Finnish Politician Suggests Embedding Chips In Citizens To Protect the Welfare State 312
New submitter janit writes that social benefits to Finnish citizens living outside of Finland have in recent days been the cause of controversy, and links to an article which suggests just how much of a controversy: A politician from the True Finns Party, Pasi Mäenranta, is also worried about the abuse of the benefits. He published a post on Facebook, where he suggests that all Finnish citizens leaving the country be embedded with an identification chip. Sounds like a parallel system might be a popular idea with some U.S. presidential candidates, too.
2084? (Score:5, Insightful)
I guess we need a second installment of 1984 as the pace of ideas from authoritarian control freaks have exceeded Orwell's wildest nightmares.
Re:2084? (Score:5, Funny)
alternative viewpoint (Score:2)
I don't believe an update is needed, because the tyrants don't have new ideas or plans. The implementation of the ideas is being closer to a reality does not make it a new idea.
Where have I heard this before... (Score:5, Interesting)
Revelations 13:16-17:
And he causes all, the small and the great, and the rich and the poor, and the free men and the slaves, to be given a mark on their right hand or on their forehead, and he provides that no one will be able to buy or to sell, except the one who has the mark, either the name of the beast or the number of his name...
Just sayin', regardless of reality or fantasy, when your policy suggestion is basically the exact thing the devil does during the "end times," you might have a tough sell there.
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Careful, you'll get the Rapturists all excited and checking their calenders.
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Which is pretty sinful, IMO, thinking they can predict the end.
Matthew 24:36:
"But of that day and hour no one knows, not even the angels of heaven, nor the Son, but the Father alone."
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I may just have to rewatch Dogma this week.
Re:Where have I heard this before... (Score:5, Insightful)
Revelations 13:16-17:
And he causes all, the small and the great, and the rich and the poor, and the free men and the slaves, to be given a mark on their right hand or on their forehead, and he provides that no one will be able to buy or to sell, except the one who has the mark, either the name of the beast or the number of his name...
Just sayin', regardless of reality or fantasy, when your policy suggestion is basically the exact thing the devil does during the "end times," you might have a tough sell there.
I'm not Christian, but I'm glad for that bit of prophesy. This type of thing is all about control. Imagine if you run afoul of the authorities and they are able to cut you off from society just by switching off your chip. It's the same reason I do not look forward to any "cashless" economy, though there are plenty of idiots who think it's a great idea. Once you have to go through an intermediary to conduct any transaction, they've got you by the balls.
Re:Where have I heard this before... (Score:5, Insightful)
They wouldn't be able to do that (Score:3)
Typical retail clerk, probably per store policy, in a power outage will be to say "Can't do it." Can't/won't take cash because "the computers are down". You can tote up the costs and add the tax and have exact change, but they still won't make the effort to accept it because "the computers are down".
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I remember shopping when the power went out and the store handed out flashlights and calculators to the cashiers. That was back when everything had price tags.
Last time I was shopping and the power went out, the cash registers kept working but went down one by one as the server started screwing up, gotta love Windows and the fact that they obviously hadn't tested enough.
Even if the system hadn't started crashing, they only have so much time on their UPS and first thing they did was stop new customers from e
Re:Where have I heard this before... (Score:4, Insightful)
There's a lot of wisdom in the Bible, and other early church writings. Throw out the magic and it's the collection of stories about human nature and conflict written down over thousands of years by the people who had to figure out how human society can and should work. We take that knowledge for granted today, but these people had to figure it out for themselves. And people haven't changed that much.
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You're kind of idealising biblical societies there though - sure they worked, you can make almost anything work if you believe hard enough, but that doesn't make them optimal. Still, it's true that the bible contains quite a bit of actual history.
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"Control" makes it sound almost benign. "Those selfish bastards are trying to control us." That's something you can actually relate to as a human being, even if you oppose it. After all, it happens in the workplace every day.
Unfortunately, the reality is much less human. It's about ownership.
I can dig that. My views on this type of thing are more extreme than I admit in public, even on this board.
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I didn't realize my VISA card was embedded in my skin by the state. TIL...
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http://www.christianmediaresea... [christianm...search.com]
This was actually a big part of the public mind way back when. Hell, Koreans still print that people who suffocated in their sleep happened to be next to an electric fan at the time....
Universal ID system (Score:2)
This is just a high-tech version of a universal ID system. That is what we need to oppose since you can easily extend the concept to allow for non-invasive natural ID technologies (aka biometrics) to become the "mark". That and universal surveillance.
It already exists in the US - your SS number (Score:3)
Let's face it, the Bible is allegory and the Social Security number is the number you fear. You are marked with it at birth, and though it may not appear physically on your skin, it is embeded in your mind, and written by (in) your dominant (right) hand every time you complete a business transaction. It is essentially a permanent number which identifies you and is almost impossible to change. You are taxed through it, every business is tracked by it, every significant financial transaction requires it - t
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KEEP T
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Well, for those of us of a certain age :-(, our SSN does not actually identify us.Yes I know the Fed gov't now treats us as identified by our SSN, but I got mine by walking into an IRS office and requesting one. I could have gone back the next day and requested another -- but since at the time the only purpose of the SSN was to track my earnings so as to calculate my retirement payments, splitting my salary reports between 2 numbers would have been stupid.
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The obvious question being, how relevant is this particular bit of mythology to Finnish society? I don't have any strong insight into this... I understand that they're predominantly Christian, but I'd also expect that nations with a heavy socialist bent wouldn't be quite as ready to call their government an agent of the devil. How do
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This is a good point. If you've read your Bible, you see that God does a lot more horrible things to people than the Devil does.
There is good reason to wonder about the other side of the story.
WHICH candidates? (Score:2)
>> (ID chipping) might be a popular idea with some U.S. presidential candidates, too
Do you have something to back that up? Did the Clintons go on the record back in the Hillarycare days on this or something?
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Which party enacts policies that place more government control over people's lives? Answer this and you'll have the answer to your own question.
So, both of them?
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Correct. We have a winner.
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Well, all of them except the Libertarians and Anarchists. And I'm not sure I believe those two actually exist.
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You must be talking about Republicans.
You know, the ones who keep trying to dictate the lives of those who receive public benefits, telling them which food to buy ('they bought expensive meat!"), controlling their sex lives ("stop having so many kids....but don't contraception or get an abortion!"), and telling them how they don't deserve a minimum wage ("you don't deserve to live outside of poverty and out of the street!! but you stould still get an education you cant afford and pick yourself up by your bo
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So the Democrats don't want to tell me I can't have a firearm, that I must have health insurance, that I can or can't do business with Cuba or Iran... You see? It's both major parties that are statist and controlling. They just keep people divided over which parts of your life they want to control more. If you want less control over your life exercised by the state, try the Libertarians.
Re:WHICH candidates? (Score:4, Insightful)
There was one senator who voted against the Patriot Act, and it was not a Republican.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
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For completeness, in the House there were 66 Nay votes. 59 were from Democrats, 3 from Republicans, and 4 others.
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Absurd overreach. An ID card need not have any appreciable cost. Poll taxes and the like have already been ruled out. Try again.
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you're right it shouldn't.
that hasn't stopped them though.
you and those like you seem totally unaware that even a 25$ fee for a drivers license can be out of people's reach.
they also rather conveniently tend to ignore the hidden costs of obtaining such ID, such as taking the day off (days they frequently either don't get, and cant afford to take without pay), bussing across town (my experience being Atlanta, where they oh so conveniently have been shutting down both state ID issuers and polling places in or
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exactly, thank you
republican efforts to disenfranchise the poor shows who and what they really stand for, and it's not the american people
soon enough though enough of the old assholes will die off, and not even gerrymandering will save them
in the 2014 midterms we see a "celebration" of republicans taking many congressional seats, and hand wringing about how and why democrats don't vote in the midterms
funny thing is though, millions of more democrats voted in the midterms than republicans. but they were all
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Most of Europe requires photo ID to vote, or require documentation that would be needed to get a photo ID. I know Germany, the Netherlands, and Ireland all require photo ID or similar documentation to vote. I somehow doubt that all of these countries have fallen victim to a nefarious Republican plot to disenfranchise the poor. Only in the U.S. is it controversial to require an ID to vote.
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I don't know about the US but in Ontario if you don't want a driver's license then you can get a photo ID from the provincial government for $35 that is valid for five years. You still have to go and get your picture taken but you don't have to write the first test and then take the practical driving tests which means that you don't need access to a car.
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Here in Canada the Conservatives passed the "Fair Elections Act" which mandates official ID with your current address on it. $75 for my wife who has lots of official ID but not with her address (previously she'd just show a bill with her name and address). This also disenfranchises people without a numbered address such as natives on their reservations, students who are living somewhere for a few years while attending university and others.
They also used the act to take away much of Elections Canada investi
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yes, that is the ignorant propaganda they use to sell their poor-hating initiative. nicely regurgitated, good little partisan tool
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illegals voting has never, ever been a problem that ever swayed any contest ever. it's a completely made up issue. so republicans can fake the fear, to push for laws that restrict poor people from voting
but keep on with your ignorant hysteria. you are the republican party: dumb and angry about stupid fears
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Yes, Feinstein just wants to tax your firearms, not ban them completely. Keep telling yourself that.
I'm all for chipping politicians (Score:3)
Especially US presidential candidates....
--PM
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Can we connect the chips to a mild electric shocker. Each person would be able to administer a shock to a candidate, but the amount would be barely detectable. When you get enough people together, though, you could cause the candidate some major discomfort. Did Candidate X just insult all women? He's going to be feeling some serious voltage tonight!
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Which presidential candidates? (Score:2)
Sounds like a parallel system might be a popular idea with some U.S. presidential candidates, too.
I'm genuinely curious. I know the knee-jerk reaction is going to be "Teh Republicanz!", but I haven't heard any suggestion from any Dem or Rep that they want to introduce this. National ID cards? Sure, there are some politicians spouting that, but chipping people like dogs is a step beyond that.
Pedophiles also (Score:4, Funny)
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Mutual of Omaha's Wild Kingdom - Finland Ed. (Score:2)
While Marlin Perkins sits back in his Mutual of Omaha office, Jim Fowler is out in the helicopter shooting herds of Finns with tranquillizer darts and tagging them with chips after they collapse.
Way to treat people like animals. Why don't we just tattoo them, and make them wear armbands? Oh wait...
Oblig. (Score:2)
Just don't give benefits to non-residents (Score:2)
My Citizen's Dividend plan has the following eligibility: all natural-born, resident, American citizens over the age of 18 receive the full Dividend.
If you weren't born here, you don't get it. This prevents an influx of gold-digging first-generation immigrants from coming to America for the free money.
If you aren't living in America, its territories, its military bases, its naval ships, or in active military deployment, you're not resident and you don't get shit. You left the country; we'll pay you to
How does embedding a chip differ from issuing (Score:2)
a passport in terms of the security it provides for "the state"? Do you think that people won't be stealing/selling the chips to others who want to be identified as Finnish citizens? Do you think that a minor surgical procedure that can be performed in any alley is going to be more secure than a printed document?
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
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Prison? Public execution on prime time TV.
As America catches up to chip-and-pin ... (Score:5, Funny)
I'm all for embedding chips in politicians ... (Score:3)
I prefer Tagging and tracking politicians. (Score:2)
Politicians need to be tagged and monitored. Bonus points if you can build remote shock capability into the tags.
This is an inevitable development (Score:5, Interesting)
Scandinavian welfare states evolved from the traditional communitarian cultures of these countries. Within this culture, the Lutheran moral code promotes helping each other out in time of need while stigmatizing freeloading.
But now Europe as a whole is facing an uncontrollable, Arizona-style flood of refugees who are not part of this culture and who do not feel restrained by the Lutheran moral code. Now Finland has its first Joe Arpaio.
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What exactly ... (Score:2)
They want to detect Finns leaving the country at border crossings so as not to fund expatriates? Good luck with that. There are too many non monitored points one can cross the border and I doubt the RFID chips will be worth a damn once the people are out of range.
Controlling who has access to bank accounts and from where might be a better aproach. Auto deposit of benefit checks could be cut off if the account is accessed from overseas for an extended period of time.
Nope (Score:2)
Only ONE proper response to an idea like this: (Score:2)
The number of The Beast (Score:2)
The first thing I thought of when I read this were the numbers that the Nazis tattooed prisoners in death camps with.
It amazes me how a politician would think its OK to even suggest this, and how he can even still keep his job.
Him first (Score:2)
After he had one implanted, we can discuss it.
What good is an RFID chip... (Score:2)
What would happen next? (Score:2)
So who was ahead of his times? (Score:2)
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"Mäenranta is not worried about this being a violation of privacy, since people are already willingly tracked with smartphones, Google or Facebook."
Slippery slope, indeed.
Still, I'd argue that Google does not (yet) have the monopoly on legal use of force on their side.
Re:He has a point (Score:5, Insightful)
Jump to the modern phone, and you find that if people use features that allow them to "check in" from a given location, they only use that feature when they choose to use that feature. They do not state their location everywhere they go, they use it selectively, to essentially boast, or because they earn a living through online connectedness and marketing and it is to their advantage to share far too much information with the rest of us.
As to the data communication between the handset and the carrier, that's an unfortunate necessity of the technology. The frequencies and density of users means that phones have to be tracked in order to remain in communication with them as they roam about a given area and change towers. The average cell user doesn't really understand how that technology works either, but would probably not be happy if their movements were being logged everywhere they went, an that theoretically should be privileged information between the carrier and the subscriber, as in the United States, one Federal Circuit has recently ruled.
Re:He has a point (Score:4, Informative)
I don't think our education system is a laughingstock - people fall all over themselves to attend school here. Our crappy urban and rural public schools are the laughingstock.
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No, I was not crapping on public schools. I send my own kids to public schools. Good, diverse, schools in a first-ring suburb.
Right across the border, the funding level is several thousand dollars less per year. Not that it matters, because funding there doubled over 10 years and outcomes did not change. It's a mix of funding, corruption, sheer incompetency, and a very difficult student population. Rural schools have similar challenges. I'm not sure how we stratified into "pro" and "con" public school camps
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"Finland is beginning to sound like a shithole"
This guy belongs to a party called "True Finns". He's obviously a nazi douchebag. You have a point, though, since this party got 17.7% of the votes in the 2015 parlamentary elections, becoming the second largest one.
Moo? (is that enough o's?) (Score:2)
Wait...are you implying that chips are for cows?
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What does it say about slashdot that a recurring offtopic post has almost become an site-local meme?
I have an idea, but I can't think of how to describe it without invoking another meme that involves sharks and jumping over them.
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Instead I would argue that no social security benefits should be paid to people living abroad, or have those benefits adjusted automatically for local cost of living. (excepting state pensions, which should be free to spend as one pleases). Require recipients to be registered in the country and have them collect their benefits i
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Social Security Retirement is payable outside the USA now for citizens and other approved people (green card holders etc) who live in certain countries with agreements with the USA. This should continue. I worked and paid into Social Security Retirement as per the agreements. I would expect my money when I complete the requirements. But I don't hold my breath. Wall Street wants every penny of retirement money they can get their hands on.
However, Social Security also has many other programs that I do not min
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Actually he was saying that anyone who left the country would be chipped. Supposedly it would help finding them in a disaster. Don't see how. Maybe with the identification. But it's not like they could sweep a detector over the snow or rubble and find the chip under a meter. A good search and rescue dog would find a person in that case. Besides they would have to know the person was a Finn in the first place because nobody else would have a chip.
And it wouldn't be just for people going to live abroad.
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This seems to be a non sequitur argument which is set to frame the political discussion in a way that it becomes a legitimate policy option.
Yeah, that's the idea. This type of thing will be sold as either a security measure (as in this case) or a convenience feature.
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I've already developed a superior welfare system for America that would terminate poverty and permanently baseline our economic growth somewhere about where it sat during the 90s, with all that rapid growth from computers uncorking all production bottlenecks. I wonder if Finland, Norway, or some other rich countries have the economic basis to successfully implement such a system; in America, it reached cost-parity with our current system in 2013 (I projected all the way back to 1950, which is hilarious: 1
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Well. Are you keeping your system a secret or something? Do you want payment? Otherwise, where's the link to an exposition?
See his sig (Score:2)
He advocating a Citizen's Dividend of 17%. 17% of what I'm not sure, but the general idea of a citizen's dividend is that profits from government own commons, like oil drilling permits and royalities, mineral rights, timber rights, should be charged and paid out to citizens directly instead of going into government's general funds.
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Something like this http://www.huffingtonpost.com/... [huffingtonpost.com]
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Less secret and more that people don't listen. Politicians want a token to get votes; everyone else wants humanitarian efforts--meaning they want funding backed by carbon credits or whatnot, they want to give everyone $4000 for every child they birth, and they want to pay people enough money to live *comfortably* (i.e. $20,000 per person) so that nobody has to work anymore. I've had so many arguments with people who imagine everything will go exactly the way they want, while I'm here slimming down risks a
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If you're asking if people will decide to take the easy life, the answer is the obvious yes. People chose to steal, to prostitute, and to knowingly market pseudoscientific bullshit to con people out of their money [kickstarter.com].
All of these problems, while annoying, are minimal. Unemployment is currently 5.3%; while of course 3% deciding simply to not work will have severe economic effects, a sufficiently small number will be less likely to cause dearth of employment in whole markets. That is to say: were we faced
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I made, under unemployment income, a wage of equivalently $10.50/hr--$420 per month.
Per week. Holy fuck.
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Key advantages include no need for minimum wage laws (the one and only exemption is a disincentive against low wages), is automatically progressive, is dead-simple, and eliminates the need for welfare programs.
The only tunable parameters are the tax rate, the exemption amount, and the exemption rate. This of course doesnt allow politicians to reward and/or punish, so they will never support it without c
How can related news be a troll? (Score:2)
It's not like it's unreported or tinfoil hat [wnd.com]. It's straight up relevant counter points!
BTW, chipping isn't the right idea either.
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It really keeps me going.
I just really like to call out people with blinders and agendas, as certain mods obviously have.
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Buchanan was parodied here with some kind of sketch suggesting installing nonremovable collars on illegal immigrants caught crossing the border. When they would attempt to cross again the collar would explode. It sounded like someone took the idea of the collars from the inmates at the beginning of The Running Man.
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So you're saying he just wants to make sure he only has true believer followers from the pure chosen ancestry? Got it. Is there a special salute and a secret police?
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