While I think Senator Schumer is rather bright and capable as a Senator, this is a spectacularly bad idea on both pragmatic and libertarian grounds.
Pragmatic Objections
1. This can be fairly expensive. In addition to the need to have staff to implement id checks, in some cases stations may need to be reconfigured to ensure that boarding is not possible without passing through security.
2. We can't secure everything and if our standard is that whenever al-Qaeda contemplates a terrorist act against a class of targets we are going to try to exclude potential terrorists from that class of targets we are going to be spending way more than we can afford for the small amount of additional security.
3. This won't effectively protect train passengers because unlike an airplane if you want to harm a train being inside a train is not that much more effective than being outside. More importantly, Senator Schumer's proposal does not include commuter trains such as the New York City Subway, the Long Island Railroad or New Jersey transit. An al-Qaeda attack could avoid the security we add to Amtrak by targeting the commuter trains, which are a more attractive target in any case. Logistically, we can't check ID for commuter trains.
Libertarian Objections
1. The no-fly list is maintained in an arbitrary and secretive fashion which violates due process. There is no notice that one is on the no-fly list, no hearing before being put on it and, unless you are a United States Senator, no quick way to get off it. Further, the people on the no-fly list are there because of suspicion, not conviction of a crime. This may be necessary for airplanes, but we the more we expand the uses of this list, the more problematic this becomes.
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