TSA Tells Parents to "Make a Game" out of the TSA Checkpoints: Ease Their Fears Before the TSA Gropes the Children

Those who think airport security has improved because a TSA agent takes a naked body scan or gropes your genitals will soon be missing their freedoms and rights. There is a reason these checkpoints exist and are expanding across the land. The government is using fear to get you to comply with their demands, which include the eventual destruction of the rights our founding fathers established in the Constitution.

Like cows the slaughter, the TSA is conditioning Americans to answer questions and allow the government to violate their rights. Is there any place more private than your privates? No government official has the right to touch you there, and as noted, do it on the street, and chances are you are going to be put in jail for sexual assault. Do it to your girlfriend after she says no, and the prosecutor will throw the book at you when she presses charges. A TSA agent can get away with it. This is about breaking you down and making reconditioning you to believe everything that you have been taught was wrong is okay providing the federal government is overseeing it. Answer their questions at the checkpoint, do you even stop to consider what your rights are? In most cases, of course not.

Now they are training parents to prepare their kids to go through these oppressive tyrannical checkpoints. The TSA is telling parents to tell their children the pat down is a "game." Think about how this will work when the latest perv on the playground says the word "game" to your child and takes away their innocence. It's a dangerous game the TSA is playing, and many parents are just letting it go because they want to feel like they are safe when they get on an airplane.

TSA spokesman told parents last month, "You try to make it as best you can for that child to come through. If you can come up with some kind of a game to play with a child, it makes it a lot easier."

Ken Wooden, founder of Child Lures Prevention, says the TSA's recommendation that children be told the pat-down is a "game" is potentially putting children in danger.

Telling a child that they are engaging in a game is "one of the most common ways" that sexual predators use to convince children to engage in inappropriate contact, Wooden told Raw Story.

Children "don't have the sophistication" to distinguish between a pat-down carried out by an airport security officer and an assault by a sexual predator, he said.

The TSA policy could "desensitize children to inappropriate touch and ultimately make it easier for sexual offenders to prey on our children," Wooden added.


It's sick what how far the Department of Homeland Security is going. Wooden is right. There is nothing funny about telling a kid someone is going to touch their private parts and it's a game.