There’s only one way to end TSA’s political weaponization of surveillance
Only in Washington would an edict to banish all dissidents be labeled Operation Freedom to Breathe.
The Transportation Security Administration in 2021 created a secret watchlist of individuals who publicly opposed President Joe Biden’s COVID mask mandate.
Operation Freedom to Breathe resulted in dozens of individuals being either banned from flying or hit with additional groping or patdowns.
The covert crackdown only ended when a federal judge struck down Biden’s mask mandate in April 2022.
That was only one of a trifecta of TSA surveillance-gone-wild programs Congress and the Department of Homeland Security exposed last week.
Hundreds of Americans were hit by the Biden administration’s secret condemnation of anyone tied to the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol protests.
TSA approved “enhanced screening” and watchlists for anyone “suspected of traveling to the National Capital Region” for those, Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) revealed.
TSA bloated the list of Jan. 6 suspects by tapping a George Washington University database of alleged extremists — which was as credible as randomly selecting names of Trump donors.
A TSA privacy officer protested: “TSA is punishing people for the expression of their ideas when they haven’t been charged, let alone convicted of incitement or sedition.”
New dirt also came to the surface about the Quiet Skies program, which sent TSA air marshals to covertly surveil travelers on the flimsiest pretexts.
If you fell asleep, used the bathroom or glared at noisy kids during a flight, those incriminating facts might have been added to your federal dossier.
Air marshals noted whether suspects gained weight or were balding or were paranoid about the undercover federal agents who followed them into the parking lot to their cars.
Quiet Skies, which cost $200 million a year, provoked a scandal last year after targeting former Rep. Tulsi Gabbard (now director of national intelligence) after she criticized Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris.
Turns out Quiet Skies was also tracking three Republican congressmen before the program was abolished in June. TSA has not yet revealed the names of those congressmen.

