Paper Example Doctorate 392 words

Racial profiling as a counterterrorism strategy: arguments and implications

Last reviewed: March 13, 2004 ~2 min read

¶ … attacks of September 11, 2001 spawned a number of dubious government actions, including the intensification of racial profiling to target Arabs and Muslims. This means that a certain section of American society is under immediate suspicion of terrorism simply for being of a particular race or religion. Tolerance and equality are two of the highest principles treasured by the United States and its inhabitants. The fear and suspicion cultivated by racial profiling, especially after September 11, represents an abomination of the rights guaranteed under the Constitution to all within American borders.

To suspect millions of law-abiding, innocent people of terrorism as a result of the actions of a handful, is like suspecting all white males of perversion as a result of a few perverted serial killers. It is illogical and causes more harm than good.

There are many actions that are helpful in preventing terrorism. Immigration laws for example can be tightened. Airport searching systems can be upgraded. All of these protection systems can be upgraded without having to resort to racial profiling.

Racial profiling furthermore breeds suspicion and distrust within the American nation (Harris). Americans distrust each other on the basis of, as mentioned above, religion and race. This more than any act of terrorism from the outside, is destroying the "way of life" the President is trying so hard to protect.

You’re 72% through this paper. Sign up to read the full paper.

Sign Up Now — Instant Access Already a member? Log in
130,000+ paper examples AI writing assistant Citation generator Cancel anytime
Cite This Paper
PaperDue. (2004). Racial profiling as a counterterrorism strategy: arguments and implications. PaperDue. https://paperdue.com/essay/attacks-of-september-11-2001-spawned-a-163717

Always verify citation format against your institution’s current style guide requirements.