Right. And my friend from high school who forgot her saxophone in a public bathroom - the police blew it up because they’re not jazz fans, huh?
Face it: there was nothing unique or personal about what happened. As for “denying her the use of her laptop”… you know they sell computers here, right? OK, Macs are a bit overpriced (Israelis don’t like Macs), but she could have picked up a decent PC (or a cheap netbook) at any mall in the country.
Me too. I don’t see what’s so protesty about entering Israel from Egypt.
Also, is it normal to shoot a laptop to “blow it up”? Shooting at a computer to disable it just seems weird–if it’s got a bomb, isn’t that just going to trigger it?
She fit the profile. Maybe she was just here on vacation - odds are she was - but the job of border security is always to consider the worse case scenario.
The idea is to trigger it. First you clear the area, then you blow it up. Much better to destroy property than to risk lives.
The Israeli approach to security emphasizes looking for terrorists and their associates over simply looking for weapons (and, if I may get in a dig as a FF against the TSA boobs, looking for types over pretending that Gramma Perez needs a careful random screening for the bomb in her bloomers because, hey, any one of us could be a terrorist…).
Anyway, what’s missing from this story is why this particular laptop owner raised a suspicious eyebrow. It’s not likely it was totally random and it doesn’t seem likely it was a bunch of security yahoos either. It is equally unlikely the Israeli security folks are going to have much to say in public about the why’s, regardless of whether they were right or wrong. Since the HD was not destroyed and since they are going to pony up for a replacement, I think we can assume it wasn’t the electronic content on the computer, but beyond that we seem to be pooling ignorance here.
Did one get a chance to read the student’s blog? While she’s entitled to her opinions, she’s not exactly an unbiased tourist (from the viewpoint of Israelis looking to sniff out malcontents).
In any case, Insha’allah she’s having a better day today.
I was speaking of the case(haha) at hand, not your friend’s poor saxaphone.
But since you insist, the two events aren’t analogous. An anonymous abandoned piece of luggage isn’t the same as a laptop carried by a known traveler.
My problem is really with the procedure. If they truly believed there was a suspicion of explosives in the laptop, shooting holes in it can only prove the positive, when it explodes. That it didn’t explode doesn’t prove the opposite but yet they returned it to her.
I suspect that somebody who hates them calling them ‘brutish’ doesn’t concern them overly much.
Do you have any idea of the trouble ‘confiscating, and giving back when they leave’ would entail?
In all fairness, I can see how it’d look protest-y. American student goes on a “save Palestine” trip to the Middle East, tools around Egypt, maybe takes a gander at the Gaza border (if Egyptian security lets people get that close - does anyone know?), then heads to Tel Aviv for an afternoon of placards and bullhorns. Not that there’s anything wrong with that - regardless of whether such a protestor’s position is “correct”, I think it’s important to let people do that sort of thing, and the idea of keeping out “protest tourists” strikes me as unpleasant. But on the facts, it’s not crazy to look at this kid and see a likely “protest tourist”.
That being said - when my sister planned a trip to Israel, she planned to do the exact opposite of this kid’s itinerary, and head to Egypt from Israel. Nothing protest-y about it, she just has a friend there.
Incidentally, I see nothing hypocritical or inconsistent in “protest tourists” flocking to Israel instead of Iran or Saudi Arabia. It’s a sort of back-handed compliment, really - these tourists, even as they decry Israeli human rights abuses, have enough trust in Israeli law that they expect to engage in their protest, and return home unharmed. In fact, they expect to be able to persuade Israelis to change their minds, and then vote in free and fair elections for politicians who’ll change Israeli policy. On the flip side, it would be nuts to have that kind of expectation about Saudi Arabia - and I don’t think a desire to avoid Saudi prisons makes a person (even a misguided one) a hypocrite.
(ETA: I don’t know that this kid was on a “save palestine” trip - I was just describing a “protest tourist” scenario, and a speculative one, that would fit these facts. My apologies - I should have been more clear about that.)
The most absurd part of this all is the idea of disabling or blowing up a computer by shooting it through the monitor. The reason the hard drive could be returned to her undamaged is because it’s located under the base. There’s a lot more room in the base for explosives, anyways. Although the heat generated by a MacBook itself could probably detonate an explosive down there.
Now that I look at the picture again, the bullet holes are also in the bottom, so you’re right, it must have been shut when it was terminated. If this had been my PC laptop, my hard drive would have been directly under the left-most bullet hole and not salvageable.