http://www.cnn.com/2007/POLITICS/08/16/real.id/index.html
8/16/2007 4:40:20 PM
I can understand a lot of the fervor that comes about from privacy issues, but I've never understood how ID cards were one of them. You already need some sort of ID to do many of the things mentioned; why does it matter that they want to standardize them?
8/16/2007 4:42:39 PM
Awesome post, maybe you should.. I dunno.. commit or make a point about the article..
8/16/2007 4:44:23 PM
it's sort of the principle of free travel within our own country. i mean to show id to get into a federal park? why?
8/16/2007 4:44:34 PM
Wouldnt this be a good idea?They could put it on a key chain and make it a debit card too, so they know its really you because of the ID and you could use it for vending machines, and at stores then you wouldnt have to carry a wallet
8/16/2007 4:46:13 PM
and then the database with all your shit gets stolen or hacked and you have no identity and go bankrupt
8/16/2007 4:49:02 PM
um it would be on government computers they could put it in the pentagon
8/16/2007 4:55:42 PM
in related news, I read where the feds want to start using the top of the line spy satellites in local law enforcement in the US.closer and closer to a police state.^right, b/c government computers have never been hacked before. [Edited on August 16, 2007 at 4:56 PM. Reason : .]
8/16/2007 4:56:05 PM
8/16/2007 5:06:49 PM
8/16/2007 5:08:37 PM
I've never understood what the problem was.The information that would be tied to the real ID is already stored and accessable by the government. The bigger concern with real ID is the cost to state governments to reissue IDs and create/move to new infrastructure.Now the requirement of an ID to go to national parks, board planes, etc... is another issue.
8/16/2007 5:15:38 PM
Six years? I can't remember any time that I could check in without some proof of identity.While I'm unsure about the network of databases and bar codes/RF tags on ID's, I have no problem with Federally established minimum requirements for states to issue identifications, especially given how reliant our society already is on drivers licenses for a variety of identification activities. I also don't have any problems with the Federal government punishing states that refuse to comply with those minimum standards, say for example, not accepting a driver's license from a particular state at airports. That kind of security is needed to help ensure identity protection and reduce the chances of some yahoo out there creating fake ids; I lost faith in the entire driver's license system when states started issuing them to illegals.
8/16/2007 5:21:24 PM
next thing you know they'll be asking for some type of government identification when i want to buy beer or rent a car!
8/16/2007 5:22:56 PM
Don't forget lottery tickets and rated R movies! What an absurd notion...
8/16/2007 5:25:33 PM
8/16/2007 5:48:24 PM
Still don't need an ID to vote!
8/16/2007 5:51:18 PM
remind me again where it says in the Constitution that Congress can regulate things like identification? 10th ammendment, anyone?
8/16/2007 10:31:48 PM
But ID's can fall under interstate commerce because out-of-state licenses are commonly used to verify a person's identity in another state, at times crossing national borders, and for things like flights that cross state lines.
8/16/2007 10:58:19 PM
On the one hand I can understand that the government wants standard identification simply to make it easier to confirm that you are who you say you are when, for example, you're coming to/leaving the country. On the other hand, requiring this ID card to go just about anywhere (and by extension, to have it on your person at all times) can potentially lead to massive privacy invasions.Government buildings are one thing, but what if you're required to flash your ID at a place as mundane as the local supermarket? What if you're not even allowed to make purchases without this ID? Yes I know that nobody has actually suggested anything like that and admittedly it's a slippery slope fallacy, but this would effectively make a log of where you've been and when you were there. The government can then form an entire database about your day-to-day activities. Some jack-off sitting in some air-conditioned federal building somewhere will be able to browse your file and see that you went to Food Lion and bought some condoms along with your deli sandwich. While that particular information isn't exactly damning or embarrassing, why is that level of information anybody's business but your own? What possible justification can the government give to allow itself constant, real time access to your whereabouts?So yeah, my main concern with this is that it will potentially open up a whole new level of surveillance and intrusion. And as somebody else pointed out, what happens if you lose your ID or it gets stolen? You're pretty much going to be SOL since that card will contain a lot of vital information about you such as your SS#. And good luck proving to anybody that you are who you say you are, though hopefully they have procedures planned for that sort of incident.I don't know. I can certainly appreciate the need for identity verification, but to centralize it all onto one card reeks too much of Big Brother for me.
8/16/2007 10:59:43 PM
Now, I don't like the provisions of the program as they are presented in the OP, which may or may not be exaggerating things. Needing a card to get into a national park is silly, of course, but I have a sneaking suspicion that nobody involved in promoting a national ID actually has any desire to do that. The article seems to interpret it as a possibility based on the suggestion that it be used for Federally-related purposes.Aside from having the usual drivers' licence info and some characteristics that identify the card as legitimate (water marks, holograms, the shit we put on dollar bills, whatever), I don't see the need for anything else. The barcode worries me, to be sure. We don't need people to be tracked, we need people to be identified.
8/17/2007 12:18:19 AM
8/17/2007 7:15:25 AM
Took me awhile to find this again...HR 4633 was proposed in 2002 as the Driver's License Modernization Act. Granted, it never found its way into law, but it does give a view into what the government has in mind. The bill didn't propose a national ID per se, but it would have required a numbering system such that all drivers in the US would have a unique DL number, regardless of what state issued the license. The bill would have also mandated the collection of 'biometric data', the creation of nationally accessable databases containing the biometric data, and the ID cards would have to be readable by non-government third parties. My favorite part would have been the 'Innovative Uses Pilot Program' that authorized the NSF to give grants "for the implementation of programs that utilize computer chips embedded in drivers' licenses and identification cards [...] for innovative uses." In other words, the bill would have legislated function creep of the driver's licenses.http://www.govtrack.us/congress/billtext.xpd?bill=h107-4633
8/17/2007 8:20:33 AM
8/17/2007 11:42:26 AM
it seems to me like the people who seriously have a problem with some type of national ID card almost view it as a microchip implanted in their arm or something...isnt it basically like a passport? if we (we meaning us in this thread, etc...not meaning illegal aliens) are already in the system from having a drivers license or having utility bills in our names, etc...doesnt seem like it would have any drastic effect on us, at least as i understand it[Edited on August 17, 2007 at 12:30 PM. Reason : .]
8/17/2007 12:28:56 PM
8/17/2007 1:09:33 PM
did you cringe when they said the creation of a department of homeland security was essential to fighting the war on terror? again i just dont see the huge deal...we're not talking about microchips being implanted inside you...we're basically talking about a drivers license/passportthe cliche argument "if you didnt do anything wrong you dont have to worry about anything" is often wrong....but in this case its "if you are an american citizen who is not a terrorist you dont have to worry about anything" and thats correctmaybe i'm wrong this just doesnt seem like a huge deal to me]
8/17/2007 1:23:28 PM
8/17/2007 1:54:55 PM
8/17/2007 4:32:55 PM
The inability for the government to easily data mine the myriad state IDs and disparate state databases achieves a level of privacy that a federal id with a microchip does not. A social security number is bad enough, but you at least don't have to flash your social security card everywhere, even at the airport. And yes, if it is necessary, there should be a law against government efforts to create a universal database through data mining. Don't pretend that the current system and the proposed federal system are the same. If they weren't any, they wouldn't be doing it.
8/18/2007 12:59:00 AM
i'm confused...everything I can find indicates that the DHS has gone with a 2D data storage method for the cards (barcodes). that RFID has already been shot down...but that's what i keep hearing people complain about...i suspect that it's mainly because of that alarmist video that floats around (http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=c7pHb7bPfMc)could someone find something concrete saying that the DHS has decided to go with RFIDs?
8/18/2007 10:44:41 PM
8/20/2007 10:11:14 AM
8/20/2007 11:36:48 AM