Lol, tboy arguring with the tgirl... I suppose it was bound to happen sooner or later!
Actually, during a pat-down, a female security guard will do exactly that - and a strip search is more revealing than either a scanner or a pat-down. The difference is that security guards can't pat you down without justification, and can't strip-search you unless you've been arrested, or there's a justifiable reason to see you as a threat. This policy eliminates their need to justify their actions - they can just ask you to go through without giving you a reason.
I
don't know they're fake - nobody knows exactly what the scanners see, except the person operating it, and I would suspect that there are different levels of visual penetration that they can use. My point is, just because the media pics don't show anyone's genitals, doesn't mean the scanners aren't capable of displaying them. It would be foolish for the government to reveal the limitations of the technology, because that would defeat the entire purpose. I'm simply speculating that the scanners might be more powerful than we've been led to believe, and there's plenty of reason to be suspicious.
It's not exactly about numbers. I don't know how many mutilated-dick-from-a-car-accident victims there are (see previous example) but that's not important - I can certainly see why someone in that situation would oppose the naked scanner. I was using the example to expand the discussion
past the trans issue, and point out that there are many people who might object to this policy, for many personal reasons.
The reason we should not use the technology is because it doesn't offer any benefits that the current procedures can't solve on their own. Without any clear benefits, I see no reason to cause additional problems for many people who pose no threat to airline security, and it's a gross invasion of
everyone's privacy.
Again, these are OPTIONAL because the government knows they'd never withstand a constitutional challenge. I have every right to refuse the naked scanner and request a pat-down instead - and that's exactly what I'll do, if it comes down to it. I just hoped that, by explaining
why I'm opposed, people might have a better understanding of the complications associated with the new policy, and might see things from another perspective.