NYC Scary Last month I was in NY city for a few days on business. Since I live in Connecticut, I am able to take the train into Penn Station. On the way home, my train was delayed and I stayed in Penn Station for a bit longer than I wanted to. It was...interesting, to say the least. Next to the train status boards, there were large-screen TVs showing looped video of friendly security personnel admonishing you to 'see something, say something', one particularly creepy video of a mother and daughter happily having their bags searched at a checkpoint. There were mock recreations of suspicious activity (men taking photos of the undersides of trains) that resulted in arrests, interviews with dog-handlers, Amtrak police, and homeland security officials. In real life, there were bomb-sniffing dogs, armed national guard troops, and police officers wandering the terminal constantly. Then the loudspeaker - about every ten minutes, in-between announcements about the trains, an announcement warning us that we or our belongings could be searched at any time. And of course, video cameras covering the entire terminal. It was so over-the-top that I was for that short period of time, more scared of the 'security' in place than I was of the minute possibility of a terrorist attack. Is this what our country has become? So terrified of the terrorist bogeyman that we happily live in a big-brother state? Now, I should add that neither I nor my bags were searched, nor was I detained in any way (apart from my train being delayed). So this was apparently for show, a 'presence' as it were. But as a former member of the public-safety profession, for me to feel this way says something remarkable.