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U.S. National Identity Cards All But Law 1083

CompSci101 writes "News.com is running a story about the RealID Card legislation that's been attached to emergency military spending bills to ensure its passage. How soon does everyone think this system will be abused either by the government or by thieves ? The worst part is the completely machine-readable/automatic nature of the thing -- you might not even know you're giving your information away." From the article: "Starting three years from now, if you live or work in the United States, you'll need a federally approved ID card to travel on an airplane, open a bank account, collect Social Security payments, or take advantage of nearly any government service. Practically speaking, your driver's license likely will have to be reissued to meet federal standards."
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U.S. National Identity Cards All But Law

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  • Blank Reg (Score:5, Insightful)

    by ackthpt ( 218170 ) * on Friday May 06, 2005 @02:56PM (#12454875) Homepage Journal
    "Starting three years from now, if you live or work in the United States, you'll need a federally approved ID card to travel on an airplane, open a bank account, collect Social Security payments, or take advantage of nearly any government service.

    So how possible would it be to get by without one? Regarding

    Practically speaking, your driver's license likely will have to be reissued to meet federal standards."
    I expect that would cross the line of States Rights. Perhaps they could enforce it for interstate transportation, but within my state I think there would be a fight against such a thing.

    Might as well start writing the check out now to help fund the fight against this thing.

    Geez, you'd need to have spent half your life on drugs and alcohol to think this is a good idea and sign it into law.

    "Aus Passe!"

  • *Please* RTFA (Score:1, Insightful)

    by daveschroeder ( 516195 ) * on Friday May 06, 2005 @02:58PM (#12454911)
    I bef of you. Please RTFA [com.com].

    The worst part is the completely machine-readable/automatic nature of the thing -- you might not even know you're giving your information away.

    Um. Huh? With the exception of RFID, how in the living hell would you not know you're "giving your information away"?

    If, again, the argument is "ease", thanks to a technological change or technology itself, then why do slashdotters always argue in favor of technology elsewhere, but against it here?

    - The card will still be issued by your state motor vehicle agency. It will merely be a federally approved, standardized version of your state Driver's License or state Identification Card.

    - The process to obtain the card will be more rigorous, and you will have to provide more documents to prove your identity.

    - The House *already approved* a standalone version of the Real ID bill, so the fact this is attached to military spending is irrelevant

    - IF the standardized "machine readable technology" (which almost all state issues IDs already have in the form of a bar code, magnetic strip, etc.) ends up being RFID, you must at least concede that this standardization is based on consistency, functionality, and ease of use, not a desire to build a nationwide network of centrally administered RFID detectors for the purposes of tracking every citizen

    - All of the information on all of the cards is already accessible to any entity that requests identification, such as banks. However, the information will now be presented and stored in a uniform manner.

    - If you think that all of these actions are designed exlusively to institute a 1984-style police state by evil conservatives, you probably don't see the illogic in opposing simple standardization of ID cards that already exist.

    - All of the items listed - opening bank accounts, collecting social security checks, travelling by air, etc. - already require ID (and if you want to get retarded about the whole air travel thing, go for it. John Gilmore already found he could travel without ID [slashdot.org] (a href=http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=140827&ci d=11799450>2, but it didn't serve his agenda).

    Look. I don't mind vigilance for the sake of privacy and individual rights. In fact, I think the vigilance of privacy advocates, the ACLU, etc., is necessary and important. But you must realize that extreme views are almost always not the correct ones. It's the interplay and balance between both sides of a reasonable debate that is important. The people who think a national ID card with a DNA fingerprint and everyone implanted with GPS are wrong, and the people who think that every single bit of legislation like this is part of a corporate/government/Republican conspiracy to control them are also wrong. By all means, fight for your convictions, but if you do it from a not-so-tinfoily perspective, you'll have more chance at convincing others of the validity of your position.
  • Oh Boy (Score:2, Insightful)

    by SengirV ( 203400 ) on Friday May 06, 2005 @03:00PM (#12454948)
    Nazi Germany, here we come. Where are your PAPERS!!!!!
  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 06, 2005 @03:00PM (#12454951)
    It will do little to stop criminals, because criminals have never cared about the rules, but decent American citizens will have to jump through hoops and come to accept presenting papers to travel in-country just like those Soviets we looked down on.
  • Re:Blank Reg (Score:5, Insightful)

    by AdamWeeden ( 678591 ) on Friday May 06, 2005 @03:00PM (#12454952) Homepage
    States Rights haven't existed since the Civil War.
  • Pretty sad. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 06, 2005 @03:00PM (#12454960)
    We never had real freedom here in this part of europe. People used to dream of travelling to the USA, the land of the free.

    Americans had freedom and are willingly throwing it away. All it takes for evil to triumph is for a few good men to do nothing. WAKE UP!

  • Nice trick (Score:5, Insightful)

    by sg3000 ( 87992 ) * <<sg_public> <at> <mac.com>> on Friday May 06, 2005 @03:01PM (#12454967)
    Wow, is anyone else surprised CNET put this in here:

    > Why did these ID requirements get attached to an "emergency" military
    > spending bill?
    ?
    > Because it's difficult for politicians to vote against money that will go to the troops
    > in Iraq and tsunami relief. The funds cover ammunition, weapons, tracked combat
    > vehicles, aircraft, troop housing, death benefits, and so on.

    The Republicans control congress and the executive branch now, and they wanted [house.gov] to have this National ID bill. By attaching this to a wholly unrelated military spending bill, the so-called advocates of small government will get their national ID card wish.

    As an interesting aside it's funny that they chose to stick this into a military spending bill for Iraq. Anyone recall that the Bush Administration told us told this war was going to cost? I thought this was was supposed to cost between $10 and $100 billion [salon.com]? We're already more than three times the high end figure, with no end in sight. This is the fourth emergency allocation of money Bush has asked for for his war "on the cheap".

    Anyway, make no mistake about it. The Republicans are now using their complete control to railroad this bill through, by sticking this thing in a military spending bill. It's a perfect catch-22. If the Democrats voted against it, they would have been accused of being against our troops (John Kerry, please take some time to describe how that feels). If they voted for it, it miraculously becomes a bipartisan bill so the Republicans can pass the blame around to evade responsibility. Even after this, the Democrats can be accused of "flip-flopping" since they voted against the national ID before, and now they're voting for it when it's buried in a military spending bill (Senator Kerry, your turn again). Wow, it's a win-win-win situation for the Republicans.

    Of course, for the Democrats and the public in general, it's a nice lose-lose-lose situation though. Maybe a brave Democrat can filibuster this bill so it doesn't get railroaded through. Oh, wait, the Republicans want to get rid of the filibuster [nytimes.com], too.

    I call upon all the Democratic senators and representatives who read Slashdot to stop this as soon as possible! There. I've done my part.
  • Soc. Sec. Cards have been used for years as a form of National ID, I welcome this, just wish it was more secure and private.
  • free pass (Score:2, Insightful)

    by PopeAlien ( 164869 ) on Friday May 06, 2005 @03:02PM (#12454987) Homepage Journal
    Might as well start writing the check out now to help fund the fight against this thing.

    But why would you want to do that?! This is all about freedom and safety and other comfortable words.
  • Re:Blank Reg (Score:4, Insightful)

    by TripMaster Monkey ( 862126 ) * on Friday May 06, 2005 @03:03PM (#12455006)


    Unfortunately, that's why they attached this thing to an Iraq spending bill...so they could ram it through Congress without actually having to debate the issues...on its own, it was expected to have trouble in the Senate.

    Attached to an Iraq spending bill, it will have no trouble passing, and our esteemed President has already expressed his support.

    This bill will impose costs on states (driver's licenses)without proper reimbursement, so there's a fighting point right there, but I don't realistically see this being stopped. Instead, it might be better to start thinking about how we might benefit from the imposition of this new technology.

  • by Kainaw ( 676073 ) on Friday May 06, 2005 @03:03PM (#12455008) Homepage Journal
    FTA:
    "Practically speaking, your driver's license likely will have to be reissued to meet federal standards."

    What standards doesn't my driver's license have? Again, FTA:
    At a minimum: name, birth date, sex, ID number, a digital photograph, address, and a "common machine-readable technology" that Homeland Security will decide on.

    Checking my driver's license:
    [x] Name
    [x] Birth Date
    [x] Sex
    [x] ID Number
    [x] Digital Photograph
    [x] Address
    [x] Machine-readable technology: both a magstrip and a barcode.

    What states are issuing driver's licenses without this information on them?
  • Re:Blank Reg (Score:3, Insightful)

    by ConceptJunkie ( 24823 ) on Friday May 06, 2005 @03:05PM (#12455044) Homepage Journal
    You're wrong. Every state has the right to kiss the Federal government's butt and it might get some money. Of course what it gives away for that money is another matter.

    In all seriousness though, your statement was exactly what I was going to say.

  • Why can't they... (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 06, 2005 @03:06PM (#12455055)
    Why can't they just pass a law that only allows one law per bill. I'm tired of this kind of political bs that they can get away with - attaching these types of little things at the end just to get it through. I can imagine there will be a "preferred" vendor of these cards/equipment and they amazingly increased their spending in congressional pocket lining... err.. lobbying this year to get 'er done!
  • Re:*Please* RTFA (Score:5, Insightful)

    by stinerman ( 812158 ) on Friday May 06, 2005 @03:06PM (#12455068)
    - The House *already approved* a standalone version of the Real ID bill, so the fact this is attached to military spending is irrelevant

    Wrong.

    1) Rules for a federally approved ID don't belong with a supplemental military spending bill.
    2) It means nothing that it was passed by the house. If you follow the article a bit more (part 2):

    It was expected to run into some trouble in the Senate. Now that it's part of an Iraq spending bill, senators won't want to vote against it.
  • by MobyDisk ( 75490 ) on Friday May 06, 2005 @03:08PM (#12455097) Homepage
    The real tragedy here is not the use of a national ID. There are legitimate merits to both sides of that discussion, and I will not address them here. The real tragedy is that this is an "Emergency military spending bill" which a HUGE rider on it.

    This is why the line item veto [loc.gov] was popular, despite being blatently unconstitutional. A few congress persons sitting on a committee can completely disrupt the validity of a bill. Nobody is going to veto a bill that gives money to the military and be responsible for leaving them high and dry. And the bill also gives tsunami aid. Nobody will veto that either.

    It should be unconstitutional to place this type of stuff on a bill. It is also highly irresponsible of our congress people to not flame anyone who tries to do this stuff. I don't know how to word the ammendment, but it would probably do a LOT to clean up some of the obnoxious laws that sneak into place.
  • Re:How soon? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by WormholeFiend ( 674934 ) on Friday May 06, 2005 @03:08PM (#12455109)
    Yes.

    Government officials almost never go to jail.
  • Re:*Please* RTFA (Score:4, Insightful)

    by TripMaster Monkey ( 862126 ) * on Friday May 06, 2005 @03:13PM (#12455189)


    I agree with you completely, with the exception of the 'shocking' part.
  • Re:For the . . . (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Foamy ( 29271 ) on Friday May 06, 2005 @03:14PM (#12455197)
    Those who give up a little freedom for putative security neither deserve, nor shall receive either.

    This ID card will NOT make you any safer in any way whatsoever.

    Let's use the old NRA argument here. One of the main reasons the NRA is opposed to gun registration (excluding their interpretation of the 2nd Amendment) is that criminals will not register their guns, thus only legitimate gun owners will be registered and potentially tracked.

    This national ID is exactly the same. Do you really think that the Terrorists will go to the DMV and say, "Hi, I'm Osama Bin Laden, I'd like my Driver's license today. Thank you?" Do you really think they won't be able to get fake credentials that are as good as these IDs or can be used to get a legitimate ID?

    And finally, do you really think that the government won't abuse this new power (i.e. knowleged of your every purchase, move, travel, etc.)? Who do you think will hold and compile these data? My guess is an Oracle based system. Do you really think that our corporatocracy will keep this information away from corporations?

    Can you imagine how much corporations would pay to know your every move, flight, purchase, hotel reservation, rental, etc. etc. etc? These data are worth billions upon billions and they won't be sitting idly in some database in DC doing nothing.

  • by mcc ( 14761 ) <amcclure@purdue.edu> on Friday May 06, 2005 @03:16PM (#12455228) Homepage
    We were starting to get to a point where using social security numbers as identification was actually prohibited, and this prohibition was actually being enforced. For example, note how many colleges had previously used soc#s as student IDs but who have been phasing that out in the last five years.

    Well, so much for that.
  • Re:*Please* RTFA (Score:5, Insightful)

    by ClioCJS ( 264898 ) <cliocjs+slashdot AT gmail DOT com> on Friday May 06, 2005 @03:18PM (#12455261) Homepage Journal
    You sure like to give the benefit of the doubt to the government.

    Funny thing when you give them the benefit of the doubt. You usually can't take it back. Once the floodgates are open, they can't generally be closed.

    You fail to realize the reason of the dichotimy(sp?) between the two slashdot viewpoints: Technology is an enabler, but it is a much more efficient oppressor. Slashdotters want technology that enables, and don't want technology that oppresses, or can oppress. It's quite simple really.

    Considering that Texas is considering RFID tags on all license places, and yes, police would scan them automatically for criminals in the like, I'd say the "trcaking system" infrastructure is already being put in place. (Only if the license gets an RFID tag, now they'll know if someone's borrowing your car or not.) And as more and more things are RFID-mandated, more and more government buildings will have readers, then like red-light cameras they'll be red-light RFID readers (to help catch people who run red lights, of course)... The end result will indeed be tracking of everyone's movements. Technology as an oppressor. NO ONE has to have that idea in mind now for that to be what happens; it's simply where the current trend will end up.

    You also seem to think that just because there are not men in dark suits in a dimly-lit board room conspiring against us, that there is no conspiracy. There is a conspiracy, but it is more a de-facto conspiracy of ideas and moral forces that mesh together to create things bigger than any single human being (corporations, government entities, grassroot movements). That the conspiracy doesn't have a specific face does not mean that it is not something that should be fought against.

  • by shawb ( 16347 ) on Friday May 06, 2005 @03:19PM (#12455272)
    If they outlaw those devices, I'm pretty sure the good old microwave oven would do the job.
  • So, any /. folks old enough, like me, to remember how we would react with derision and scorn at the horrifying stories of people in the USSR being required to have "internal passports" for travel and always carry identity papers? Well, just for giggles, how would you define "internal passport" and how is that different from this?

  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 06, 2005 @03:22PM (#12455312)
    "What no one seemed to notice was the ever widening gap between the government and the people...And it became always wider...
    "The whole process of this disconnect coming into being was built around diversion...
    "Nazism gave us some other dreadful, fundamental things to think about ...or, rather, provided an excuse not to think for people who did not want to think anyway...
    "Nazism kept us so busy with continuous changes, accusations and 'crises' and so fascinated ... by the machinations of the 'national enemies' without and within) and the government's 'responses' to them, that we had no time to think about these dreadful things that were growing, little by little, all around us...
    "Each step was so small, so inconsequential, so well explained or, on occasion, 'regretted', that unless one understood what the whole thing was in principle, what all these 'little measures' must some day lead to, one no more saw it developing from day to day than a farmer in his field sees the corn growing...
    "Each act curtailing freedom... is worse than the last, but only a little worse. You wait for the next and the next. You wait for one great shocking occasion, thinking that others, when such a shock comes, will join you in resisting somehow...
    "You don't want to act, or even talk, alone... you don't want to 'go out of your way to make trouble' or be 'unpatriotic'...But the one great shocking
    occasion, when tens or hundreds or thousands will join with you, never comes...
    "That's the difficulty. The forms are all there, all untouched, all reassuring: the houses, the shops, the jobs, the mealtimes, the visits, the concerts, the cinema, the holidays. But the spirit (which you never noticed because you made the lifelong mistake of identifying it with the forms) is changed. Now you live in a world of hate and fear, and the people who hate and fear do not even know it themselves; when everyone is transformed, no one is transformed. ...
    "You have accepted things you would not have accepted five years ago, a year ago, things your father... could never have imagined."
    Source: They Thought They Were Free, The Germans, 1938-45 (Chicago: University
    of Chicago Press, 1955)
    __________________________________
    "We will not wait as our enemies gather strength against us. In the world we have entered, the only path to safety is the path of action, and this nation will act." G.W.Bush, West Point, June 2002
    "In this new world, declarations of war serve no purpose. Our enemies must be defeated before they can harm us. I will never declare war, but will take action!" Adolph Hitler, June 1940
    "Not too many people will be crying in their beer if there are more detentions, more stops and more profiling. There will be a groundswell of public opinion to banish civil rights," Peter Kirsanow, Bush's controversial appointee the U.S.
    Commission on Civil Rights
    "I tell you, freedom and human rights in America are doomed. The U.S. government will lead the American people, and the West in general, into an unbearable hell and a choking life."
    Osama bin Laden, October, 2001

  • by Ron Bennett ( 14590 ) on Friday May 06, 2005 @03:22PM (#12455330) Homepage
    How does knowing one's identity really make us collectively safer. I've yet to see a good answer to this question.

    Requiring identification is basically a way of tracking people; fishing expeditions.

    Scanning for explosives, etc is what they should concentrate on... most, if not all?, of the 911 terrorists had valid licenses; many of them had no criminal records ... again, my question is how does requiring ID make us safer?

    Ron Bennett
  • by TheLoneGundam ( 615596 ) on Friday May 06, 2005 @03:24PM (#12455363) Journal
    we must work to make sure that WE can read the information on our own cards, to ensure accuracy, with a low-cost device owned by US and not some agency (to prevent the trivial programming of reader devices to omit information that agencies don't want us to know they've encoded there). We must not accept any form of encryption of the data that we don't have a key to (encryption is OK to prevent trivial theft of the information, but the owner of the ID card should own (at least a copy of) the decryption key).
  • Re:Blank Reg (Score:5, Insightful)

    by ZosX ( 517789 ) <zosxavius@nOSpAm.gmail.com> on Friday May 06, 2005 @03:25PM (#12455372) Homepage
    I expect that would cross the line of States Rights. Perhaps they could enforce it for interstate transportation, but within my state I think there would be a fight against such a thing.

    Yeah, because dissent will get you far in todays political climate. Didn't you see the congressman on Farenheit 911 state very plainly that for the most part they don't even get to read and analyze what bills they are voting in? The Patriot Act is so fucking unpatriotic that George and Tom are still rolling in their graves. 200 years ago we went to war over such intrusions into our private lives and yet now we idly sit by and watch as slowly but surely the bill of rights becomes eroded with each new act of congress.

    Think it is any small mystery that the government wants less people to own guns and certainly less people to carry them on their person? Why do you think militias, you know, those little civilian armies, you know, the ones that originally fought for our revolution, why the fuck do you think want them to only really have small arms and certainly no automatic weapons, bombs, grenades, or anything of power? The very real posibility that the people may one day get fed up with all these bullshit laws is precisely the reason that the federal government wants to ultimately have everything under wraps. Whatever happened to Taxation without Representation? Ask yourself honestly, who is being represented within the federal government? Who does congress typically side with? Who funded the media blitzes that got these cadidates seats within our government?

    The political climate in this country is so stifling it makes me wonder how people can call themselves public servents when they have become so entirely self serving. Absolute power corrupts absolutely. You should never trust any reigning power, including the president and his bought and sold republican congress. The people need a voice and that voice is drowning out in the politics of corporate america and the rethoric of an unwinnable war on terrorism. By coaxing the public into a constant state of fear, we have created a public opinion that our rights are not nearly as important as our safety. According to Mr. Franklin, we now deserve neither safety nor rights and will be given neither in this sad pursuit.

    I think the James Madison quote in my sig speaks best about the current political environment. Remember, Madison and Jefferson both wanted no American to trust the federal government and left the flexibility in our constitution to tear down our government if need be and erect something in its place. As it happened with the original Articles of the Confederation, which basically gavae the federal government no authority, it was realized that such an arrangement would not work for a great many reasons, including the need for a single currency. Thus 10 years or so later, the Constitution was born and signed into law.

    As long as people keep voting for a party that does paltry little to represent their voters and their voters' rights, then American will continue along this sombre path of imperialism, corruption, world manipulation, and war all in the name of protecting our "freedoms."

    The next time you go to vote for someone, ask yourself, who does this candidate represent? If you can't put yourself into that picture, well then, who the hell can you vote for?

    I hope your state does indeed fight this and my state as well, but unfortunately I'm sure that with the threat of removal of precious federal funding, most states will do as they have always done and bend over. Good thing you voted for those state reps right?

  • by rleibman ( 622895 ) on Friday May 06, 2005 @03:27PM (#12455401) Homepage
    I get emails from this organization: www.downsizedc.org [downsizedc.org]. They've been working against this for a while, and they have tons of information about *exactly* why a national ID card is a bad idea.
    They have a very easy form to contact your senator on this issue.

    They are also working on a law proposal that would force lawmakers to read the laws before they get to vote on them. A good idea and well presented.
  • Re:For the . . . (Score:5, Insightful)

    by RatBastard ( 949 ) on Friday May 06, 2005 @03:28PM (#12455424) Homepage
    You are a terrified, easily manipulated idiot. There is no nice way to put it.

    How wil this stop a hijacking? None of the previous group used false ID. And neither will the next group.

    You obviously have no idea of how they were able to crash those planes and why it won't happen again. The reason they succeeded was because in the entire histiory of domestic hijacking the best way ti survive was to sit down and shut up. The hijackers wanted money, travel out of the country, the freedom of a comrade, or some other goal that only power outside of the plane could grant them. The passangers were hostages and the plane was a convenient container to keep them in. The 9/11 hijackers played a completelt new set of rules. The passangers meant nothing to them. They wanted the aircraft.

    Do you get that? The rules changed and only the hijackers knew it. But now everyone knows. The next time someone tries to hijack a plane they are going to get the shit kicked out of them by people who don't want to die. Just look at what happened to the "shoe bomber".

    But this begs the question: "how much of your privacy are you willing tio give away?" What will you give away when terrorists find a different way to attack us? And what about the attacks after that? At what point do you declare that you've had enough?

    The brutal truth is that there is no way to stop terrorists completely. If they really want to hurt us they will. They will find ways to attack us that we haven't thought to defend against.
  • Re:*Please* RTFA (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Xepherys2 ( 174396 ) <`ten.syrehpex' `ta' `syrehpex'> on Friday May 06, 2005 @03:30PM (#12455454) Homepage
    Come now... you can't be serious?!

    Federal Identification

    This is blatently anti-American, or at a bare minimum anti-Checks and Balances. Primary identification has always been a function of the state. In fact, I can rarely use my military ID in place of a state ID at banks and the like. Places that do accept it often require additional identification, where if I had used my state driver's license, that one piece would suffice.

    RFID as a Convenient Technology

    Why, you ask, is it that most /.ers will champion technology that created convenience as long as it doesn't have to do with privacy? I almost feel ignorant answering that question, but I will anyhow. The fact of the matter is, if RFID chips make it more convenient for a grocery store to track items, therefore saving money due to less shoplifting, better restock times, no lost items, et cetera, I will(should) in turn save as well. If RFID chips are used in retail for inventory purposes, then those companies will see more profit. More profit for American companies = good.

    Now, if those same RFID chips make it more convenient for a would-be thief to steal my identity, or for government agents in a terrorist-stricken world to pilfer my whereabouts, then I am against it. Stolen identity != good. You following?

    Uniformity in Identification

    Currently, the most common and uniform form of identity in the United States is the Social Security Card / SSN. This common and uniform (and important) piece of information is also the root cause of the majority of identity theft in the US. Uniformity is not always a good thing. Each state creates it's own forms of ID, and those agents that are required to request that ID understand where/what/how data is stored on those cards. Nobody else needs to know. *shrug*

    Final Comments

    Now DNA/Fingerprints I don't see as much of a problem. Of course, being in the Army, they already have that for me. Frankly, the only thing I can see that being used for is matching criminal investigations. The amount of effort spent tracking a person down for whatever reason solely on DNA and/or fingerprints is outrageous. However, RFID, GPS, tracking devices, cameras... Anything that allows a person to be tracked by the government (even for potentially legitimate reasons) allows a person to be tracked by malevolent persons as well. That is never an option IMHO.
  • by TripMaster Monkey ( 862126 ) * on Friday May 06, 2005 @03:32PM (#12455492)

    16

    He also forced everyone,
    small and great, rich and poor,
    free and slave, to receive a mark
    on his right hand or on his forehead,


    17
    so that no one could buy or sell
    unless he had the mark, which is
    the name of the beast or the
    number of his name.


  • Re:Nice trick (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Jtheletter ( 686279 ) on Friday May 06, 2005 @03:33PM (#12455499)
    By attaching this to a wholly unrelated military spending bill, the so-called advocates of small government will get their national ID card wish.

    I agree that this bill is problematic in setting up a de-facto (if not in-facto) national ID card. However you really need to RTFA (again perhaps) as it clearly states that the ID card rider had already been passed in a stand-alone bill before it was tacked onto the military spending one. Yes, this makes it difficult, if not impossible, for dissenting reps who may have changed their mind having learned more about it since the first time it went through, but this is not a backdoor bill, it already had major support.

    On a side note re: your mention of the rampant spending for this war - at what point can we begin impeachment for such blatant lies? We entered this war with no exit strategy, no reconstruction plans. Hell I'd be astonished to learn Bush had planned anything farther than "bang-bang shoot em up real good". I think it's pretty clear that this administration has at no point cared about actual public opinion, political results, or actual cost. They wanted this war at any cost and have lied, cheated, and passed the buck from day 1 of Bush taking office. As much as every piece of government seems to be in bed with the executive branch (goodbye checks and balances) I can't believe there is no legal case against half the cabinet members for knowingly misleading the public and basically doing whatever the hell they want with zero regard for legality, international relations, or - for fssk's sake - the consequences of their actions over the next generation.

    "Democracy delivered by the bomb and the gun is terror elsewhere in the world where I'm from." - Special Delivery, MC Frontalot

  • Re:Blank Reg (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Com2Kid ( 142006 ) <com2kidSPAMLESS@gmail.com> on Friday May 06, 2005 @03:34PM (#12455515) Homepage Journal
    That is the same thing we said to England a few years ago about us having better privacy rights.
  • Re:How soon? (Score:3, Insightful)

    by willCode4Beer.com ( 783783 ) on Friday May 06, 2005 @03:34PM (#12455516) Homepage Journal
    hahaha.
    Since this works with all the states, the crooks need only go to a state with a broken education system [slashdot.org] and take advantage of the people to get in the system.
    And as pointed out, the system is as weak as the state with the weakest system.
  • Re:Nice trick (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Usaflt2003 ( 881612 ) on Friday May 06, 2005 @03:39PM (#12455608) Homepage
    Yes, lets blame the evil republicans for being the sole users of political dirty tricks, those bastards!

    How about dumping the partisan rhetoric and getting some of your facts straight. First with the rhetoric, you make it sound like the democrats have never used a rider on a bill for whatever hot potato pet project they have going at the moment. If you do believe them to be pure as the undriven snow when it comes to politcal dirty tricks you are just naive. Both sides of the aisle are equally dirty and to blame for abuse of the legislative process to the detriment of society as a whole.

    As a short aside I get really pissed at both sides of the aisle for using me and my fellow military members (read my name as United States Air Force LT) as a means to an end in this kinda political shit. Military spending for troops in the field is not a rug to sweep bad laws under. One of these days someone is going to put some truly egregious rider on a spending bill that cannot be ignored and the whole spending bill will get voted down and some troops are going to die. Its sad but that probably what it will take to end this crap practice. (sorry, just had to vent about that for a minute)

    As far as the facts, you have wrong the propsed end of the filibuster. It is for judicial nominees only, not legislation. Though, hey, it feeds in to your bombast and rhetoric to over state the issue so thats all that matters right? Thats not to say that the end of the judicial filibuster is a good thing but please if your going to rail against injustice keep it accurate, exaggeration just makes you look silly and hurts the over all cause to fight said injustice.
  • Re:*Please* RTFA (Score:4, Insightful)

    by stinerman ( 812158 ) on Friday May 06, 2005 @03:41PM (#12455640)
    Hell, I'm bored. Lets have a go.

    The House already had overwhelming support for the standalone bill, and there is no reason to believe it would not have passed in the Senate as well.

    There is also no reason to believe it would have passed the senate.

    "Running into trouble" != not passing

    Similarly, "Running into trouble" != passing. So the best either of us can do is to say that we can't know how the stand-alone bill would have done in the senate.

    I think you're smart enough to know the point of my arguement. That is, that it is wrong to tack an unrelated rider that may have touble passing onto a bill that is guaranteed to pass. Any laws passed in this way are patently wrong, no matter what they legislate for or against.
  • Re:For the . . . (Score:5, Insightful)

    by richg74 ( 650636 ) on Friday May 06, 2005 @03:41PM (#12455642) Homepage
    This ID card will NOT make you any safer in any way whatsoever.

    I entirely agree. First of all, it is worth remembering that almost all of the 9/11 terrorists had valid, DMV-issued IDs. There is nothing that I can see in this bill that is going to fix that. It will also screw up the effort in some states to give limited driver's licenses to (possibly) illegal immigrants, in the interest of seeing that they actually know how to drive, have insurance, and so on. Since, statistically, your chances of dying in an auto accident are much higher than in a terrorist incident, I don't think this is a trivial concern.

    Second, the whole concept of checking IDs against a list in order to fly is stupid. If we know who the suspects are, it would be much more efficient to spend the resources investigating what they're doing. Does anyone actually believe that potential terrorists are so dumb that they'll not try flying before they do the real thing? Or that they might not consider just blowing up a shopping center or a sports stadium?

    These data are worth billions upon billions and they won't be sitting idly in some database in DC doing nothing.

    Even assuming I trusted the government 100% not to misuse this data, one class of people to whom it would be very valuable are identity thieves. I suppose the argument will be that the database is so secure it can't be hacked.

    Right.

  • Re:*Please* RTFA (Score:5, Insightful)

    by shawb ( 16347 ) on Friday May 06, 2005 @03:43PM (#12455681)
    you must at least concede that this standardization is based on consistency, functionality, and ease of use, not a desire to build a nationwide network of centrally administered RFID detectors for the purposes of tracking every citizen

    Even if the reason is not to track citizens, it will eventually be used for it if allowed. Speed pass records have been confiscated in investigations ever since the speed pass was introduced. Do you think that the government won't subpoena records of where you've been if they deem you a threat? It's already done with credit card records, cell phone usage records, etc etc. Except in this case the ID card scanner will probably have to phone home to a central server to verify the card. Now the government won't have to go through the hassle of collecting all this data, when it's already in their hands. Allows for a lot more shuffling of locational data to make a case appear to fit (even if the data is only circumstantial.)

    Granted, this data mining will probably be used MOSTLY on investigations where there is already a suspect, and this information could also be subpoenad by a defendant to prove his innocence. Basically if you feel that your government is generally benevolant, there should not be a problem with using this tech. However if you have fears [oldamericancentury.org] that your government is moving towards more totalitarianistic [wikipedia.org]or even fascist [wikipedia.org] state, then you might actually has a valid reason to fear this.
  • Re:Blank Reg (Score:3, Insightful)

    by surefooted1 ( 838360 ) on Friday May 06, 2005 @03:43PM (#12455696)
    As long as people keep voting for a party that does paltry little to represent their voters and their voters' rights, then American will continue along this sombre path of imperialism, corruption, world manipulation, and war all in the name of protecting our "freedoms."

    I was right with you up until the part above. This is in part why things happen as they do. The gov't gets people arguing about democrats this, republicans that, when the gov't institution itself is corrupt. It doesn't matter if they're red or blue. They will both try to screw you to retain and/or increase their power.

    Until we see that the problem is the federal government itself and fight the problem from that front, we will accomplish nothing in the smoke and mirros dems vs. reps debate.
  • Re:*Please* RTFA (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Godeke ( 32895 ) * on Friday May 06, 2005 @03:48PM (#12455772)
    But it likely would have passed the House and Senate and been signed by the president regardless.

    Well, whoop-ti-doo, we just found a wonderful way to avoid all that messy discussion and debate. Declare it "likely to do stuff" and just toss it on the pile of "must be voted for" items.

    Look, you admit it shouldn't have been on a spending bill, so why bother people with all the logic when what you really are saying is "the fact it won't get debated doesn't bother me because I'm for the whole thing". The people who are annoyed are annoyed because of the bypass of the whole open discussion and debate part of our lawmaking process. Obviously those opposed to it would be more annoyed than those who see it as manifest destiny. Even if it passed after discussion, it likely would be modified in some way if the normal processes took place. Ever notice the phrase "reconciling house and senate versions of the bills" bouncing around? That is because both houses have different makeup and therefor different viewpoints and often make different choices. Now the alternative viewpoint is squelched. Sure, the end result might be the same. In fact, it is probable... but why be all happy and supportive of short curcuits to the law making process?
  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 06, 2005 @03:51PM (#12455844)
    Internal passport: for countries that don't let their citizens leave the country with *REAL* passports (see: communists).
  • by ninjagin ( 631183 ) on Friday May 06, 2005 @03:57PM (#12455938)
    I've been keeping track of this legislation for a few months, now, and I can't believe the irony of it.

    My gun club is populated by a lot of right-wingers, some of whom are pretty far right. The guy I buy my ammo from used to regale me (because he knows I'm a lefty) with tales of how the liberals were trying to institute national IDs which would stomp on states rights. He used to say stuff like "The liberals are gonna take away our freedom to go where we please when we please without having to show papers. It'll be illegal to just be walking down the street without anything in your pockets. Then they'll take away our guns." I laughed at him then and I confess that it's still pretty funny to me. Nobody's going to take away our guns, after all.

    It's especially funny that the same righties that used to holler and crow about how those liberal treehugging twits were gonna take away our rights are now the same ones that want national ID cards. Now that's ironic.

    It's funny also because I used to think that conservatives were for smaller federal government that leaves more responsibilities to individual states and doesn't spend so much money. Yet, these IDs are very much a big-government imposition on the states, the federal ban on gay marriage is one more such example, the Terry Schiavo fiasco proves that the fed is even willing to bypass the states to step on individual rights, and I've never seen an administration spend so much borrowed money since the Reagan years. Do republicans stand for anything conservative anymore?

    I'll probably garner some flame for this post, but there just seem to be so many examples over the past couple years where the supposed "conservative" parts of the legislature and the admittedly conservative executive branch have taken stands that are so completely at odds with conservatism as I've always understood it. Honestly, I'm not intending to start a right-left flame war -- some of my best friends are republicans, not to mention folks in my family -- I'm just trying to figure out what being a conservative means at this time.

  • Re:Blank Reg (Score:5, Insightful)

    by 87C751 ( 205250 ) <sdot AT rant-central DOT com> on Friday May 06, 2005 @04:01PM (#12455989) Homepage
    Didn't you see the congressman on Farenheit 911 state very plainly that for the most part they don't even get to read and analyze what bills they are voting in?
    Nit: He didn't say "get to". He said "We don't read most of the bills..." It's not for lack of opportunity. It's from lack of concern.

    Personally, I think there should be no riders. Every bill should address one thing and one thing only, and should carry a title that clearly summarizes its intent. Of course, that would be the end of pork, so there's no chance in hell that it will happen prior to the revolution. But I can dream...

  • Re:Blank Reg (Score:2, Insightful)

    by drkich ( 305460 ) <dkichline.gmail@com> on Friday May 06, 2005 @04:10PM (#12456128) Homepage
    Excuse me you insensitive clod. The political spectrum is not made up entirely by Democrats and Republicans. There are many other partys to choose from. Unfortunately everyone is lead to believe that it is a wasted vote NOT to vote for dems or repubes.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 06, 2005 @04:16PM (#12456202)
    That kind of thing is only a problem because the financial industry has chosen to use SSN as their unique ID to identify people. If they got their own damn ID, SSN would be pretty much entirely harmless.
  • by Frangible ( 881728 ) on Friday May 06, 2005 @04:17PM (#12456211)
    So uh, why are a good 10% of the comments I've seen on this blaming Bush for a bill the democrats are happily voting into law? Wake up guys, both political parties are in screw-you mode.
  • Re:But why? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by bodrell ( 665409 ) on Friday May 06, 2005 @04:17PM (#12456225) Journal
    You're already required to carry ID or a driver's license, this bill doesn't change that fact.

    Um, no, you are most certainly NOT required to carry ID or a driver's license. You are required to carry a driver's license when you are driving, but that's it. If I'm a passenger in a car, or walking down the street, there is no requirement for me to have identification.

    Also, Declan's article was misleading on this point:

    Steinhardt predicts the federalized IDs will be a gold mine for government agencies and marketers. Also, he notes that the Supreme Court ruled last year that police can demand to see ID from law-abiding U.S. citizens.

    Police can demand all they want, but you have no obligation to show them ID. The case was about a man's refusal to identify himself, not refusal to show ID. You are required to identify yourself, but that can be as simple as saying "my name is [insert name here]." If a police officer wants to take you down to the station because you won't present an ID card, that's false arrest.

    But to answer your question, why do I care? The first reason is that having to present this ID to board an airplane is a hindrance to both interstate commerce and freedom of assembly (note the environmental activists who were prevented from flying due to the secret watch list). But John Gilmore [freetotravel.org] does a much better job explaining this point.

  • Re:But why? (Score:1, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 06, 2005 @04:21PM (#12456279)
    You're already required to carry ID or a driver's license, this bill doesn't change that fact.

    That's 100% false, for starters. There is currently no requirement to carry any form of ID on your person unless you are engaged in certain regulated activities, such as driving, hunting, fishing, crossing a national border, etc.

    Do you think the government will find sonething out about you they don't already know?

    Perhaps.

    Are you afraid you'll be watched somehow in a way you already aren't being watched?

    Tracking everyone by ID cards is a way of watching me that isn't already happening. Why shouldn't I oppose that?

    Are you afraid it violates your rights? Which ones?

    "The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated." That's the first half of the 4th Amendment, and is one small part of the right to privacy that we are all entitled to.

    This is bad and wrong because it is easy to abuse by its very nature. It's bad and wrong because it will cost us all money without benefitting us in any appreciable way. It's bad and wrong because it will make identity theft even easier than it already is. It's bad and wrong because IT'S SO OBVIOUS THAT THE PEOPLE DON'T WANT IT THAT ITS SUPPORTERS HAD TO SNEAK IT THROUGH CONGRESS UNETHICALLY.
  • Re:But why? (Score:3, Insightful)

    by sacrilicious ( 316896 ) <qbgfynfu.opt@recursor.net> on Friday May 06, 2005 @04:23PM (#12456305) Homepage
    Why [does one care?]

    To turn it around: what good will this new id card do?

    To any extent that it facilitates better tracking (or whatever), it's not too hard to come up with a scenario where that greater tracking is abused.

    More generally, this intiative smells like any of a number of garden-variety post-9/11 "anti-terrorist security" notions that piss people off because they're showboating in the name of security while in fact simply taking away freedoms (and yes, anonymity is a freedom). Our "greater airport security", for example, deters nobody from hijacking or bombing airplanes but the stupid and impulsive, and the folks who pulled off 9/11 were neither. Don't even get me started on the patriot act.

    Rest assured that your complacency about this issue in no way placates me.

  • Re:Blank Reg (Score:2, Insightful)

    by amigabill ( 146897 ) on Friday May 06, 2005 @04:25PM (#12456327)
    I wish we had things set up so these attachments could not be possible. If you're voting on a military spending bill, no off-topic items have any reason to be there. Are you spending money on the military, or are you defining an ID card requirement? They don't belong together.

    Much like whatever that controversial thing added to the big budget omnibus a while back, this sort of thing should not be allowed to take place.

    If you want a national ID card, VOTE ON A NATIONAL ID CARD LAW.

    If you're afraid it will fail a vote, then it must not be a very good idea, and should not be snuck by in a vote on an unrelated topic.

    Considering how many of our reps vote without reading bills, I think most of congress should be outright fired anyway, but I've already petitioned my own congressman to do something about this off-topic attachment crap and people not possibly having time to read and understand bills before voting, such as the emergency budget omnibus and anti-terror bills. I dont' expect this to go anywhere, but at least I've tried...
  • by cfalcon ( 779563 ) on Friday May 06, 2005 @04:29PM (#12456384)
    You are not required to carry an ID or a driver's license (though you may be in order to go about activities like driving). That's your first mistake. The USA is not the land of "papers, please". You can *choose* to do it (my job required a full background check, drug test, fingerprinting, but if I needed it just to exist I'd be pissed).

    The argument "Law abiding folk have nothing to fear" is used time and time again by oppresive governments. It's not the American way.

    That said, I'm pretty sure a national ID card is largely inevitable, and if they can implement it correctly (which this is not), it probably won't be used to violate civil rights left and right.

    I care because it's a bad precedent, a step towards a land that is less free and more monitored. Have you seen some of the stuff that is illegal in some places? Certain sex consensual sex acts are just the start.

    I also don't think it's a problem with the *current* government, but a potentially evil *future* one.

    It's inherently a bad idea to build an infrastructure that a Hitler or a Stalin can immediately exploit should such a villian cease power, and this is a step in that direction.
  • Re:Blank Reg (Score:2, Insightful)

    by anoiniminious cowher ( 876990 ) on Friday May 06, 2005 @04:29PM (#12456389)
    States Rights haven't existed since the Civil War.

    Or before. It was more the South imposing their will on the North, with the Fugitive Slave Act, etc., than the other way around. The only reason the Northerns put up with it for so long is the South kept threating to bolt if they didn't, and what do you know, they bolted anyway.

    *ducks*
  • Re:Nice trick (Score:3, Insightful)

    by llefler ( 184847 ) on Friday May 06, 2005 @04:30PM (#12456405)
    Re: filibuster

    Actually, all Democratic senators and representatives do these days is read Slashdot.

    Maybe that's a good idea for them. Instead of standing up there reading a phone book, they could pick a slashdot article and read all the comments. They might even learn a thing or two in the process.
  • Well... (Score:3, Insightful)

    by speedfreak_5 ( 546044 ) on Friday May 06, 2005 @04:30PM (#12456410) Homepage Journal
    see those things that you listed? Those aren't necessarily bad things. I think safety nets like those are kinda cool just in case you ever need them.
  • Re:But why? (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Maggott ( 849849 ) on Friday May 06, 2005 @04:37PM (#12456504) Homepage
    We care because there has never historically been a government power that has not been abused at some point.

    Imagine, for a moment, if your worst enemy--the person you loathe more than anyone in the world, and who makes no secret of the fact that he delights in doing things that hurt you for their own sake--is placed in a position of authority over federally-mandated security cards.

    He can make sure you never get one. He can place you on all manner of government watch lists preventing you from doing just about anything. After making sure you don't have an ID, he can give the cops a tip to pull you over and get you arrested for not carrying one. Don't laugh--I have personally KNOWN people like this.

    Power is dangerous. Authority is a form of power. What does a law like this do? Well, it lets them punish (read: Cause harm to) people for not carrying a card around; a card over which they have complete control. And when it comes down to handing out harm, they're not going to care whether the situation was justified or whether they're doing anyone any good; to most people, the fact that it's "The Law" is excuse enough to cause all the mayhem and real life hurt you want.

    As such, you must assume the law will lash out anywhere it is able, because people who are petty and corrupt will actively seek out positions that allow them to indulge that pettyness and corruption. If through law we create those positions, they will be filled by those kinds of people. If you do not have a clear, present, and pressing need for a law, it is dangerous, irresponsible and, if I dare use the term, un-American to pass it anyway.

    And in my mind this whole "Rider" bullshit is unconscionable--it is intentionally undermining the democratic process by end-running around it. People who see democracy as an obstacle should not be our leaders under any circumstances. I wouldn't mind if they declared it treason.

    And if they're willing to shitcan democracy for the convenience of their personal agenda, their motives should be PLACED VERY HIGHLY IN QUESTION.
  • Re:Blank Reg (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Rinikusu ( 28164 ) on Friday May 06, 2005 @04:37PM (#12456505)
    It's not that they're "blaming Bush" for starting it, but blaming him for not STOPPING it,and indeed, advancing it at a pace that would, under "normal" circumstances, be hard fought in the legislature. Bush, champion of the Republican Party, which champions "individual rights", "smaller government", "personal responsibility", etc etc, is actively acting contrary to the position that the Republican party worked so hard to present during the Clinton administration. Yeah, Clinton started it. Once the Republicans took power, they didn't use their power to reverse any of those discretions.
  • Re:But why? (Score:2, Insightful)

    by necrognome ( 236545 ) on Friday May 06, 2005 @04:42PM (#12456565) Homepage
    I care because the system will become significantly more oppressive.

    You're right: at the current moment, there is somewhat of a universal requirement to show state-issued ID under certain circumstances (e.g airports). However, these IDs are manufactured to disparate standards and even the machine-readable cards have different formats. This soon-to-be-passed law requires any state-issued ID to be machine-readable vis-a-vis the federal standard.

    Sure, the powers-that-be could "track a person across the country" with today's relatively low-tech ID, but that's expensive for all but the big players. Post-RealID, this cost will decrease dramatically, and it will be trivial for any of the players to monitor a person's movement and behavior.


    Frequency of Fishing Expeditions = constant / Cost of "Tracking" Large Numbers of Subjects


    This is essentially my fear. The cheaper it is to acquire "real-time" information about the whereabouts and habits of people, and cross-correlate said info with at database of attributes, the easier it is for the powers-that-be to engage in "pre-emptive policing", all in the name of fighting terrorism.

    Illegal immigrants will be first, because it is hard for anyone to make a case for their civil rights. Sex offenders have already been taken care of, but I'm sure some aspect of the "sex offender flag" will be rolled into RealID. Then the fun starts when insurance companies, probably with bipartisan assistance from Congress, decide to reduce rates for companies/buildings that refuse association/entry to persons with a "high threat index". Arabs and Muslims will be next, especially those who reside in "certain zip codes". Then the leftists, later the conservatives who still believe in freedom with a capital 'F'.

    No one else will care.
  • Re:Blank Reg (Score:3, Insightful)

    by nharmon ( 97591 ) on Friday May 06, 2005 @04:49PM (#12456655)
    The US Civil War wasn't about slavery.

    The American Civil War was as much about slavery as it was anything else, regardless of what some neo confederates say.

    Several northern states were allowed to keep slaves for many years after the war ended.

    The war effectively ended on April 9, 1865 when Robert E. Lee surrendered to General Grant at Appomattox. The 13th Amendment, which outlawed slavery, was declared on December 18, 1865.

    Explain to me, exactly, how several northern states were allowed to keep slaves after the 13th Amendment became law.
  • Re:But why? (Score:1, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 06, 2005 @04:53PM (#12456728)
    It begins with airplanes and cars. All they would have to do is require the ID for trains and buses, which wouldn't be hard to lobby for, and in effect you will need ID papers to cross state lines.

    Not only that, they could combine it with bank transactions, which require the ID card for an account, and track the movement of everyone travelling. If you drive to another state, you have to buy gas. If you bicycle or walk across, you have to eat and sleep somewhere. Not many people are going to carry $10,000 in cash.

    This will have far reaching consequences, but for the moment I can only forsee denying political critics and unacreditted reporters / blog journalists the right to travel to events. David Byrne has pointed out in his blog that it's becoming very difficult for legitimate foreign entertainers to be granted entrance into the US. There's also copyright extensions, which are prevent us from learning about history because it's too controversial or the owner cannot be located. Who knows what affect these will have on our ability to make educated decisions?
  • I certainly don't think it's quite as onerous, but it's not too far from it. I did read the article and here's the second paragraph:

    Starting three years from now, if you live or work in the United States, you'll need a federally approved ID card to travel on an airplane, open a bank account, collect Social Security payments, or take advantage of nearly any government service. Practically speaking, your driver's license likely will have to be reissued to meet federal standards.

    Further, with the Supremes recently ruling that's it's OK to arrest someone who fails to produce an ID upon demand [epic.org], this just puts us one step closer.

  • Re:Blank Reg (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Refrag ( 145266 ) on Friday May 06, 2005 @05:32PM (#12457239) Homepage
    When the grandparent poster said s long as people keep voting for a party that does paltry little to represent their voters..., I don't think he meant the Republican party. I think he meant the two parties in this country which represent the corporations more than the people.
  • Re:Blank Reg (Score:3, Insightful)

    by 87C751 ( 205250 ) <sdot AT rant-central DOT com> on Friday May 06, 2005 @05:32PM (#12457244) Homepage
    Maybe it's not that hard. Technically, a rider is an amendment. Just restricting amendments to affecting only the bill to which they are attached would go a long way toward sanity.
  • by EaglesNest ( 524150 ) on Friday May 06, 2005 @05:32PM (#12457246)
    We already HAVE a federal ID card called a passport. It's expensive because it is designed to be an identity document. Why don't we just make a passport the required document for traveling between states? This is what - in effect - we are doing, only it's more politically palletable to the ignorant, and an unfunded state mandate, too. I remember when we used to make fun of Russia for requiring papers for in-country travel. Now, we're doing the same thing.
  • Re:But why? (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Mr. Slippery ( 47854 ) <tms&infamous,net> on Friday May 06, 2005 @05:38PM (#12457311) Homepage
    if the founding fathers could see the issue of terrorism ... what would they propose

    It could be argued that, by the standards of their time, the Founders were terrorists. The tactics of the Colonial armies often violated the rules of war common at the time.

    That depends on the definition of "terrorism". But certainly attacks on civilian populations, assassinations, bombing (Guy Fawkes plot) and the use of mass indiscriminate destruction (burning cities) were known 200 years ago. The founder's solution was the same as it was for more "conventional" threats: a population prepared and willing to defend itself.

    (And if we'd stuck with that rather than standing armies, we'd have been much less likely to fall into the trap of foreign adventures in imperialism that has made us a terrorist target.)

  • Re:But why? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by DougInthezoo ( 745880 ) on Friday May 06, 2005 @05:40PM (#12457345)
    And may I add my my 2 cents on "airport security". The whole thing is a sham. I understand that they don't ever want to let terrorists turn an airplane into a bomb again. I don't want that either.

    But even without all the added security, it can never happen again. EVER! You see, back before 9/11 the thought was that if a terrorist was to hijack a plane, they wanted to go somewhere, maybe land and hold hostages for a while, negotiate, and eventually, if you were quiet and did what they said, you would go back to your family after a frightening ordeal.

    Now that whole paradigm has changed. If a terrorist takes a plane, every man woman and child aboard will know that they WILL DIE if they do nothing. See the difference?

    Before 9/11 - do nothing during a hijack and live
    After 9/11 - do nothing during a hijack and die

    The terrorists used a one-time window of opportunity to do what they did that day. But now, were it to happen, the terrorists themselves would die before they ever took the plane down. Every able bodied passenger will fight for their lives if facing death. How can a terrorist take a plane if there are 30 people willing to die fighting to re-gain control of the plane?

    Using a plane full of passengers as a missile will never happen again. So all the airport security in the world, searching for box knives and zippo lighters, is only to make frightened people feel like they should be frightened, and more importantly, to take away more liberty.

    The people of this country have got to figure out that the only way to loose the war on terror is to let your life be changed out of fear of terrorism. That's the whole goal of terrorists, and our government is simply letting them win.

    Ok, more like ten cents than two...
  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 06, 2005 @05:46PM (#12457425)
    Heck, the US Constitution gives the feds the right to regulate interstate commerce. Saying something is a hindrance to interstate commerce can hardly be interpreted as a good argument against a federal law.

    That's literally the same as saying the Constitution doesn't give the government the power to "provide for the common defense".

    That's not a winning argument.

    Besides, if the feds have the right to run a national retirement program which involves a national ID system, they sure have the right to require state IDs to meed federal requirements for specific federal reasons.
  • by glenebob ( 414078 ) on Friday May 06, 2005 @06:14PM (#12457726)
    Religious? You mean you're unable to recognize wisdom thousands of years old just because the wording is badly out-dated? You shouldn't discount out of hand what someone says just because they have a belief system different than yours. Some things never change. People in power have always and will always strive to increase that power, and people have always know it.

    16
    Congress also forced everyone,
    small and great, rich and poor,
    free and slave, to receive an ID
    and a card,

    17
    so that no one could buy or sell
    unless he had the card, which bears
    the number of his name.
  • Re:Blank Reg (Score:3, Insightful)

    by maxpublic ( 450413 ) on Friday May 06, 2005 @06:15PM (#12457733) Homepage
    The American Civil War was as much about slavery as it was anything else, regardless of what some neo confederates say.

    And the bullshit goes on....

    What was being determined was whether or not the states or the federal government would reign supreme over the U.S. of A. The feds settled the issue by burning most of the South to the ground.

    Slavery was the excuse, not the reason.

    Max
  • source? (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Main Gauche ( 881147 ) on Friday May 06, 2005 @06:17PM (#12457753)
    "You may want to check with your state, but most states require everyone over the age of 18 to carry a state ID/DL/Passport/etc. If you do not and a cop stops you, he can cite you (possibly arrest you) for not carrying ID. Yes not many people know this,

    I am one of the many people who don't know this. Can you cite just one state's law which backs up this claim?

    I wonder what happens if someone is broke, and cannot afford to pay for the ID. These states would have an easy, legal way of tossing most homeless people in jail whenever they feel like it.

    (In as troll-less a way as possible, I'm trying to say I don't believe the claim.)
  • Comment removed (Score:2, Insightful)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Friday May 06, 2005 @06:56PM (#12458156)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Re:Blank Reg (Score:3, Insightful)

    by b!arg ( 622192 ) on Friday May 06, 2005 @07:26PM (#12458410) Homepage Journal
    Kinda, but not really. The line item veto does give legislative power to the President, which is no good. Congress has given away enough of its power to the President as it is. I think what he refers to is not allowing non-germane amendments on bills. This would reduce these sorts of tactics and probably a lot of porkbarrel legislation too. Hmmm...didn't the Republicans used to be the party of smaller federal government and states rights? I guess that's just whoever isn't in power. :)
  • by Fjandr ( 66656 ) on Friday May 06, 2005 @08:51PM (#12458954) Homepage Journal
    Or try getting married to someone of the same sex in Massachusetts, see how many other states honor the marriage.

    Or, try to get a state to pay you a debt (ie jury duty payment) in gold or silver coin, also mandated by the Constitution.

    The Constitution exists only as long as people believe in it (much like the value of paper money, or anything else written on paper). Most Americans today have no idea what's in the Constitution, hence there is no consistent belief in its tenets. As a result of this, it basically does not exist past what people see on Law & Order.

    Welcome to the USA.
    Papers please, comrade.
  • Sorry, Godwin... (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Mac Degger ( 576336 ) on Friday May 06, 2005 @09:01PM (#12459029) Journal
    Ausweiss, bitte!

    We got compulsory ID here in the Netherlands first though (well, before the US...in january 2005)...funny thing is, that's the seconds time in 60 years we've had that happen.
  • Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Friday May 06, 2005 @10:58PM (#12459605)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 06, 2005 @11:23PM (#12459739)
    Recall that in a village everyone knows everyone by sight, a stranger is immediatly noticed. In the early ninties we talked about the global village, and now we see the down side of it, no anonymity. In a village no one is anonymous, and thats what we will have.
  • by BobSutan ( 467781 ) on Friday May 06, 2005 @11:31PM (#12459767)
    Your choices are soapbox, ballot box, ammo box. Which is it time for?

    Well, let me summarize it for ya: we've been speaking out against the government's intrusions into personal privacy, the bill of rights, etc. And then there's the lack of representation of the people because so many congresscritters have sold their souls to the corporations.

    After all the screaming and shouting we all got to vote with our hearts, but then we're stuck with a damned if you do, damned if you don't scenario because of our 2-party system where both candidates aren't about to serve the best interests of the people anyway. Hell, has that really ever been the case with oligarchies like the US gov?

    And to top it off, the 2000 election was not so quietly stolen by not so obvious voter fraud, thanks in part to Bush family ties to Choicepoint's owners (which is the company that eliminated the number of votes to give "W" the Florida electorate).

    So, we've used the soapbox extensively, in fact I'm doing it now. We've used to ballot box, but that didn't seem to have any affect. So what's that leave us with?
  • Re:Pretty sad. (Score:1, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday May 07, 2005 @01:04AM (#12460228)
    We never had real freedom here in this part of europe. People used to dream of travelling to the USA, the land of the free.

    Americans had freedom and are willingly throwing it away. All it takes for evil to triumph is for a few good men to do nothing. WAKE UP!
    People went to America because they felt they needed different external circumstances to be 'free'. Europeans knew better.
  • Re:But why? (Score:1, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday May 07, 2005 @02:42AM (#12460578)
    Before 9/11 - do nothing during a hijack and live
    After 9/11 - do nothing during a hijack and die

    The terrorists used a one-time window of opportunity to do what they did that day.


    Yes, and it didn't even take a day for people to realize this. It happened in *minutes*. As soon as the people on the fourth plane heard what had happened to the other planes, they went to try to take control of the plane, preventing it from being flown into a building.

    How can a terrorist take a plane if there are 30 people willing to die fighting to re-gain control of the plane?

    The sad answer is: terrorists will have smuggled weapons onto the plane. From the news reports, it's still surprisingly easy to do -- at least one person brought a loaded gun on board, by accident! And the honest passengers will have only their hands, because the government said they'd be safer if granny isn't allowed to bring her knitting needles on board.

    4 hijackers, with weapons, who only need to keep the unarmed passengers out of the cockpit (and away from my pilot) for a few minutes in a narrowbody jet? If I was a terrorist hijacker willing to give my life for a Cause, I'd like those odds.
  • by SeaFox ( 739806 ) on Saturday May 07, 2005 @03:40AM (#12460788)
    It's funny how people complain about having to show their ID and being tracked everywhere and fortifying borders for 'national security'. They make claims that if things get much worse they're moving to Canada. They seem to miss the big picture.

    With all these sealed national borders and national ID card initiatives getting pushed through Congress, you may wake up one day and find you couldn't leave the U.S. if you wanted to.

    Maybe we all need to take a breather and reread select chapters from Margaret Atwood's The Handmaid's Tale.

  • by Atario ( 673917 ) on Saturday May 07, 2005 @03:40AM (#12460790) Homepage
    So all the airport security in the world, searching for box knives and zippo lighters, is only to make frightened people feel like they should be frightened, and more importantly, to take away more liberty.

    Also: to make it look like they're Doing Something About It(tm). AKA looking busy. All these newly-minted petty dictators have to keep enacting new egregious violations of your libery to keep reminding you why their jobs are "needed". If they just do their jobs, they'll eventually be let go as an unneccessary and annoying expense. Instead, we get dire warnings, intoned in the most serious of voices, that fingernail clippers are not permitted. What? Ohhh, it's inconvenient and unreasonable? Izzat so? Well, why don't you tell us -- why do you hate America??

    If our forefathers could see us now, we'd hide in embarrasment at the glare they'd give us. It's sickening.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday May 07, 2005 @10:53AM (#12462085)
    There is no "wisdom" to recognize here. Wise statements are ones that make carefully argued points.

    What you have posted is merely a claim.

    If someone 1,000 years ago wrote, "National ID cards are bad" we would not consider it "wise". Likewise, if someone had written "National ID cards are good" we would not consider it "wise", either.

    Both are merely statements, devoid of any argument or reasoning.

    In fact, if you take the passages from Relevation out of DIVINE context (as you are attempting to do here by transliteration) they are on par with just about every other piece of ancient writing that is a mere assertion. And just because a statement is old doesn't make it true or interesting.

    -- AC
  • but the ease of getting a driver's liscense is part of why 9/11 happened. Either driver's liscences should ensure residency and identity, or they ought not permit someone on a plane (etc.)
    My point exactly. Security morons are assuming that the problem was that the IDs we had are somehow lacking [....] the problem is actually relying on IDs for security in the first place.

    As far as I know, most of the 9/11 hijackers used things like their passports to get on the planes, and their IDs were accurate.

    In other words, innaccurate IDs had almost nothing at all to do with 9/11.

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