to confirm that Williams lacked both the intention and the weapons to take over a plane. But that’s not the bureaucratic way.
Jim Harper, an expert on the burgeoning national surveillance state, pointed out on Cato@Liberty that one likely result of a national ID requirement will be to “exclude the indigent from rungs on the ladder [of advancement in life].… A land of freedom doesn’t put paperwork requirements between a man on the rebound and a long-awaited reunion with his mother.”
Homeland Security’s obstreperousness resulted in what turned out to be a minor delay. Thanks to The Today Show and The Early Show, Williams was able to fly the next day.
Great for Williams. For others? Most rungs up from homelessness don’t garner major network support.
This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.
3 replies on “Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Bureaucracy”
Papers, preeze.
Which country are we in?
My experiences with the TSA have not been so great and I’ve had all the proper ID.
Articles like this raelly grease the shafts of knowledge.