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jan scratch two

jan scratch two

Lisa P

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A person is apologizing for the delay and mentions that someone in their household had COVID. They talk about a part in the information where Lisa explains Quad S and mentions finding a better place for it. Then they mention the creation of the Transportation Security Administration after 9/11 and the ramping up of watch listing potential terror suspects. There is a secretive watch list called Quad S that most people haven't heard of, which causes frustration for frequent flyers like Halil Demir. He uses the Traveler Redress Inquiry Program to address his travel troubles. The system is questioned for its equity. Hello, hello, hello. How are you? I am so sorry for this delay. I get home and guess who had COVID? No, not me, but the other member of the house. He's been living in the basement for the past few days. Okay, so I have seen where you ended. I'm going to give you more scratch coming up in the part where you said Lisa explains Quad S. I'll find a better place, obviously, to make this sound perfect once we know what cities we're going to use as examples. Okay, so here's where we ended. This one maintained by the U.S. government. So here we go in 3, 2, and 1. In the aftermath of the terrorist attacks on 9-11, the Transportation Security Administration is created and watch listing of potential terror suspects ramps up. But only the most extreme form, the no-fly list, gets much attention. There is another list most of the American public has never heard of, a secretive watch list, the Secondary Security Screening Selection, which we'll refer to as Quad S. Murky in how it is assembled, infuriating, Halil Demir says, in how it is enforced. And it's about to hit this frequent flyer million miler again here at the ticket counter. Today it's at United Airlines, but really it could be any domestic carrier. He will stand here often for more than an hour as countless travelers pass him. Once he finally gets a boarding pass, which he is not permitted to print on his own, he'll move down the hall towards security only to endure more layers of delays, frustration, and routinely humiliation. Why? Demir's wife Donna has seen firsthand his travel troubles for almost a decade now. To defend himself from the invisible accuser, Halil Demir turned to the only remedy the federal government offers called a TRIP, the Traveler Redress Inquiry Program, which exists for travelers to tell the TSA their troubles. Demir filed five separate trips each time. His attorney, Kristi Jump, at the Constitutional Law Center for Muslims in America. The TRIP is also a form for travelers who, for example, can't locate their luggage. Compare that to eight years of routine, invasive searches. And the question, is this system equitable? Thank you.

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