Wouldn’t fixing the failures rather than attacking the pilot make more sense? Of course, little about the TSA and their security theater makes any sense.

The pilot, whose name has not been released, uploaded a series of clips taken at San Francisco International Airport. His intent was to expose the insane double standard of TSA’s airport employee screening policies: Although pilots and flight attendants are required to pass through the same concourse checkpoints as passengers, many ground workers, including baggage handlers, caterers and cabin cleaners, are exempt from these checks. The YouTube segments, which have since been taken down, showed ground employees passing through a simple turnstile on their way to work. You can see some highlights from the videos in this television news report by News10 in Sacramento, Calif., where the pilot lives.

This has been TSA policy from the beginning. It is also something I’ve been writing about in my columns, on and off, for the past eight years. Finally the issue is getting some attention — if not entirely for the right reasons. This should be a story about farcical security practices; instead, as the media has been playing it, it’s the story of a renegade pilot.

TSA says the pilot’s actions are “under review,” citing the possible release of what the agency calls, “sensitive security information.”