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9-11 BLAME?
Who is to Blame for 9-11?
by William L. Anderson
Given the toxic legal climate in the United States for business in
general,
it should have surprised no one that a federal judge has ruled that
families
who lost loved ones in the September 11 attacks can sue United Airlines,
American Airlines, Boeing and the Port Authority of New York and New
Jersey.
That the plaintiffs and their lawyers are not suing the worst offender of
the tragedy 'the U.S. government' says volumes about the surreal nature of
American jurisprudence today.
According to Federal Judge Alvin Hellerstein in his ruling that the suits
could continue, the airlines
had a duty to protect their passengers, crew and victims on the ground by
better screening passengers. The . . . defendants controlled who came
onto
the planes and what was carried aboard. . . . They had the obligation to
take reasonable care in screening.
Boeing, the manufacturer of the planes, is also culpable, wrote
Hellerstein,
who, in effect, blamed Boeing and the airlines for what occurred:
While it may be true that terrorists had not before deliberately flown
airplanes into buildings, the airlines reasonably could foresee that
crashes
causing death and destruction on the ground was a hazard that would arise
should hijackers take control of a plane. The intrusion by terrorists
into
the cockpit, coupled with the volatility of a hijacking situation,
creates a
foreseeable risk that hijacked airplanes might crash, jeopardizing
innocent
lives on the ground as well as in the airplane.
According to the lawsuit, Boeing manufactured a "defective" product
because
it did not have secure doors to the cockpit, which allowed the hijackers
easy access to the controls of the four planes. Apparently, the judge
agreed
that Boeing should bear that responsibility. (While this was only a
hearing
to see whether or not the suits could take place in federal court, the
judge's ruling sounds like an out-and-out indictment of the defendants,
and
one can imagine that it will be nearly impossible for the airlines and
the
others to receive a fair trial in his court.)
Of course, the attorneys who have filed in this case are ecstatic, one of
them being Mary Schiavo, who was a Department of Transportation inspector
general (and huge critic of the airlines) during the Clinton
Administration.
"It's the first time that a judge has said the airlines had a duty to
protect those on the ground and that this was foreseeable," said Mitchell
Baumeister, a New York lawyer who represents about 60 families.
While the attorneys and their hand-picked judge actually are clouding the
issue here (as I will explain later), their lawsuit and their public
comments'do not tell us what really happened on that fateful day, and why
this tragic event occurred. Suffice it to say that 9/11 had the imprint
of
the U.S. Government from the planning of the attacks, the truncated
pre-attack investigation that permitted the terrorists to move about
unmolested, to the boarding of the plane, and to the conduct of the crew
and
passengers before the planes were turned into flying bombs. In this case,
the airlines and Boeing have a legitimate defense when they proclaim they
were simply following orders.
(The Port Authority is being blamed for evacuation procedures and for
having
locked doors to the roof, although it is doubtful that any rooftop
rescues,
dramatic as they might seem to be, would have been possible, given the
prevailing conditions that day. Again, even here the stamp of the U.S.
Government can be found, as the Environmental Protection Agency, in its
jihad against asbestos, during construction halted the asbestos
insulation
of the girders holding up the twin towers at about two-thirds up the
buildings. We will never know whether or not the asbestos would have
withstood the intense heat of the jet-fueled fires.)
The first thing to remember is that airline traffic in the USA is heavily
regulated by the Federal Aviation Administration, which governs all
procedures, including construction of the planes themselves. (Airlines
have
some say about routes and fares, which is about the extent of the vaunted
industry "deregulation.") That means the placement of every wire, every
piece of steel, and every doorway on the Boeing planes used as weapons of
mass destruction that fateful day was approved and overseen by the FAA.
While it makes for good press for attorneys and judges, the idea that
Boeing
on its own could have ordered "secure" cockpit doors is a laugher. Any
unilateral attempt by any aircraft maker to act without FAA direction is
always met with swift action against the manufacturer; to put it another
way, it would have been illegal for Boeing to make planes with
impenetrable
(if that is even possible) cockpit doors before 9/11, something that
Schiavo
and her fellow attorneys (and Judge Hellerstein) already know.
Furthermore,
as John Lott has pointed out, there are many questions of whether or not
FAA-approved (now) secure doors are even secure.
Even without the secure door issue, let us now look at the role played by
government regulations and actions that helped lead to the hijackings. We
know now that many of those involved had expired visas or other legal
problems, yet the government did nothing.
In fact, as James Bovard writes, at least one flight school official had
tipped off FBI agents about a possible hijacking conspiracy, yet through
unbelievable bungling, the FBI in the end did nothing. In other words,
the
idea of someone hijacking planes and using them as bombs was not
considered
out of the realm of the possible, but U.S. law enforcement agents failed
in
their duties to stop this conspiracy in its tracks (for which they are
immune from any lawsuits).
The lawsuit claims that United and American should have kept the
perpetrators off the planes, but even here, they were following the law.
For
example, at the time box cutters'the apparent weapons of choice for the
hijackers'were FAA approved, so it would have been illegal for the
airline
security agents to have confiscated them. Second, suppose that the
screeners
had found not only the box cutters, but also the Islamic death shrouds
that
the hijackers were carrying. To have kept them off the planes almost
certainly would have meant that the airlines were violating U.S.
anti-discrimination laws, and no doubt anyone who might have intervened
would also have found himself on the receiving end of a federal
discrimination lawsuit.
Third, once the hijackers made their actions known aboard the planes,
everyone on board obeyed the law by following the hijackers' orders.
Ironically, the passengers on the UAL's doomed Flight 93 broke the law by
attacking their assailants. Yes, it is doubtful that the passengers would
have been criminally charged had the flight somehow landed safely, but
nonetheless, prosecution of Todd Beamer and others who charged the
cockpit
would have been a legal (but not politically feasible) option for U.S.
authorities. To put it another way, in the eyes of U.S. law, Todd Beamer
was
not a hero; he was a felon.
That Hellerstein has permitted the lawsuits to go forward is further
proof
that it does no good in the USA for private citizens to follow the law.
Instead, federal authorities tend to make up the "law" as they go.
Moreover,
the government at all levels is doing its level best to keep airlines
from
preventing another such hijacking. From dragging its feet in permitting
pilots to be armed, to turning air screeners into government employees
(the
creation of the Transportation Security Administration), to the inane
methods used by the TSA to screen "potential" hijackers (like 90 year-old
grandmothers in wheelchairs, who are regularly searched by screeners
through
"random" selections), the government is using massive amounts of
resources
to create an illusion that it is "doing something" about preventing
airline
hijackings.
(My assessment of the government's role in the 9/11 atrocities does not
include a critical look at U.S. foreign policy, not to mention its
relationship to Saudi Arabia, which produced 15 of the 19 hijackers. The
irresponsibility of U.S. foreign policy is in itself worthy of an
examination that would dwarf any of the absurdities committed by
transportation regulators, which is why I do not write about it in this
article.)
One can be assured that should airline hijackers once again engage in a
9/11-type attack, the only entities that will receive official blame will
be
those private firms that were following the law. Yes, in hindsight, by
following U.S. Government policies from beginning to end, United and
American airlines inadvertently aided those individuals who snuffed out
nearly 3,000 lives through their vicious actions. Yet, in hindsight, we
also
know that to have thwarted those attacks would have turned some employees
of
United and American into felons. Perhaps Mary Schiavo should be suing
herself for her own role in creating this mess when she worked for the
Department of Transportation, but instead she stands to become a
wealthier
person because of the twisted state of U.S. law.
William Anderson, an adjunct scholar of the Mises Institute, teaches
economics at Frostburg State University. Send him MAIL. See his Mises.org
Articles Archive.
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