Maybe I should walk through with a dosimeter badge. Yes, I could use the grounds that one of my clients is a nuclear power plant, another is a fuel processing facility. Use the reason that the company’s safety policy requires all employees associated with certain projects must have exposure logs (as in after so many millirems within a year, no more exposure situations for that year). As an officer in the company I can make such calls.
walk through with a dosimeter badge. Yes
**Airport body scanners not only show you naked, they also have the potential to wreck your DNA. The body scanners use terahertz waves to show your privates and terahertz waves rip apart DNA..**
http://www.infowars.com/terahertz-wave-body-scanners-destroy-dna/
“Maybe I should walk through with a dosimeter badge.”
Yup, done that, a Landauer aluminum oxide crystal model, thje hexagon shape. They only respond if the total dose is over 1 mR. I did this on multiple flights, so they pick up the scan dose and the flight dose.
Results show that the dose on the badge scales to flight length, not the number of times I get scanned. The backscatter xray dose is limited by law to be less than 25 UREM, which is pretty small for a dosimeter badge to see.
When you do this, hold the badge in your hand- they yell at you to remove everything from your pockets and hold it in your hand, so you can carry your badge through.
If you leave it in your pocket, it will be scanned and record the dose in your pocket, at that point they’ll ask you to remove it and you can say sorry, I forgot.
Actually, in those cases, you are required to NOT have the badges exposed to outside exposures. If you did as you say above, you would be violating Federal law.