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Connecticut To Store Biometric Information

AugstWest writes: "I just got word that when I renew my driver's license, I will have to submit to allowing the CT DMV to store biometric information, as well as smile for facial recognition software from Viisage to be able to continue driving. I am so appalled, I don't even know where to begin. With all of the national law enforcement agencies opening up their databases to each other, is this the first step in taking a surveillance society to a tracking society?"

597 comments

  1. Thank goodness... by rusty+spoon · · Score: 1

    ...I live outside the US. I guess you folks can look forward to this disease becoming widespread.

    So much for freedom and privacy. Enjoy it while it lasts.

    1. Re:Thank goodness... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Right, chuckles. What happens in other countries has nothing to do with you. You're so smart.

    2. Re:Thank goodness... by rusty+spoon · · Score: 1

      Just like nothing outside the US affects the US, unless it's oil related of course.

      Get over yourself, everyone else has.

    3. Re:Thank goodness... by Moridineas · · Score: 1

      Out of curiosity, where do you live that has so much a less intrusive govt? Sounds great if as advertised..

    4. Re:Thank goodness... by rusty+spoon · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Guess where...take three guesses.

    5. Re:Thank goodness... by chriso11 · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      I only need 1 - Antartica

      --
      No, I don't trust in god. He'll have to pay up front, like everybody else.
    6. Re:Thank goodness... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just like nothing outside the US affects the US, unless it's oil related of course.

      Get over yourself, everyone else has.


      News flash. The United States runs the world.

    7. Re:Thank goodness... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you were over the US, as you claim, you wouldn't have started this thread.

      You claim to be disinterested, but you can't stop talking.

    8. Re:Thank goodness... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Cuba?

    9. Re:Thank goodness... by Moridineas · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      1) Never-never Land
      2) The Moon
      3) Communist China

    10. Re:Thank goodness... by 0x0d0a · · Score: 1

      You're saying that *England* is less intrusive than the US?

    11. Re:Thank goodness... by rusty+spoon · · Score: 1

      In this instance hell yes. My drivers licence has no picture or biometric smilies. Next up they'll want your DNA.

      Are you saying otherwise?

    12. Re:Thank goodness... by rusty+spoon · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      I claimed nothing AC, I said *thank goodness I don't live in the US*. Hope that helps.

    13. Re:Thank goodness... by issachar · · Score: 1

      HAHAHA

      yeah, but you have video cameras recording your streets, and no Bill of Rights. I'm not an American, but I know which country's government is less intrusive. (And it ain't anyone it Europe)...

      .

      --
      . --- If you're looking for free e-mail you won't find it here! http://www.noemailhere.com
    14. Re:Thank goodness... by issachar · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      sure it's fair, but and it's funny to do it sometimes too. But if we're going to be realistic, it is true that Europe wouldn't have been able to stop Hitler without the help of the US. (Economic & hardware help before officially entering the war, and with troops, kicking ass and taking names after).

      and the US military definately learned some lessons in Vietnam, but it's applied those lessons well. Fact is that the US is a sleepy giant that likes to be left alone. Wake it up and you will regret it. (Why can't Arabs figure this out)???

      .

      --
      . --- If you're looking for free e-mail you won't find it here! http://www.noemailhere.com
    15. Re:Thank goodness... by GLX · · Score: 1

      Unless of course you're Somalian or Iraqi... Then, your actions against someone else tend to "wake us up"

      --
      Sig (appended to the end of comments you post, 120 chars)
    16. Re:Thank goodness... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The United States runs the world.

      DAMN STRAIGHT!!!1! And the USA invented the computer which you are using to read Slashdot! So if you don't love the USA, STOP READING SLASHDOT!!

      Loser.
    17. Re:Thank goodness... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      yeah and the usa invented the computer they're using to store this schmuck's biometric information. and they invented the software to do it, and are going to be screwed by the government that's doing it to them. and soon it'll be happening at YOUR grocery store. where ever you are.

    18. Re:Thank goodness... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Fact is that the US is a sleepy giant that likes to be left alone. Wake it up and you will regret it. (Why can't Arabs figure this out)???

      Fact is that the Arabs are a sleeping giant that likes to be left alone. Wake it up and you will regret it. (Why can't the USA figure this out)???

      ALLAH U AKBAR
    19. Re:Thank goodness... by tftp · · Score: 1
      you have video cameras recording your streets

      Cameras can be avoided. But you can not effectively live in USA without having a driver's license or its non-driving equivalent.

      no Bill of Rights

      There is little left of it in USA anyway.

      I know which country's government is less intrusive.

      Bermuda?

    20. Re:Thank goodness... by CompMD · · Score: 1

      I worked as a translator in a DMV for a while and I had to learn how to identify falsified documents. In less than three months I had gotten everything from blatant fake state IDs to beautiful fake social security cards. All in all, I had around 110 fake documents presented to me. Driving without a license in my state means driving without insurance too. How would you like to be driving your shiny new car only to be hit by someone with a fake license and no insurance? Also, in my state we digitally archive the license photos. That comes in very handy. I had a boy come in two days after his 16th birthday to get his license, and the system wouldn't let me give it to him because apparently it had already been issued. I went and looked at the picture archive, and there's some 40 year old man's picture there. So, now my question to you is this: how would you like it if your children had their identities stolen? I don't think you would feel too secure.
      After a couple of months, I got really tired of people taking me, a stereotypical 18-year old large-build american geek guy, and thinking that they could get a fake past me and the state records and photo archives that I had at my disposal.

      Frankly, more power to Connecticut for taking a stand against idiots. Kansas, Colorado, and Illinois have all done so. Kansas has archived photos, Colorado archives photos and is rumored to use face recognition, and Illinois has licenses that are essentially impossible to fake.

      Now that you have the point of view from somebody who worked on the other side of the desk at the DMV, you might reconsider hating us. Depending on the state, your DMV emplyees do much more than just ask you to read the letters on the vision test or to go sit in the corner and take the written test. Some make sure that you have a real piece of government issued plastic that says who you really are, and that your identity stays yours and yours alone.

      Nick
      Former employee
      Illinois Secretary of State
      Driver Services Division

    21. Re:Thank goodness... by wheany · · Score: 1

      We saved your ass in the war

      This discussion is over. No point in reading further. Push the back-button in your browser and pick another story.

    22. Re:Thank goodness... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yup.

      Americans are all pretty much butt-fucked from now on.
      No amount of "letters to your congressbeing" will solve that.

      You made your bed, now you have to lay in it.

    23. Re:Thank goodness... by olesk · · Score: 1

      Kinda funny really, that whenever the US does something ridiculous, like this, everybody goes into defense if they are being critizised from abroad. If you're a US govt. institution and want to pass another bill taking away the last illusions of privacy in the US, all you have to do is log on to /. and pretend to be a brit and critizise it. Every slashdotter from the US is suddenly all in favour.
      Why is this so hard to realize?

      Oh, and Norwegian government is much less intrusive. So is Swedish, Danish and Islandic to mention the few ones I know well enough to compare. Pretty much every one I know really. But I'm not from the US, so the response to this post is pretty much given allready, isn't it? ;P

  2. Undue Restrictions by akac · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Just curious - what happens if you refuse? I guess they would prohibit you from getting a driver's license, but isn't there some law that prohibits the states from putting undue restrictions on basic priviliges (driving is a privilege).

    Next question would be if anybody would challenge this in a court of law.

    1. Re:Undue Restrictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Question - did they say what they plan on using the information for? I realize all of the obvious negative results from even having this information but I was wondering what are their intentions in the first place? "We are undertaking a major initiative to update Connecticut's drivers' license system to improve customer service levels; enhance the quality and look of licenses; and improve card security. The state also has also exercised the option to utilize biometric features with the new Digitized Driver License system given the need for greater security since September 11. It has become evident that the driver's license is now a critical identification document. As such, it behooves the state of Connecticut to ensure that our licenses are as secure and tamper resistant as the latest state-of-the-art technology allows." That quote really doesn't say enough for me... there should be a detailed policy of what they can and can not do with the information.

      _
      WINDOWS USERS CLICK HERE!

    2. Re:Undue Restrictions by yasth · · Score: 1

      Personal preference isn't a right. Now if you belonged to religion that didn't let your picture be taken, that would be different thing all together. Of course then you couldn't enter the gas stations, and couldn't use an ATM, etc.

      --
      I'd do something interesting, but my server can't handle a slashdotting.
    3. Re:Undue Restrictions by jethro200 · · Score: 1

      I can guarantee that if this becomes widespread, it will be challenged in a court. People challenge any and evey new law that comes out if it is even slightly controversial, and I would consider this issue to be more than slightly controversial.

    4. Re:Undue Restrictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I tried this in California. I refused to let them scan my thumb print and they told me flat out, no license. I demanded a refund of my fee and left. Eventually I got pulled over and was ordered by the police officer to go and get a valid California driver's license (at the time, I had, ironically, a Connecticut driver's license). Of course all of the CA DMV sheep could not understand when I explained to them, that scanning my thumb would do nothing to stop a criminal or a terrorist from getting a fake license or from using mine when it was stolen. They just looked at me with that typical mindless state employee look as if to say "C'mon don't you know that the government would not do this unless it was best." There is no hope.

    5. Re:Undue Restrictions by jgerman · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Driving is a privilege


      Heard this crap before. Driving is a right. Yes, if reason can be shown that there is a valid purpose for not providing someone with a driver's license it's fair enough to dissallow them one. However, in this, to use a horribly cliche phrase, not haveing a drivers license bars you from participating in a wide variety of activities in this country. The gorvernemt really has no right, IMHO to divvy out drivers licenses. I always here the argument: "The government pays for the roads". Bullshit, I pay for the roads, you pay for the roads, all of us pay for the roads.


      Sorry for the rant but the whole driving thing with the government burns me up. Don't even get me started on the government mandated extortion that is mandatory auto insurance. ;)

      --
      I'm the big fish in the big pond bitch.
    6. Re:Undue Restrictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting
      Silly person. Simply put some Elmer's glue on your thumb before you roll it. It doesn't take alot, then when you put your thumbprint down it won't show up the same.

      It's also hard to spot, so chances are you won't have anything to worry about.

    7. Re:Undue Restrictions by NDPTAL85 · · Score: 0, Troll

      Heh nice opinion. That still doesn't change the fact that driving is a privilege.

      --
      Mac OS X and Windows XP working side by side to fight back the night.
    8. Re:Undue Restrictions by Meech · · Score: 1
      Don't even get me started on the government mandated extortion that is mandatory auto insurance. ;)

      When someone hits your car that doesn't have auto insurance, you are not going to think that it is a stupid law anymore. It is the insurance companies that really are screwing you by their prices. By the way, in some states, if you can prove that you have access to a certain amount of money, then you do not require auto insurance.

    9. Re:Undue Restrictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      when they ask for your thumb print, tell them "hold on, I use my own ink" and then drop your pants and stuff your thumb up your ass. Get it good and brown, and voila, give them the thumb print they demanded.

    10. Re:Undue Restrictions by Sc00ter · · Score: 2

      In NH you don't need auto insurance at all.. It's not required.

    11. Re:Undue Restrictions by JordanH · · Score: 1
      • They just looked at me with that typical mindless state employee look as if to say "C'mon don't you know that the government would not do this unless it was best." There is no hope.

      I think you misinterpreted the look. The look was actually as if to say "What the heck are you doing making waves? I just work here and do as I'm told, you expect me to make policy?"

    12. Re:Undue Restrictions by tongue · · Score: 3, Insightful

      That still doesn't change the fact that driving is a privilege.

      Driving is NOT a privilege. It is a right. It is not, however, a constitutional right. The same rationale that says driving is a privilege says that privacy is also a privilege.

    13. Re:Undue Restrictions by Meech · · Score: 1
      That is a bad argument. Most reasonable people want auto insurance. Mandating it drives the prices up for everyone, and the deadbeat no goods who drive with no insurance still have no insurance.

      The fact that the regulation has driven up prices is an example of how the government is pro-business. They should regulate the insurance companies, sort of like they regulate the utility companies. But, they are looking out for the reasonable people by forcing the unreasonable people to carry insurance. People that do not have it should be fined/punished, like other criminals.

    14. Re:Undue Restrictions by ipfwadm · · Score: 1

      Of course all of the CA DMV sheep could not understand when I explained to them, that scanning my thumb would do nothing to stop a criminal or a terrorist from getting a fake license or from using mine when it was stolen.

      What do you expect them to do? Say "oh, ok, since you're harassing me, I'll make an exception just for you"? These people aren't the ones making the laws. If you want to make a difference, talk to your representatives in the legislature or whoever it was that enacted this policy/law. You're like the person that beats up the sales clerk because the price of a stereo is too high, when the sales clerk has absolutely no control over what the store charges, and (in my experience working in retail in college) really doesn't give a shit. Quite possibly the "DMV sheep" understood exactly what you were saying, and quite possibly even agreed with you, but that still doesn't change the fact that they can't simply make an exception for you just because you're that much more enlightened than the rest of the population. This is definitely a case where the "I just work here" reasoning DOES apply.

    15. Re:Undue Restrictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...or is it?

      Check this out, a little legal brief apparently used successfully to defend "driving without a license".

      http://usff.com/iepsc/dlbrief1.html

      Interesting quote:

      "Personal liberty largely consists of the Right of locomotion to go where and when one pleases only so far restrained as the Rights of others may make it necessary for the welfare of all other citizens. The Right of the Citizen to travel upon the public highways and to transport his property thereon, by horsedrawn carriage, wagon, or automobile, is not a mere privilege which may be permitted or prohibited at will, but the common Right which he has under his Right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. Under this Constitutional guarantee one may, therefore, under normal conditions, travel at his inclination along the public highways or in public places, and while conducting himself in an orderly and decent manner, neither interfering with nor disturbing another's Rights, he will be protected, not only in his person, but in his safe conduct." II Am.Jur. (1st) Constitutional Law, Sect.329, p.1135.

    16. Re:Undue Restrictions by webloser · · Score: 1

      too bad many states no longer use the ink and stamp way of obtaining your fingerprint anymore. Just press your thumb on a digital scanner and viola.

    17. Re:Undue Restrictions by Zenin · · Score: 2, Insightful

      ,not haveing a drivers license bars you from participating in a wide variety of activities in this country.

      I'm curious; have you ever actually made a real effort to live without the use of a car? As someone who's been car-free by choice for about four years now, I'll be a bit presumtious and guess not.

      While you've "Heard this crap before", so have I, from the other side of the fence. On a good day only about one in ten of the drivers on the road should be anywhere near a car. While I'll quickly admit the US is far, far behind most sane countries wrt cycling and transit programs, it's not in the complete stone age. You aren't barred from anything by not having a license. In many parts of the country, you're infact liberated by the lack of a license.

      --
      My /. uid is better then your /. uid
    18. Re:Undue Restrictions by Sc00ter · · Score: 2

      Funny, I live in southern NH, I have many friends in Mass. The people that live in Mass have much cheaper insurance then I do, even when they have one or two more cars then me. Unless of course they live in Lawrence :)

    19. Re:Undue Restrictions by 0x0d0a · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Agreed. Assuming the guy even *has* the ability to enter the data without a valid thumb scan, he isn't going to risk getting fired over you not wanting your thumb scanned. You'd have to go to a higher-up policymaker and make waves.

    20. Re:Undue Restrictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Driving is _NOT_ a right. Driving is a privledge, and therefore it is NOT subject to constitutional law. That is why (here in CA) you must pay the fine BEFORE you go to traffic court, you have no right to appeal, they can make you pay outrageous fees and fines, and all kinds of other crap.

      I've been in traffic court often enough to know how the system works and why, without being a lawyer (and I am not).

      As my lawyer says to all his clients, traffic court and the fees that the DMV charges are just another form of tax. Until some smart lawyer, or set of lawyers, is able to prove in court that driving is a RIGHT, we will have to put up with this kind of BS and governmental extortion.

      - Rohan

    21. Re:Undue Restrictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Now if you belonged to religion that didn't let your picture be taken
      I assume you're talking of Islam. Fatwahs except picture taking for necessities, such as passport photographs (because Mohammed said that certain laws can be excused for necessities). However, advice has been given against a Muslim man having to shave off his beard for such photographs.

      So, this may hit the fundamentalists. Which, according to current US scaremongery, means stopping nasty terrorists, and according to me, means Larry Ellison is about to get a windfall!

    22. Re:Undue Restrictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Driving is a right.

      Driving is a right. Using public roads is a privilege. You don't need a driver's license to drive on private property with permission of the owner.

    23. Re:Undue Restrictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful
      Nonsense. When law is appears good in a moment of need (like when another driver wrecks your car) , we surely cannot imply that the law was there to help you and should be considered a good law. Lets bring a few cases to illustrate this point:

      Must every newborn be insured on the day of birth against the possibility that they may cause damage later in life if they commit murder against another person? If so, every newborn should be required to carry murder insurance.

      And how about insurance against rape? Every male (and every female) carry rape insurance in case they happen to rape someone in the future. This will surely help the victim in the time of need.

      And how about walking on public street? We should buy insurance for that too.

      And how about battery, swimming, or going to the grocery. These too are cases were you could cause damage to others and they should be compensated for it.

      In short, we can have insurance for everything and the government should have the right to decide who should live and who (in effect) should die. Just more of the same like with their wonderful extortion theirs when they attempt to extort the population with "driving is a privilege", and if you don't pay this or that, the law will refuse to grant you license.

    24. Re:Undue Restrictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nonsense. It costs a lot more to call a cab, and
      it takes a lot of time wait for public transportation (if available),
      than to conduct your business and errands by
      car. This is obvious and requires little or no discussion.

    25. Re:Undue Restrictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      By the way, in some states, if you can prove that you have access to a certain amount of money, then you do not require auto insurance.

      Depends on the state.

    26. Re:Undue Restrictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I explained to them, that scanning my thumb would do nothing to stop a criminal or a terrorist from getting a fake license or from using mine when it was stolen.

      But it might stop a criminal or a terrorist from getting a real license.

    27. Re:Undue Restrictions by theCoder · · Score: 1

      It's not just driving a car you need a driver's license for. Try buying alcohol without one if you're under 25 (and over 21 of course). It's bad enough trying to buy alcohol with an out of state ID. Same goes for writing a check.

      Sure, you can go to the DMV and get a non-driving ID, but isn't that the same? (it would have the same data on it, you just aren't allowed to drive)

      The fact is, you can't do a lot of things in our society without your papers, er, government issued ID. Not that I see an easy solution, but a driver's license isn't just for driving anymore.

      --
      "Save the whales, feed the hungry, free the mallocs" -- author unknown
    28. Re:Undue Restrictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course all of the CA DMV sheep could not understand when I explained to them, that scanning my thumb would do nothing to stop a criminal or a terrorist from getting a fake license or from using mine when it was stolen.

      And you could not understand that the gummint having your fingerprints does nothing harmful to you.

    29. Re:Undue Restrictions by TheOrange · · Score: 1



      Driving is a right defined in the constitution. The right to liberty, defined in part by courts, as the right to move about using transportation methods of the time.

      They can restrict this right, but they have the burden of proof.

    30. Re:Undue Restrictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You totally miss the point.

      The state or authority doesn't have the right to license driver's because they pave the roads or even as a way of regulating industry, although those are both good points. The state's aithority essentially derives from its responsibilty to protect its citizens safety and manage the utilization of what is, in all honesty, a lethal weapon that poses a serious danger to the majority.

      However, I don't think the state has teh right to gather biometric data if it can't show cause, and I'm sure teh ACLU willl challenge this soon enough (in fact, I'll bet the CT chapter is doing backflips overthe opportunity to take such an easy case).

      Remember this, the state's numberone resource isn't oil, it isn't business, and it isn't technlogy. A state's primary resource is people, and a functional state system (regardless of political leanings) will always act to protect its human assets as best it can.

      -rt

    31. Re:Undue Restrictions by warkda+rrior · · Score: 1

      You can buy alcohol using your birth certificate (or naturalization certificate).

      --
      You need to install an RTFM interface.
    32. Re:Undue Restrictions by Qrlx · · Score: 1

      Get a passport. It's $65 bucks, it's good for ten years, and it is the most universally accepted form of idenitification.

      No, I'm not talking about the Microsoft passport.

    33. Re:Undue Restrictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mandatory automotive insurance ought to be illegal as it is now - discrimination abounds. All insurance companies charge you more if you're under 25 than if you're over, as if hitting the magic 25 year old mark makes any difference at all. That they don't do the same for people over 70 shows that the pricing decision is simply arbitrary.

      "It is the insurance companies that really are screwing you by their prices"

      Rediculous. They're only doing so because they know you have to have it. If you didn't, competition would drive the prices down further, because less people would feel the need to have it (I wouldn't want it, since I'm a safe driver, for instance.)

    34. Re:Undue Restrictions by tongue · · Score: 2

      moderators, mod parent up...

    35. Re:Undue Restrictions by emc · · Score: 1

      I love NH.

      Live Free or Die.

      That says it all.

    36. Re:Undue Restrictions by Com2Kid · · Score: 2

      Nonsense. It costs a lot more to call a cab, and
      it takes a lot of time wait for public transportation (if available),
      than to conduct your business and errands by
      car. This is obvious and requires little or no discussion.


      Damn thing is troll as this may be, this is exactly how many people look at the situation.

      They never bother to realize that they can get up off of their fat rump and walk / ride a bike. Hell people look at me in shock when I say that I'll just walk the 1.5mi, after all, what the hells 1.5mi but 20 or so minutes of my time (Hey, I did say walk. ^_^ ) and some (arguably) fresh air?

    37. Re:Undue Restrictions by cduffy · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Just because they say driving is a privilage, and treat driving as a privilage, does not make driving a privilage. Similarly, if for some class of people the ability to worship as one pleases were treated as a privilage, regulated and revoked as a privilage -- it would still be a right, and those people would be unfairly suppressed; and no matter how much one said "religion is a privilage", it would be not a whit less so.

      Driving -- using the property one owns to move about over the property owned by not the government but the public -- is no less an expression of basic liberties.

    38. Re:Undue Restrictions by cduffy · · Score: 2
      And you could not understand that the gummint having your fingerprints does nothing harmful to you.
      And letting you have my /etc/passwd file does nothing harmful to me -- it's encrypted, right?!
      But I'm not handing it over.

      I could take the letters I write to my little sister and put them up on a web board -- there's nothing in there embarrasing to either of us, and otherwise no reason not to.
      But I don't.

      You could give me copies of all your elementary school records -- surely there's no harm in me having them, right?
      But I expect that you aren't much inclined to do that, either.

      Privacy (and, dare I say it, freedom) is more than avoiding harmful personal consequences -- it's simply nothing more and nothing less than being left alone to enjoy my rights as I see fit, with no obligations except those I make of my own free will. Requiring one to take on fresh obligations to exercise "priviliges" which are in fact rights is harmful indeed.
    39. Re:Undue Restrictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually I was thinking of some christian groups (Amish and mennonites, and there are others), and yes some mennonites drive autmobiles (trucks for business).

    40. Re:Undue Restrictions by jgerman · · Score: 2
      Now see you're putting words into my mouth like a typical ignorant kid. I said nothing about not having insurance, the problem is the method that the government allows to be implemented that fucks the drivers, rather than putting a reasonable system in place.


      I am aware that certain states have different laws, some better than where I live (MD).

      --
      I'm the big fish in the big pond bitch.
    41. Re:Undue Restrictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've covered my thumb with glue to get my license in California. I was too tired of watching for police, being fined for driving without a license, being unable to show photo id. But it doesn't work that smoothly.

      When they take your thumb print, the machine recognizes that something's wrong. It doesn't immediately recognize your thumb's presence, and it may take three or four attempts for it to recognize the scan. Luckily, the DMV personnel witness this phenomenon rarely, and are bewildered by its behavior, passing it off as an abberation.

      But the advances in scanning technology mean that even the partial scan may still prove good enough.

    42. Re:Undue Restrictions by Chasuk · · Score: 2

      ...not haveing [sic] a drivers license bars you from participating in a wide variety of activities in this country.

      I got my first driver's license when I was 26. I used it so infrequently that I didn't renew it when it expired. I am now 41, and I still very seldom have need for a driver's license.

      I have travelled the world, gone to myriad concerts, the theatre, gone camping, skiing, to the cinema, shopping, and I have never once been impeded by my lack of driver's license.

      On the other hand, I have never had to look for parking, pay for parking, pay parking fines, pay a speeding ticket, pay for gasoline/petrol, pay for automotive maintenance, been in a car accident, pay for automotive insurance, or make a car payment. I have also never been trapped in a traffic jam, been the victim of, or experienced, "road rage," changed a tire, or paid for an MOT Inspection or for Road Tax.

      Yes, I have had to walk home in the rain, waited too long for taxis, and been inconvenienced by unreliable public transportation, but to me the benefits of being without a car far outweigh the cons: needlessly polluting the atmosphere, depriving myself of many reasons for bicycling or walking, and smelling someone else's exhaust fumes or being tailgated.

      Your assertion seems rather grossly exaggerated.

    43. Re:Undue Restrictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      oh yeah? come to Atlanta GA and then try to get along without a license and car.

    44. Re:Undue Restrictions by BgJonson79 · · Score: 2

      Interesting because I live in NH but go to college in Worcester MA, and I bet our insurance would be about 10^6 times more if they knew our car spent about 7 to 8 months a year in this shithole (at least, for two and a half more weeks). Hell, I have to drive through Lowell and Lawrence to get to/from home/school, and I try to drive 80 so if I break down I can coast through the towns.

      --

      There are four boxes used in defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order.

    45. Re:Undue Restrictions by thopkins · · Score: 1

      You obviously live in a big city, the only place where a life like this is possible. Get off your moral high horse and try this in a suburban or rural place.

    46. Re:Undue Restrictions by akac · · Score: 1

      Driving on your own property using your own property is your right - since its all your property.

      Driving on PUBLIC streets using your own property - that is a privilege.

    47. Re:Undue Restrictions by Chasuk · · Score: 2

      I assume you are accusing me of arrogance. Did you even read my post? If so, can you provide an example of my supposed arrogance? I don't think so: I wasn't on a high horse, moral or otherwise.

      Regardless, you are utterly wrong about where I reside or might have resided. I've lived in the suburbs and rural areas most of my life, and there is nothing self-important or overbearing in that statement, either. I live in a rural area now, and I walk to work every day, 6 days a week, rain or shine, sleet or snow. Is that an arrogant statement? Am I astride a high horse?

      I stated merely that the original poster's assertion was grossly exaggerated, after having provided counter-examples.

      You might have misinterpreted the phrase needlessly polluting the atmosphere, but a re-reading should correct that mistake. Cars pollute the atmosphere, I arrange my life to avoid requiring the use of cars, so I do not needlessly pollute the artmosphere. Is there something arrogant about that statement of fact?

      Get your head out of the horses ass and read what was actually said, not what you felt compelled to read into it: there was no connotation present or intended.

      If you still feel threatened, get over it.

    48. Re:Undue Restrictions by shams42 · · Score: 1

      It must have been difficult for you to do anything that requires a credit check, like purchasing a cell phone. I used to sell them for Verizon and I know that they simply will not process an app without a driver's license.

      Do you have a state ID card at least?

    49. Re:Undue Restrictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      And letting you have my /etc/passwd file does nothing harmful to me -- it's encrypted, right?!

      Wrong! It's encoded! And why aren't you using a shadow password file?
    50. Re:Undue Restrictions by Chasuk · · Score: 2

      No, but I do have a passport, and that is adequate most of the time. I also have credit cards, and a checking account, and (now) make most of my purchases on-line, where ID isn't a problem.

      Living in a rural area, most shopkeepers know me, so I haven't had to present any ID at all for ages, actually. I lived outside of London at one time, and it wasn't a problem there, either, once shopkeepers knew my face.

      It really isn't the hassle that most assume that it is, I assure you. :-)

    51. Re:Undue Restrictions by curunir · · Score: 2

      A US passport or state identification card should be sufficient for any identification process not involving an automobile (a driver's license can be required for the purposes of buying or renting a vehicle, for example).

      If you denied someone's application for a cell phone because they tried to use a state ID card or a passport instead of a driver's license, they would have grounds to sue your company for discrimination.

      --
      "Don't blame me, I voted for Kodos!"
    52. Re:Undue Restrictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Driving on PUBLIC streets using your own property - that is a privilege.

      Oh yeah THAT is a privilege, but what about the PRIVILAGE cduffy was talking about? Or the PRIVLEDGE that the AC who's been to traffic court a lot was talking about? Why aren't you mentioning THEM?
    53. Re:Undue Restrictions by SecurityGuy · · Score: 2

      The state's aithority essentially derives from its responsibilty to protect its citizens safety and manage the utilization of what is, in all honesty, a lethal weapon that poses a serious danger to the majority.



      A car is not a lethal weapon. We need to get *far* from that sort of reasoning. A car is a mode of transportation. A firearm is a weapon. A knife *might* be a weapon. The ones in my kitchen are tools, thank you, as is my axe, straight razor, etc. The logic that something is a weapon just because you can hurt someone with us is what gets good kids kicked dragged out of school through the auspices of zero-thinking^Wtolerance policies.
    54. Re:Undue Restrictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, that's not interesting at all, that's OFF TOPIC. Dickhead.

    55. Re:Undue Restrictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Rediculous.

      That's "ridiculous", Einstein. As in "deserving of ridicule", from the Latin "ridiculosus".
    56. Re:Undue Restrictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What about pouring toxins into the air we all have to breathe? Privilege or right?

    57. Re:Undue Restrictions by cduffy · · Score: 2

      Ahh, externalities. If you pour toxins into your own air, that's your right. If you let those toxins get off your property, it's a privilige you need to purchase from those whose property you've contaminated -- and if that's the public, then you purchase such rights from the public, with the government acting in facilitation of this transaction.

      Relevant how?

    58. Re:Undue Restrictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I definitely don't feel threatened by the likes of you. If you want to use the tranportation methods of the 19th Century, go right ahead, but don't think you're that superior, because you're not

    59. Re:Undue Restrictions by cduffy · · Score: 1

      The point that I'm trying to make is that PUBLIC property is not the same as GOVERNMENT property. If something is public property, it's available for the use of all (but any destruction of this property is similarly an offense against all; hence, the need for government or some other organization to represent the interests of public property). Government property, on the other hand, is owned by and reserved for the use of the government, as opposed to the public. Stopping me from driving on the public roads of which I'm part owner isn't an action a government concerned about personal liberties should take, unless I'm doing undue harm to my co-owners' property.

      Driving on GOVERNMENT streets with my own property -- yes, that's a privilege. But on PUBLIC streets... no, those are mine as much as anyone else's.

    60. Re:Undue Restrictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      A car is not a lethal weapon. We need to get *far* from that sort of reasoning. A car is a mode of transportation. A firearm is a weapon.

      How many people get killed each year by guns? How many people get killed each year by cars? Until the number of people being killed by cars drops dramatically, we need to think of cars as lethal objects, if not weapons.
    61. Re:Undue Restrictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Could he just crap on the scanner instead?

    62. Re:Undue Restrictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      What if you've shown no respect for the safety
      of others by speeding, reckless driving, drunk
      driving, ect ect ect? Should you be allowed to
      drive then?

    63. Re:Undue Restrictions by mshurpik · · Score: 2, Informative

      It really isn't the hassle that most assume that it is, I assure you. :-)

      Oh, not having a car is most certainly a hassle.

      I'm 26 and I have yet to own a car. At this point, the novelty has been completely lost, and yet I still need one.

      Shopping is ridiculous without one. I can only buy so much as I can carry, which in terms of groceries is usually half of what I want. In terms of capital investments like tools, lumber, or furniture, being carless becomes an absolute joke. Home Depot laughs if you ask about delivery; why would you go to home depot without a car?

      I'm limited in my shopping range to only the most convenient, rather than cheapest/best stores, which means I spend more money on inferior products. And it takes a minimum of an hour to go to the supermarket, even though it's right inside my freaking neighborhood.

      Travelling is a joke. I tried going to suburbia once without a car, I figured that since everyone in suburbia has one, it would be fine. Nope, disaster. And in the urban environment in which I live, the few people who have cars are so protective of them that asking to borrow one is a serious imposition.

      The economics of public transportation are a joke. The next-nearest airport to this city is an hour away. Bus fare is cheap ($15), but if you add in shuttle or taxi fare, round trip becomes $50-80.

      If it wasn't the airport, I'd rent a car, as I do for all other trips. A car is $50 a day. Divide by 12 for a two-hour stint, and that $80 trip to the airport should be $4. Where did the other $76 go? To pay for the bus driver?

      I admire the fact that you went your whole life without a car, but I can't imagine that it wasn't a hassle, or that you did it without generous help from car owners. My experience being carless is that simple tasks become logistical nightmares. Being carless consumes far more of my planning abilities than it deserves.

    64. Re:Undue Restrictions by Chasuk · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      I repeat:

      Can you provide an example of my supposed arrogance? You can't, because the example doesn't exist.

      I am obviously superior to you, at least insofar as your demonstrated literacy. Now, if you continue this dialogue, you will be able to quote the former sentence as an example of my arrogance, because that is exactly what it is, and well-earned arrogance, at that.

      Happily, your ignorance _is_ cureable. Translation: you needn't feel intimidated forever.

      Just for your information, the transportation methods of the 19th, 20th, and 21st centuries include bipedal locomotion, and probably will do so for many centuries to come. Translation: walking isn't obsolete quite yet.

    65. Re:Undue Restrictions by cduffy · · Score: 1

      If I drive recklessly, drunk or so forth, then I run the risk of financially ruining myself via civil penalties (or, if I choose to buy insurance, by paying an even greater amount in average to buy insurance), killing myself, and so forth.

      If I'm not rational enough to be dissueded by those factors, I'm probably one of those people who speeds and drives drunk despite the laws against such actions.

    66. Re:Undue Restrictions by moncyb · · Score: 1

      I have been without a car for a few years. (however I do have a drivers license).

      Maybe what the AC said isn't true in your area. Maybe you just haven't had to live without a car for a while. But in some (maybe even many) areas, it is very difficult to live without a car.

      It may be not a great burden to walk a mile and a half, but what about 10? 20? ...and the bus? Where I live (and many other western states), the bussing system is a complete joke! Traveling that 10 miles takes about an hour--and that is only if the bus goes "directly" there and you don't have to transfer. It also doesn't count walking to/from the bus stop and the time wasted waiting for the bus. The busses here are usually 5 min. early to 15 min. late--that's up to twenty minutes you have to wait!

      In a car that trip would take maybe 15 minutes. On the bus that same trip takes over an hour--provided that the route stops at the doorsteps of your source and destination! Oftentimes it isn't possible to work things out that way--unless you greatly restrict everything you do.

      Maybe you might like sitting your ass on a bus for two hours every day or staying in some crappy barely minimum wage job just because it's within walking distance. I sure don't!

    67. Re:Undue Restrictions by Frank+T.+Lofaro+Jr. · · Score: 1

      What if you have to go further, maybe even 20 miles or more?

      By bike that would be over an hour, walking would be over 5 hours, but driving it could be almost down to 15 minutes.

      If you want traffic and pollution to be abated, rather than trying to force alternative transportation down unwilling people's throats, why don't you work to support GOOD public transportation modalities, such as light rail?

      I'll never take a bus by choice, but I would take a train.

      Trains can be faster than cars - buses CAN'T.

      A high speed light rail would definitely get people out of their cars.

      --
      Just because it CAN be done, doesn't mean it should!
    68. Re:Undue Restrictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ahh, one of those weird property-worshipper types.

      How does air become anyone's property? You buy it from the air-god? Or does it become yours by being near land which you've gotten from the creator of the land, or at least in direct and legal descent from said creator? Or does it become your property when you (or your parents) beat up someone else and claim it? Or what?

      Relevant 'cause someone said "rights", which I always find a funny notion. Probably pretty off-topic in general.

    69. Re:Undue Restrictions by leviramsey · · Score: 1

      Not in Massachusetts.

      Under the Massachusetts General Laws, the only valid forms of ID for alcohol purchase are, iirc:

      • Massachusetts (and only Massachusetts) drivers license
      • Massachusetts (and only Massachusetts) liquor ID
      • Passport (I'm not sure if foreign passports qualify)
      • US Military ID
    70. Re:Undue Restrictions by cduffy · · Score: 1

      All rights are property rights. Your right to free speech is your right to do what you wish with your vocal chords; your right to freedom of religion, etc. There's nothing weird about worshipping property rights any more than any other rights.

      Ownership of air (unless that air is effectively enclosed, as in an artificial pressure) is for practical reasons treated simply as ownership of the space in which the air provides. When pollution released into that space spreads elsewhere, that's when potential damages occur (irregardless of which exact air molocules are where). There's nothing so magical about it.

      As for land... well, yes, land ceded as part of a peace treaty does genuinely change owners. As for when it first had an owner, it started to have an owner when someone started working it and protecting it as their own. Eventually formal boundaries and property rights came about... and here we are today.

      Yes, there was a whole bunch of oppression and such inbetween, but it's not really practical to do anything about it (hence, the concept of a statute of limitations)... but the end result is that I have what's mine, and you have what's yours, and whatever abuses of others' rights may have been involved in creating the present situation, it doesn't change where we are and so doesn't do any good to worry about it.

    71. Re:Undue Restrictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It depends on the individual. I do all of my major shopping on a monthly basis, and then buy the other items as needed (bread, milk, etc.) which I can easy carry home. The monthly shopping is done via taxi which costs under $10.

      I don't buy larger items (tools, lumber, or furniture) except for once about every 5 years, and it is a hassle, but not insurmountable.

      Again, I don't fly often, once a year approximately, so I don't encounter airport difficulties often enough to consider them a real inconvenience.

      I am not anti-car: I choose not to drive myself, but everyone else will do as they wish and I am not interested in disuading them.

      Note that this picture is slightly out of date. My wife has purchased a car as she finds walking painful, and my eldest daughter will get a driver's license soon. It would be foolish to refuse offers of transportation when and if they offer it, so I imagine that my hardcore walking days are nearly over.

      Further, since there is now a car in the household, I imagine that I will eventually get a license again, probably in tandem with my daughter.

      My point is that being without a car is not a tragedy, or even much of an inconvenience, necesarily. It depends on personal circumstance and inclination.

      My Internet connection is my most valuable commodity. I would give up television, the telephone, the car, the radio, the microwave, and the stereo, my dish washer, and my washing machine and dryer rather than give up my 'net connection. Okay, I suppose that I value hot water, indoor plumbing and refrigeration more than I value my 'net connection, but not by much.

      A car, when I owned one, was the most boring and unexciting thing that I have ever owned. I don't worship cars (though I do worship computers), and I don't understand those who do. A car is transportation, period (IMHO), so I begrudged the expense every day. If it isn't a toy or an ABSOLUTE necessity (by my definition), I dislike spending hard-earned money on it.

      Note that the word worship in the above contexts was only in a figurative sense. :-)

      Anyway, different strokes for different folks, to use a cliche.

    72. Re:Undue Restrictions by Com2Kid · · Score: 1

      Ouch, Seattle is considered to have one of 'the worst transportation systems in the nation' yet I can honestly say that you can get to damn near anyplace in the city within half an hour to fourty five minutes by bus (albeit with one required transfer).

      Hell I ride my bike around this city and it is built upon 7 hills!

      The busses here are usually 5 min. early to 15 min. late--that's up to twenty minutes you have to wait!

      Not around here they aren't. :)

      Actualy read the fine print some time, in my city at least it states that the buses LEAVE _for_ that stop at the specified time, says nothing about when they get there (3-5minutes after listed time typicaly)

    73. Re:Undue Restrictions by moncyb · · Score: 1

      did they say what they plan on using the information for?

      My first guess is that they will print a yellow six pointed star on specific people's drivers licenses, and then to use biometric techonlogy to keep these "nasty" people in their concentration camps.

      Their supposed real reason seems to be to keep track of terrorists, but I don't see how this will help at all with that.

      there should be a detailed policy of what they can and can not do with the information.

      I agree. They should also keep that information with an organization that is of high integrity that will only release it for legitimate uses. Unfortunately, I doubt they'll even consider that...in fact the government probably couldn't even create such a organization, and if they found it, they'd probably destroy it...

    74. Re:Undue Restrictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you just stringing together legal phrases and hoping they make sense? The right to liberty is defined nowhere in the Constitution. Nor is it defined to include using a car for transportation. If you're going to make that claim, you'll need a court case as support. Otherwise it's all hot air with no legal backing. Life, liberty, and the pursiut of happyness are in the Declaration of Independance, which has no legal standing in US law.
      Finally, burden of proof has no bearing on restricting rights. I believe the relavent term is "greater good," but even that phrase doesn't make your statement true. "Burden of proof" is what's placed on a procecutor and is needed to convict a criminal.

      I hate the idea of having my thumbprint/DNA/soul scanned by the government and placed on a card, but you're not doing any good by concocting uninformed and irrelivent legal objections. I'd wager it does even more harm than good because everybody with the same viewpoint comes off as ignorant.

    75. Re:Undue Restrictions by WizardWlf · · Score: 1

      Ok, If driving is a right then why are the blind and legally blind ban for driving instead of people making accessable vehicals and roads? If driving is a right then we all should pay for road upgrades that make it so a blind person with a properly equipt vehical can drive themselves to where ever they wish to go, at any time of the day or night, no pre planning involved (except the same pre planing a sighted person would do, make sure you had gas to get there). I do not see (bad pun) any one in this nation pushing for allowing me or any other blind person to drive. But everywhere I go there is always road construction (I pay taxes!) that I am paying for. I have never been able to drive and at the rate this nation is going with people winning about having to give a little more info to the DMV it will probably never happen. Did you ever stop to think that even though someone can't drive they still can get an ID card and will have to provide all the same information and data to the DMV. So just give them the info and say you want an ID card not a licience for the next four years and see how you do.

      That's just my Opinion, I could be wrong!

    76. Re:Undue Restrictions by cduffy · · Score: 2, Interesting

      If driving is a right then we all should pay for road upgrades that make it so a blind person with a properly equipt vehical can drive themselves to where ever they wish to go, at any time of the day or night, no pre planning involved (except the same pre planing a sighted person would do, make sure you had gas to get there).

      Bullshit.

      There's a fundamental right to worship as one chooses. Does that mean churches should be government-subsidized?

      There's a fundamental right to be able to move about freely. Does that mean everyone should get free plane fare?

      There's a fundamental right to reproduction. Does that mean that those who can't get some should have state-funded in-vitro fertilization and (if necessary) surragate parenthood, with all the materials necessary paid for by the state?

      Just because you have a right doesn't mean that I pay for you to exercise it. True rights are protective; those "rights" which indicate that someone should be given something for free are not truly rights but rather obligations -- if you have a right to free housing, it means I'm obligated to pay your rent. If I'm obligated to you except of my choosing, I'm not truly free.

      I'm fully aware of the ID card thing -- I didn't have a driver's license until quite recently. That doesn't make me any more willing to accept the government or any other entity obligating me to carry ID or do anything else (other than honoring the protective rights of others) except with my consent.

    77. Re:Undue Restrictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They should regulate the insurance companies, sort of like they regulate the utility companies.

      Insurance is both regulated and required in the state of Texas and we have one of the highest rates in the nation having gone up geometrically since being "required". The consensus here is that the insurance companies 0wn the insurance board and SBC 0wns the PUC.

    78. Re:Undue Restrictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sheesh, you forgot to mention voting insurance.

    79. Re:Undue Restrictions by wheany · · Score: 1

      How would you giving your thumbprint to the government infringe your privacy? I see, now they know you HAVE THUMBS!

    80. Re:Undue Restrictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I'm fully aware of the ID card thing -- I didn't have a driver's license until quite recently.

      Why would that be, I wonder? Could it be because you have only just got out of high school? You must be exceptionally intelligent to have worked out all the answers when you are still so young.

      PS: AYN RAND IS AN IDIOT.
    81. Re:Undue Restrictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So do you think that people should work for what they get? That their possessions should be the product of their labor?

    82. Re:Undue Restrictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      A state's primary resource is people

      No, a state's primary resource is people believing in it. As soon as people stop believing in the state, it will disappear. When people no longer RESPECT THE STATE'S AUTHORITAYYYY, the state will crumble.
    83. Re:Undue Restrictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      exponential Pronunciation Key (ksp-nnshl)
      adj.
      Of or relating to an exponent.
      Mathematics.
      Containing, involving, or expressed as an exponent.
      Expressed in terms of a designated power of e, the base of natural logarithms

    84. Re:Undue Restrictions by linzeal · · Score: 1
      "churches should be government-subsidized"

      Wouldn't having tax free status be the same thing?

    85. Re:Undue Restrictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Would they mind if I bring a homeless person's thumb with me ?

    86. Re:Undue Restrictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      damn right. People in lowell can't drive to save their lives.

    87. Re:Undue Restrictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ok, I can see how you might construct a workable system based on this idea, but in the "practical" world, it seems to lead to feudalism and fiefdoms -- or at the very best, a "one dollar/one vote" system.

      Why do the Rockefeller descendants have the "right" to more air than I do? Not to mention more air than they could ever possibly breathe? (Or Bill Gates's children, to bring Slashdot into it....) Some humans just happen to be more equal than others?

    88. Re:Undue Restrictions by SecurityGuy · · Score: 2
      How many people get killed each year by guns? How many people get killed each year by cars? Until the number of people being killed by cars drops dramatically, we need to think of cars as lethal objects, if not weapons.


      Potentially lethal objects, fine. No car I've ever owned has been a lethal object, unless you want to count bugs who failed the grill test. By all means, I believe cars *can* kill people and drivers should act with necessary safety. I just object ot the reasoning that because something might possibly be used to harm someone, it's a weapon. We should restrict that word to things which have exclusive or primary purpose of killing things, or things which have or the user intends to use to kill something. My putter isn't a weapon, but yours is if you've just been attacked with it.


      Back to topic, it's these stretches of logic which make biometric drivers licenses dangerous. Forbidding weapons at school is fine and mostly reasonable. Disciplining, even severely, violators of that policy is not a bad thing. It becomes a bad thing when nitwits get to decide that a weapon is whatever they say it is. The problem isn't licensing drivers, the problem isn't linking biometric data to a drivers license, the problem is the next step. Because of the inevitability of the next step, I have to oppose the linking of biometric data.

    89. Re:Undue Restrictions by mikelieman · · Score: 1

      Really? When I READ the New York Vehicle and Traffic Code, it's quite clear that the point of licensing and registration is to provide for the timely resolution of insurance claims.

      Don't make me dig up the cites for you... Do it yourself, and you'll learn it.

      --
      Technology -- No Place For Wimps! Grateful Dead and Jerry Garcia Chatroom -- http://www.wemissjerry.org
    90. Re:Undue Restrictions by jerdenn · · Score: 2

      oh yeah? come to Atlanta GA and then try to get along without a license and car.

      Too true. I lived in one of the suburbs of ATL for a while and my car broke down. The last bus in my _very_ busy part of the county stopped running at 5pm!!! This county is actually anti-public transportation because the current powers that be are afraid that a thriving public transportation system will bring an 'unwanted element' into the area.

      -jerdenn

    91. Re:Undue Restrictions by SGHarms · · Score: 1

      The fact of the matter is that driving, especially in most parts of the US is necessary to be a productive member of society.

      The notion of privilege only applies when there are real alternatives (the basis for Kantian morality). When the non-auto infrastructure is so poor that a car is a necessity, then privilege does not enter the discussion.

      When this is the case, the argument that due to this "privilege" we have the right to monitor you fails.

      Case in point, I grew up in Houston, Texas. There are fewer pedestrian friendly places in the world. The mass availability of cheap land propelled the term sprawl to new heights. As a result, to get anywhere you needed.

      Even in the slightly more pedestrian focused Austin, those without automobiles suffer and greatly.

      The fact of the matter is that the US cities have done a horrible job of building pedestrian infrastructure.

      Even now in "progressive" California, the bike lanes are narrow and abused, sidewalks lack efficient direction etc. The best city for non-auto-possessor is SF (of course) but it still isn't near the efficiency level of cities like Vienna or anywhere in The Netherlands.

    92. Re:Undue Restrictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      court case eh ? legal backing eh ?
      yup. here you go : http://usff.com/iepsc/dlbrief1.html
      its in the constitution.

    93. Re:Undue Restrictions by YrWrstNtmr · · Score: 1

      You may move about on public streets without restriction. But the method you choose to move about may be restricted.

      You can be a passenger, you can walk, you can ride a bicycle. To operate a motor vehicle, you must have a valid license. And such license can be suspended, revoked, or simply not issued for various reasons.

      Your right to move about has not been restricted. Only the method.

      Various judges and coutrts agree. Idiot Legal Arguments

      Some quotes:
      Oklahoma
      "privilege of operation a motor vehicle on the public streets is "wholly separate from the right to travel"

      Utah 1987
      "The ability to drive a motor vehicle on a public roadway is not a fundamental right; it is a privilege that is granted upon the compliance with the statutory licensing procedures"

      Minnesota 1988
      "While there exists a fundamental right to travel, neither this court, nor our [state] supreme court, nor the US Supreme Court has ever held that there exists a fundamental right to drive a moter vehicle."

      Missouri 1985
      "The state of Missouri, by making the licensing requirements in question, is not prohibiting Davis from expressing or practicing his religious beliefs or from traveling throughout this land. If he wishes, he may walk, ride a bicycle or horse, or travel as a passenger in an automobile, bus, airplane or helicopter. He cannot, however, operate a moto vehicle on the public highways without ... a valid operator's license."

    94. Re:Undue Restrictions by mpe · · Score: 2

      It costs a lot more to call a cab, and it takes a lot of time wait for public transportation (if available),

      You need to weigh this against the fact that you don't need to find somewhere to park a taxi, bus, train, etc. No-one has yet invented a car you can simply fold up and carry with you.
      Also you need to make sure you factor in all the costs of a private car. Purchase costs, maintanance, insurance, fuel, etc.

    95. Re:Undue Restrictions by mpe · · Score: 2

      Hell people look at me in shock when I say that I'll just walk the 1.5mi, after all, what the hells 1.5mi but 20 or so minutes of my time

      In quite a few urban areas across the world you would actually get there quicker, since the average traffic speed is actually slower than walking pace. (Assuming people don't get gassed from hundreds of idling car engines.) Of course a 1.5 mile pedestrian route might correspond to a longer car route (especially considering parking.)

    96. Re:Undue Restrictions by mpe · · Score: 2

      If you want to use the tranportation methods of the 19th Century, go right ahead

      About the only transportation method which was new in the 20th century is aviation.

    97. Re:Undue Restrictions by mpe · · Score: 2

      It must have been difficult for you to do anything that requires a credit check, like purchasing a cell phone. I used to sell them for Verizon and I know that they simply will not process an app without a driver's license.

      When did a telephone become a car? How is having a driving licence even remotly relevent to credit, except to obtain a car? All this sort of stupidity does is make identity theft a bigger problem.

    98. Re:Undue Restrictions by mpe · · Score: 2

      But it might stop a criminal or a terrorist from getting a real license.

      It probably won't do much against organised crime or terrorism with anything richer than a small nation state behind it. They will have the resources to ensure that they can get "real" documents.

    99. Re:Undue Restrictions by cduffy · · Score: 1

      So do you think that people should work for what they get? That their possessions should be the product of their labor?

      Of course I do! However, there are some practical restrictions, most particularly with the matter of inheritances.

      Simply put, inheritances are an embarrasment to my philosophy (and, in my view, to libertarianism in general) as they make it such that what people have is not only a reflection of how much value they've created (as measured by how much others were willing to pay for that value). Unfortunetely, there's no means of getting rid of inheritances either without totally destroying the rights which we seek to protect... so we smile and look the other way most of the time. If you have a solution, I'd rather like to hear it.

      Also, understand that for my purposes "labor" means anything for which another rational person is willing to pay. I don't begrudge the CEO his/her $1,200,000 a year as long as those who paid the money did so willingly (ie. in return for a product). On the other hand, someone who makes $15,000 a year but does so without the agreement of those who pay him is an undeserving scoundrel.

    100. Re:Undue Restrictions by cduffy · · Score: 1

      Why do the Rockefeller descendants own more air than you (or, properly, more airspace)? Simply because enough people decided that it was in their best interests to give John D. Rockefeller money to buy his oil (a decision which they had every right to make!) and because John D. decided to give a portion of this money to his children (which he had every right to do).

      As for the "one dollar, one vote" thing -- maybe, maybe not. Most libertarians prefer a government so limited in scope that even were it completely bought out by some corporate interest, those controlling it would still be unable to act abusively. If controlling a government gives little benefit, no corporate interest will pay good money to do it. That said, however, Libertarians' first interests are in human liberties (which property rights are among); keeping the government liable to the people (by having at least one house keep one-vote-per-head) is a good way to help preserve them.

      "Being more equal" is not the same as having more property. If you have $10 and spend $5, and I have $10 and earn $5 more, does that make me "more equal" than you because I can buy more? The only kind of equality that any government should be asked to provide is that of equal protection under law.

    101. Re:Undue Restrictions by cduffy · · Score: 1

      No, I'm not just out of high school. However, I am an exceptionally bad driver, and have recognized myself as such for years -- that's why I didn't get a driver's license any earlier.

      After getting a Real Job is Sunnyvale, however, and using mass transit to get around the bay area for a few years, I decided toheckwithit and bought a motorcycle. After a few more years of driving that as my sole vehicle (with a frequently renewed training permit, rather than a license), I found that my driving skills had of necessity improved enough to trust myself with a car... so I got a class CM license and bought one.

      Happy now?

      Btw, I agree that Rand went waaay overboard... but that's not to say that all of her ideas, when taken with a dose of realism, were bad.

    102. Re:Undue Restrictions by cduffy · · Score: 1

      That's a partial subsidy, yes -- but its rationale for existing isn't to help pay for people to exercise their right of freedom of religion; ask its supporters why they favor that subsidy, and I expect that a strong majority will give you some different reason -- most likely the charitable programs many churches support.

    103. Re:Undue Restrictions by cduffy · · Score: 1

      Yes, I know the courts disagree with me; that's why I actually have a license. That doesn't make me any less right, or them any less wrong.

      It should be noted that in other cases the courts accept restriction of the methods of exercising a right as a restriction of the right itself; consider, for instance, how a legal restriction on what texts can be distributed in bookstores (with the accepted exceptions such as obscenity and the like) is considered a violation of freedom of speech, even though one is still free to communicate person-to-person or to online. This variety of case is being treated differently not because such treatment is aligned with the general principals which the courts operate by, but rather because failing to do so would result in massive waves being created (not to mention upset all the precedent laid down by those who previously acted in the interests of maintaining the status quo).

    104. Re:Undue Restrictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Simply put, inheritances are an embarrasment to my philosophy (and, in my view, to libertarianism in general) as they make it such that what people have is not only a reflection of how much value they've created (as measured by how much others were willing to pay for that value). Unfortunetely, there's no means of getting rid of inheritances either without totally destroying the rights which we seek to protect... so we smile and look the other way most of the time. If you have a solution, I'd rather like to hear it.

      Sure, I have a solution. STOP BEING HYPOCRITICAL AND GET RID OF INHERITANCE! Otherwise you'll end up with exactly the same situation we have now where there are a whole bunch of rich people who inherited lots of wealth from their parents (like Bill Gates III) who will then get much richer. Why should someone's children never have to do anything useful in order to live a luxurious life like the children of today's crop of billionaires? Until "libertarians" throw off the forelock-tugging attitude of allowing inheritance, they will never be more than servants of the rich people whom they most desire to emulate.

      You are a slave. Admit it.
    105. Re:Undue Restrictions by cduffy · · Score: 1

      Sure, I have a solution. STOP BEING HYPOCRITICAL AND GET RID OF INHERITANCE!

      Can't do it -- that would be just as hypocritical, and it wouldn't even work. Plus, as embarrasing as they are, inheritances might even be a good thing.

      Consider: Okay, we respect your rights to do whatever you want with yourself, your property, etc. as long as you don't step on anyone else's toes. However, you can't give money to your children, can't set your children up with cushy jobs in the family business (and give money to them that way), can't make contracts payable to your children in the event you're unable to receive. Not only are these restrictions on liberties every bit as repulsive to libertarians as inheritances themselves, the enforcement mechanisms needed would be simply hideous. How do you make sure that the money Lil' Bill just made in that real estate deal wasn't truly due to his dad slipping something under the table to the folks gave him the really-low-interest loan? Never mind that you'd utterly destroy family businesses -- they'd have to be passed to unrelated people each generation. You can't do it; it would harm those who comply to the law but do nothing to the really rich who would find ways to circumvent it.

      And to answer your question... why should someone not have to do anything to live a luxurious life? Because the wealth they enjoy represents value created -- even if it's value created by their parents and not them themselves. If being able to pass down money encourages the creation of value -- if their parents create more value because they know they'll be able to pass down some of the wealth they create -- then it's worthwhile. It breaks the concept of wealth (or even income) being directly linked to an individual's merits, yes -- and is an unfortunate embarassment in that... but nothing can be done about it effectively, and perhaps by encouraging greater production of value it actually provides society a net benefit.

    106. Re:Undue Restrictions by mpe · · Score: 2

      The fact of the matter is that the US cities have done a horrible job of building pedestrian infrastructure.
      Even now in "progressive" California, the bike lanes are narrow and abused, sidewalks lack efficient direction etc. The best city for non-auto-possessor is SF (of course) but it still isn't near the efficiency level of cities like Vienna or anywhere in The Netherlands.


      A possible reason for this is that European cities existed for hundreds of years before cars were invented. Whereas many US cities (or at least major parts of them) both postdate the invention of the car and were planned on the assumption of everyone using a car.

    107. Re:Undue Restrictions by Com2Kid · · Score: 1

      Oh hell its a 3mi route by car. :)

      The city has been nice enough to install tons of stairways all over the place, often times in places were cars could not get by (steep hills or such) and have to detour around, where as a person can simply take the stairs and get their quickly. :)

    108. Re:Undue Restrictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Even better. Can you imagine the smudge?

    109. Re:Undue Restrictions by DEBEDb · · Score: 1

      If I'm not rational enough to be dissueded by those factors, I'm probably one of those people who speeds and drives drunk despite the laws against such actions.

      You'll be dissuaded by being kept in jail,
      rational or not rational.

      --

      Considered harmful.
    110. Re:Undue Restrictions by cduffy · · Score: 1

      How would you giving your thumbprint to the government infringe your privacy?

      It doesn't matter if it infringes on my privacy or not -- I don't want to give it to them, and they have no legitimate means to compel me to do so against my will (unless I commit a crime, in which case I give up all sorts of rights/take on extra obligations/whatever).

      I haven't seen "collecting biometric data" anywhere on the list of constitutionally granted powers, ya know. :)

    111. Re:Undue Restrictions by thopkins · · Score: 1

      That anonymous coward wasn't me. Your arrogance in implied by the way you list all the things you avoid like gas money. You flaunt that you are able to avoid all these headaches when you know that most people cannot.

    112. Re:Undue Restrictions by wheany · · Score: 1

      I haven't seen "collecting biometric data" anywhere on the list of constitutionally granted powers, ya know. :)

      That's because probably the only thing they understood about that sentence was "metric". And maybe not even that.

    113. Re:Undue Restrictions by cduffy · · Score: 1

      Yes... your point?

      If a new power is truly needed, that's what the amendment process is for.

    114. Re:Undue Restrictions by Chasuk · · Score: 2

      Here is where we differ. To me, arrogance is more than merely listing what I perceive as the benefits of surviving without an automobile. I acknowledge that car ownership also has many benefits, but those benefits are too obvious, and well-understood, to bother enumerating them.

      I believe that most people COULD do without a car, but that they choose not to do without. I made a different decision, and it is unusual enough for an adult American male to be without a car by CHOICE that it merited enumerating my reasons. No arrogance, just a different life choice.

      Most of my friends and family, if they need a loaf of bread half a mile away at the grocery store, will drive instead of walk, because they don't value the pleasures to be had from walking. I enjoy walking, the fresh air, the solitude, the invigorated limbs. I walk not because it allows me to feel superior - which it most certainly does not - but because I enjoy it.

      Anyway, it is okay that we have different viewpoints, that is what makes the world interesting. I am just puzzled that you or anyone else would equate a simple list of perceived benefits as arrogance.

      Oh, well. If that is how you see it, I suppose I'll have to live with it. ;-)

    115. Re:Undue Restrictions by wheany · · Score: 1

      The point hasn't changed. How would the government be able to abuse your fingerprints?

    116. Re:Undue Restrictions by cduffy · · Score: 1

      It doesn't matter. Powers shouldn't be granted simply because no abuse is foreseen; powers should be granted if a serious and compelling reason exists (ie. a reason sufficiently compelling to result in the passage of an amendment), and no abuse is foreseen.

    117. Re:Undue Restrictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So please mod accordingly.

  3. So whats the problem? by VirexEye · · Score: 0

    There is still the old argument that if you didn't do anything wrong, what do you have to worry about?

    1. Re:So whats the problem? by jethro200 · · Score: 1

      Whether or not I am doing anything wrong, I don't want the government to be able to follow me and recognize me wherever I go. A certain degree of anonymity is nice, criminal or not.

    2. Re:So whats the problem? by zorba1 · · Score: 1

      If that's the case, try getting rid of that "Social Security number" associated with your name, credit, job, accounts, etc.

    3. Re:So whats the problem? by sweet+reason · · Score: 1

      There is still the old argument that if you didn't do anything wrong, what do you have to worry about?

      of course. that's why nobody ever complained about having to carry national ID or internal passports in the old soviet union or south africa.

      --
      Everything should be made as simple as possible, but not simpler. -- A.E.
    4. Re:So whats the problem? by SecurityGuy · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Funny, I hear that's just what they tell identity theft victims under suspicion of fraud. What's wrong with it is that you very, very, incorrectly assume that large, impersonal bureaucracies don't regularly grind people up and spit them out. What's wrong is that some percentage of the data in these archives will inevitably be incorrect, and it's bloody near impossible to get it fixed if you're lucky enough to even find out about it before being screwed by it. There's the problem that putting all this information on a DRIVER'S license is irrelevant to actually allowing you to drive. Given the opportunity, this stuff *will* be abused, much like bars often, I'm told, scan drivers licenses where they're scannable, ostensibly to validate whether you're old enough to be there. The marketing database and record of your visits that they can do anything they'd like with is just a bonus.


      Simply put, avoiding the potential for abuse is always a good idea.

    5. Re:So whats the problem? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The big problem here is that you actually think they care. They don't. You're just another entry in a database, and at best, if they were, what do they have? Data they could get on you if they just waited at your work place and took a picture of you as you were going home and at the extreme, data they could get quite easily by looking through your trash.

    6. Re:So whats the problem? by xonker · · Score: 1
      A certain degree of anonymity is nice,

      There's no doubt of that, but the real question is whether we have a right to expect it. Obviously, the framers of the Constitution really had no way to anticipate the technology that we'd have today -- so the question is where we draw the lines.

      And, paranoia aside, do the benefits of more accurate identification outweigh the inconveniences or intrusions? I can see beneficial uses of this technology -- what are the possible harmful effects? (Realistic, not "black helicopter" fantasies about being tracked down by super-secret government agents...) What are the possible benefits?

      It's a shame that changes like this don't need to be ratified by the citizens of Connecticut -- maybe it's time for a new Amendment to the Constitution:


      Amendment XXVIII No federal or state institution shall require that individuals disclose information that is not absolutely necessary for the operation of the institution. Furthermore, no state or federal institution shall disclose any personal information to non-governmental institutions without the express written consent of the individual, nor shall institutions collect data for the purposes of law enforcement against persons not charged or suspected of crime.


      Basically, it would need to be re-written and tightened up, but the idea would be to convey:

      1. All people have a presumptive right to refrain from giving personal information beyond what is absolutely necessary for a government institution to operate.

      2. No government entity could collect information for the purpose of solving crimes that have not yet been committed.

      3. Any information given to the government must remain in "trust" and cannot be shared with non-governmental entities.

      I'd probably add a clause that requires governmental entities to provide a copy of any and all information being stored about them, and the ability to expunge data (fingerprints, mug shots) gathered that do not result in successful charges. So, if you're arrested or charged for burglary, but are found innocent (or never go to trial at all) you can have your mug shot and fingerprints removed from their databases.
    7. Re:So whats the problem? by Darth+Maul · · Score: 5, Insightful


      Think about Australia. A while ago they had to register a handgun with the country. People were upset, but the other side said "as long as you don't do anything wrong with the gun, why does it matter whether or not we have your registration?"

      So, everyone registered.

      Then, years later, the government used those registrations to go door to door and collect all the guns because they thought it would help decrease crime.

      See, it's just the little things at first; the little pieces that eventually lead to something major. You're right, it's no big deal if we don't do anything illegal *now*, but how can we keep the government in check if they keep taking away our liberties?

      P.S. - Crimes went up an amazing amount in Australia just the next year. Especially home breakins because the thiefs knew the homeowners wouldn't have a gun.

      --
      --- witty signature
    8. Re:So whats the problem? by 0x0d0a · · Score: 1

      The reason Castro took over so easily in Cuba and squashed resistance is because all guns were registered. When he wanted to ensure that only the military had guns after the revolution, he just had soldiers go door to door. You'd better hope that you could cough up all the guns that you had listed as registered to you.

    9. Re:So whats the problem? by em_tasol · · Score: 1

      On that point - in Australia it is illegal to have a loaded handgun at any location other than the firing line of an approved shooting range ... so yes, if someone breaks into your house and you pull your handgun out of the safe, load it and shoot the home invader/terrorist, you will quite likely lose your shooter's license, be heavily fined and probably go to jail for murder/manslaughter if you're a good shot.

      To show you how warped the law is, you may have a loaded rifle or shotgun at home, and you could get away with blowing away the bad guy in that situation. I love Australia.

      --
      /* Linus is The One ... the Oracle told me so. */
    10. Re:So whats the problem? by Stonehand · · Score: 2

      Different treatment of handguns versus long guns isn't exactly unusual; it happens in the States, as well. As far as I can tell, the two main rationales are that a) handguns are more readily concealed -- thus, it's easier for a criminal to move around armed without alarming his potential victims, and b) long guns are considered more justifiable as hunting weapons.

      Quite a few US gun-control advocates seemingly prefer to pretend that the Second Amendment is about hunting, and not about providing a means of last resort versus dictatorship.

      --
      Only the dead have seen the end of war.
    11. Re:So whats the problem? by actor_au · · Score: 1

      Slight error, the guns that were taken away were all semi-automatics and automatics(No more AK's). The reason was that in the Tasmanian town of Port Arthur on the 29th of April 1996 a man named Martin Bryant opened fire on a crowd of people and killed 35 people. The government at the time basically stopped this from happening again by taking away all the guns then putting up major restrictions on purchasing a gun (not just a three day waiting period, gun safety courses and photo id are all required now to own any gun in Tasmania) the down side was the possibility of an increase in break-ins, but its better than having another crowd of people dead in a restraunt somewhere I guess. And even the increase in crime is exagerated in your post, that guns have been banned for almost 5 years now shouldn't affect crime rates now inless criminals have taken a hell of a long time to catch on.

      --
      Read Errant Story.
    12. Re:So whats the problem? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      congrats. you have just reinvented the 1984 UK data protection act.

    13. Re:So whats the problem? by fatquack · · Score: 1

      quote:
      P.S. - Crimes went up an amazing amount in Australia just the next year. Especially home breakins because the thiefs knew the homeowners wouldn't have a gun.
      unquote

      Not according to the numbers from the Australian Institute of Criminology or the Australian Bureau of Statistics. See http://www.snopes.com/science/stats/ausguns.htm for more details of this ridiculous claim. Follow the links there and read the crimestatistics your self

  4. ID Card by lizrd · · Score: 1

    In all reality, a drivers license is the most common means used to prove identity in the US. It seems desireable to me to have such a document contain a good deal of information so that upon inspection it can be used to prove the identity of the holder. It seems to me that there is a good deal of value in having the driver's license identification information be as secure and comprehensive as possible.

    --
    I don't want free as in beer. I just want free beer.
    1. Re:ID Card by T5 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      What's all this talk about a national ID card when your driver's license and SSN are already used as such? The only step left is to coordinate all the states' driver databases with the credit bureaus and banks and Big Brother can track you wherever you go.

    2. Re:ID Card by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      There's almost no reason anyone should ever be forced to prove their identity. This is America, and it's no one's business who you are unless you've committed a crime.

      It seems desirable to me to eliminate this prop of the police state completely.

    3. Re:ID Card by dracken · · Score: 1

      This is one of the most common mistakes people make. It is not going to be long till the government uses your drivers license to authenticate (makes sense doesnt it ?) Thats it - you are finished! The problem with biometric information is - once your biometric information is stolen / hacked / a rogue client created - you are screwed for life. Basically I have my face on my driver's license and your fingerprint and iris profile (or whatever other biometric data) on my card. Then I booze and drive my car.......

      The guiding principle is this - Something that cannot be discarded should not be used for identification/authentication.

      -Dracken.

    4. Re:ID Card by zeno_2 · · Score: 1

      I remember being asked for my ID when I was smoking in the downtown area here (fairly small city, fairly large police force, they get real bored at times. They will a lot of times have cops hiding in bushes around here to catch underage smokers.) I wasn't driving that day and didn't have my drivers license with me, and the cop gave me quite a bit of shit about it, and having to call in my name and stuff. Try to go to canada without having a drivers license, you'd probably have to get a passport or something instead. In Idaho we can get identification cards, which look exactly like a drivers license but it says Identification Card instead of Class D Drivers License. These can be used as valid ID for bars and whatever else you might need verification. I wonder if in this state they have a similar thing, I would imagine they do. Do you have to submit to all that biometric stuff to get a normal ID card?

    5. Re:ID Card by innocent_white_lamb · · Score: 1

      it's no one's business who you are unless you've committed a crime.

      Or you want to write me a cheque, or rent/borrow my car, or you say you're from "the gas company" and you're standing on my doorstep saying that you're here to check the meter.

      And so on.

      --
      If you're a zombie and you know it, bite your friend!
    6. Re:ID Card by Sc00ter · · Score: 2

      At the NH, Maine, and Vermont boarders you can get into Canada with a birth cert. Even if it doesn't have a picture. I would assume that this is true for most of the boarder.

    7. Re:ID Card by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You really think any of that will help protect identities?

      I got news for ya, it won't.

      It wouldn't even have prevented the 9/11 tragedy. The people who committed it weren't on anyone's list of possible criminals.

      Basically, the only thing this dl information will provide is that the government, and anyone we show our dl's to, will know more about us that they need. Not to mention anyone who happens to crack the databases where this is stored.\

      It also makes it that much easier to screw with people. If you can crack the database, you could potentially exchange your neighbor's biometric info with a known felon and watch with glee as your neighbor is arrested when you drop him off at the airport and he passes under the computer scanners.

    8. Re:ID Card by ImaLamer · · Score: 2

      There is no law which requires you to carry ID.

      You can walk around the streets of any city with no ID what so ever.

      If cops can't do what beer and cigarette sellers do everyday then they shouldn't be cops. I go to a bar, they look at the ID and that is it. I don't step into any box and get scanned.

      OR. has also paid for services from Viisage - just a note.

    9. Re:ID Card by lizrd · · Score: 2

      That's exactly my point. I'm a trustworthy person and therefore it's valuable to me to be able to prove that I am said trustworthy person and to make it very difficult for anyone who might wish to impersonate me. I'm highly in favor of good ID cards because I have much more to lose by being impersonated than I have to lose by some nubulous conspiracy of the government, evil corporations and the UN being able to track me by a piece of plastic in my wallet.

      --
      I don't want free as in beer. I just want free beer.
    10. Re:ID Card by ahodgson · · Score: 1

      So when they're on your doorstep, you'll run their thumb over your scanner and compare it to their driver's license? Which would at best prove that they used their real thumbprint when creating the fake driver's license.

      Good plan.

    11. Re:ID Card by zeno_2 · · Score: 1

      Thats kind of amazing, seeing that I could take your birth certificate and they wouldn't know the difference..

    12. Re:ID Card by Sharkyfour · · Score: 1

      Yes, Connecticut does have a a non-driver's id card that looks exactly like a driver's license. Chances are you'd still have to submit to the collection of the biometrics before they'd give you one, though.

    13. Re:ID Card by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why are you so scared of technology? You better learn to deal with it, because technology is advancing and you won't be able to stop it.

    14. Re:ID Card by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It could be worse. A military Id card has on it a hash of your right pointer finger fingerprint on the back. That would be a lot more identifiable than a facial picture. For example my ID photo has me with no hair however now I have some. The expression on my face in almost every ID photo I have ever had is one I would NEVER have in a real enviroment. Let them scan all they want. It would take them longer by doing it that way.

      HOOAH! -- Its not a word, its a lifestyle.

    15. Re:ID Card by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You have constructed a plausible argument for putting certain personal data on a driver's license. In fact, they have had height, weight, eye color, and hair color for many many years.

      But you have not justified the biometric and facial recognition database.

    16. Re:ID Card by mamba-mamba · · Score: 1

      Please mod parent up. It really comes to the crux of the matter.

      MM
      --

      --
      By including this sig, the copyright holders of this work or collection unreservedly place it in the public domain.
    17. Re:ID Card by mpe · · Score: 2

      It wouldn't even have prevented the 9/11 tragedy. The people who committed it weren't on anyone's list of possible criminals.

      Some of them were using stolen identities of people thousands of miles away. Goodness knows who they really were.

      It also makes it that much easier to screw with people. If you can crack the database, you could potentially exchange your neighbor's biometric info with a known felon and watch with glee as your neighbor is arrested when you drop him off at the airport and he passes under the computer scanners.

      Especially if your neighbour is called "Angela Bennet".

  5. Well by Slash+Veteran · · Score: 1
    the thing that cracks me up about people who freak out when they think they're losing some of their privacy -- you didn't have privacy to begin with.

    If you really think anything the Connecticut DMV is asking for is something no one else in government already knows, well, that's cute.

    1. Re:Well by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      And the slaves had no right to freedom because they were always slaves.
      the concept may be too subtle for you to grasp but I'll try anyway. Things change little by little. So if you were to compare the amount of freedom someone had during one time versus another. you would notice that the freedom was lost in very small increments. A law here a law there, requiring a license for this and a license for that. Over time those things add up to substantial changes.

      That is why it is very logical to become upset whenever one of these little events happen. They are another click in the ratchet, another step in a direction we don't want to be going in.

      And we are definitly going in the direction of less privacy and freedom. Going in that direction very fast. You don't seem too concerned about losing your rights, which is both sad and pathetic at the same time. Don't go the last mile to becomming a total loser by criticizing those who have enough common sense to try to defend the priceless things in life.

    2. Re:Well by Slash+Veteran · · Score: 1

      Again, nothing at stake here is something you're only now losing. You lost it long ago. Cheers.

    3. Re:Well by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What do you mean "Lost it long ago?"

      Things are always changing. They are either going in one direction or another. Do you think that society magically appears at various states by magic with no debate in between? Think about it.

    4. Re:Well by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Last night your house was set on fire killing your wife and your two kids. It doesn't matter who did it, after all, there just people. ;)

  6. What do you expect? by professortomoe · · Score: 1

    Oh, this is only the beginning :/ I can see this becoming the norm in all states by the end of the year, maybe DNA Archives in a year or two, until there is no such thing as privacy, all under the guise of "Safety". Oh well, things hapen and hopefully things will change.

    --
    If I wasn't so lazy, I'd have a sig.
  7. Digital Facial Recognition by Artana+Niveus+Corvum · · Score: 1

    here's the specifics of what I wanna know both from Visage and from the State:

    I know of at least two people who have had major amounts of facial damage dealt to them, one in a car accident and one on the football field. What safeguards are in place to assure these two people that they won't suddenly be denied their identity by facial scanners?

    --
    -----------------------------------------
    Remove the Greed which plagues mankind.
    1. Re:Digital Facial Recognition by kidlinux · · Score: 1

      I think in such cases, they'd go have their facial image updated. The person would be verified/authorized to perform the update by other means of information collected, such as hand writing (signature), height, eye colour, other forms of ID, etc. Of course, if the facial damage wasn't that bad, human judgement could be enough (ie: look at the person and the picture on the license.)
      Having scars on your face would probably be a good thing as far as the recognition software is concerned.

      --
      -kidlinux.
    2. Re:Digital Facial Recognition by Artana+Niveus+Corvum · · Score: 1

      from what I understand though, the ultimate goal is rather to rely wholly upon the machines for facial recognition...no "human judgement" involved
      ... and I wasn't talking about scars, the guy who got into the car accident lost large pieces of his left cheekbone and his left eye entirely.

      --
      -----------------------------------------
      Remove the Greed which plagues mankind.
  8. facial recognition by 56ker · · Score: 1, Troll

    I'd just gurn when they took the picture - then they'd never recognise me again!

  9. Great Idea! by H-1B_visas_suck · · Score: 0, Flamebait
    Now we can maybe do something about all these illegal aliens moving around our country, either driving down our wages and disappearing our medical benfits, or soaking up our tax dollars through free emergency rooms births, and just in general third-worldizing our country.

    The only people who really have anything to fear from this are crooks and the powerful elite of the upper crust.

    Bring on Big Brother....

    --

    This post is protected under the DMTA (Digital Millemium Trolling Act). It is illegal to moderate it as a troll.

    1. Re:Great Idea! by HiredMan · · Score: 2
      The mob is back, yelling "Down with taxes! Down with taxes!"

      Quimby:"They want the bear patrol but they won't pay taxes for it."
      Quimby thinks of a novel solution. He announces that taxes are high because of illegal immigrants and that they should be disposed of.

      Moe:Immigants! I knew it was them! Even when it was the bears, I knew it was them.

      Quimby: Are those morons getting dumber or just louder?
      Assistant: [checks his clipboard] Dumber, sir.

      =tkk

    2. Re:Great Idea! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I sure hope they don't go national with this. We in the IAFTDOYL (Illegal Aliens For The Destruction of Your Life) and the VMAGBH (Visas make Americans Go Boo Hoo) have worked very hard to suck every dollar out of the health care system by having as many children as we possibly can and steal all the jobs that you covet so much (like landscaping, janitorial services, food services, waste disposal, etc). But if they do we promise we'll get out and leave you nice white folk to your regular scheduled lives. Just a little bit of advice: Tell your government (oh i mean corporations) not to come to our countries and give us your jobs again.

      We'll try not to let the borders hit us in the ass when we leave!

    3. Re:Great Idea! by H-1B_visas_suck · · Score: 0
      hey dumbass, did you ever think that there ARE Americans who do need and want those landscaping jobs? None of them read slashdot, but they do exist. Not every little thing is this world is about you or me. Have you ever heard of the social contract?

      And you have no idea how mass immigration of Third worlders is affecting this country...

      They not only bring disease, but memes as well. And their memes are what scare me....

      --

      This post is protected under the DMTA (Digital Millemium Trolling Act). It is illegal to moderate it as a troll.

    4. Re:Great Idea! by 0x0d0a · · Score: 1

      "memes are what scare me"

      Suppress ideas!

    5. Re:Great Idea! by Qrlx · · Score: 1

      mass immigration of Third worlders

      Either you're a Native American, or you're talking out of your ass.

      Americans don't want those crap jobs you talk about. Well, the underclass who didn't graduate high school might want them, but the average american can make $6/hr as a hotel maid or $8/hr folding t-shirts at The Gap with their other high school friends. Which would you pick?

      You seem concerned that the Great Unwashed are going to breed us White Folk right out of America. (Extrapolating from your steinreport web page.) Let me ask you, what was your response when President Bush barred U.S. aid to international groups that advocate abortion rights? Because if you don't want to be overrun by a horde of non-White Americans, you should support that kind of thing.

      Did you ever think that maybe H1-B visas are a clever trick to skim the cream off of other countries' vat of talent, making sure that American Comanies remain dominant since all the clever Indians move to The States? So while it may fill our country up with Undesirables, it strengthens our strongest asset, the American economy.

  10. Worthless unless it is adoped by everyone by crimoid · · Score: 3, Insightful

    From the article:

    The state also has also exercised the option to utilize biometric features with the new Digitized Driver License system given the need for greater security since September 11. It has become evident that the driver's license is now a critical identification document.

    Thats all well and good, but unless someone checking the ID (ticket counter at the airport) has some means of utilizing the new features to positively identify someone the features become usless. The person checking the ID must then (as always) check photo ID.

    You can implement all the new features you want, but unless everyone has access to card readers, scanners or whatever gadget is used to utilize biometric information the features don't amount to squat.

    1. Re:Worthless unless it is adoped by everyone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Knowing who you are hardly prevents you from hijacking planes. iirc, it wouldn't have done _shit_ to stop 9-11. Notice how knowing who they were was never a problem?

      This is the government using 9-11 as an excuse to get the things we'd never have tolerated prior to 9-11. Nothing more.

    2. Re:Worthless unless it is adoped by everyone by SecurityGuy · · Score: 2

      Bars now scan drivers licenses. Enough said?

  11. Of course you could... by Thakandar2 · · Score: 1

    grow a very thick beard in the few years before your license expires, wear normal glasses and say they are prescription (make sure the restriction doesn't go on the license itself though), and wear something you would rather burn later (like a .NET shirt you got at a trade show). Then shave, never wear glasses, and wear lots of Linux stuff from Thinkgeek and it'll never come up with a match. Let acne go for a few weeks too before the picture. And make sure to smile lopsidedly.

    I have no idea how well this will all actually work, but I have a friend who has a drivers license picture where her hair is all put up funny, she is making a face, and wearing something very very ugly. When presented for drinks or ciggarettes, she is repeatedly told its fake. So, it might work...

    1. Re:Of course you could... by Anon0mous · · Score: 0


      Dude do i know you ? you just desribed me perfectly, except i have a new star wars t-shirt now and the doctor said my acne would go

    2. Re:Of course you could... by Sc00ter · · Score: 2
      Yah, and then you go to a bar, or get pulled over, give the person/officer the license. Guess what, they don't think it's you, so now you can't go into the bar, or the cop pulls you in to do a background check and get somebody to ID you. Great plan.

    3. Re:Of course you could... by Darkninja666 · · Score: 1

      dude that is the dumbest idea around. Suppositly the software will pick you out no matter what your wearing (doesn't change your facial apparence, just makes you look stupid), or how your hair looks (same argument as above, but you do look way way dumber), or wither or not you have a beard/moustache/bushy eye brows (because the evil software measures the parts of your face that can't be changed without major surgery). So the only thing you do is fuckup the reason for a picture and not have facial reg. software.

      --
      Secure multi-mediation is the future of all webbing...
    4. Re:Of course you could... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...or the cop pulls you in to do a background check and get somebody to ID you. Great plan.

      Then you sue because they are 'profiling' you!

      $$,$$$,$$$, at least

    5. Re:Of course you could... by Sc00ter · · Score: 2

      How are they profiling you? They asked for a picture ID, you provided one that they thought was fake because you don't look anything like the guy in the picture (because you went out of your way to make it seem like a different person). So they take you in to verify your identity.

      It doesn't help you any that you did it on purpose. By your on free will you made your picture look as much like anybody but yourself as possible. You only have yourself to blame for the grief.

  12. Another problem with biometric identification by SteelX · · Score: 1

    Loss of freedom and privacy is not the only issue.

    Think about it... your biometric features are very unique to you. Now, what if the DMV biometric database gets stolen? Part of you would have been stolen forever. There's no way to replace it.

    While I think that biometric authentication and identification in tight security environments (like military bases) are okay, deploying it on a wide scale like this is extremely dangerous. It may all backfire one day.

    1. Re:Another problem with biometric identification by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Huh? So if someone steals my face, It's gone and I never get it back? DAMN!! Wait a minute... I'm ugly. YAY!!!

    2. Re:Another problem with biometric identification by Darkninja666 · · Score: 1

      AMEN AMEN AMEN I was in the miltary, and I understood why I had to give up certain information about my self to very yahoo I came across. However, when I want to DRIVE on a public street or go into a public bar I should not have to give out my birthdate/waist size/shoe size/favorite color/bank account number/size of package/etc.Sorry got kind of carried away there. These things make up me in a digital world, I should not have to share everything to everybody for nothing.

      And the funniest part about this is that the driver's license was NEVER ment to be an id, it was just to show that you knew the basics of running a frigging car. Same thing on SSN numbers.

      --
      Secure multi-mediation is the future of all webbing...
    3. Re:Another problem with biometric identification by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      has anyone ever heard of the stasi??. the east germam intellignece agency (when there still was an east germany) well.. they did something like this.. collected scent from a LOT of people.. so you could sick a dog after them.. so suddenly the great country of freedom is doing a very communist thing... or maybe not a communist thing.. just paranoia on the part of those in control.. once they are paranoid about losing control, then isn't the whole democracy shit out the window.. in a democracy you are not supposed to be in power indeffinatly.. something does not work.. it changes. (in practice though, this is a bunch of shit.. at least in this time)..

      so now our wise and knowing leaders are scared of those they lead.. lets compile all the information on them, so when the time comes, we can use it against them..

      i don't think i am going to get another drivers license.. cars just fuck shit over anyways

      this whole thing really does not surprise me though.. this isn't freedom.. i have never thought of it as so.. like the fifteen song.. we live in isolation so we think we are free.. well the isolation is now gone.. for all intents and purposes the world is one giant land mass.. split up by those that can talk fast and convince people to follow them.. (or have guns).. so now the world is a bunch of plantation: they need to watch their slaves so they don't run off.....

      hmmm.. this sucks

  13. They already do facial recognition in many places. by sanermind · · Score: 2, Informative

    Like, for example, here in south carolina. Except, here, they don't tell you that they are doing it. At least you in conneticut have the privelege of knowing what rights you are losing; here, they never mentioned it. PS: new system has been in place for several months.

    --

    ---
    the pen is mightier than the sword, the sword is mightier than the court, the court is mightier than the pen.
  14. Easier to find a look-alike by Papineau · · Score: 1

    Look at it the bright way! It'll be easier to find a look-alike in your home state or, if the database is shared by every state, in the whole USA! That way, you can get in touch with him and both of you can have great alibis :"I was in CA. I have witnesses." when they come after you for something in CT.
    The other guy can do exactly the same.

    Of course, then there's always the possibility that your lookalike is a criminal and you are mistaken for him...

  15. Re:They already do facial recognition in many plac by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They are doing it in every major city in the country. GWB and crew and the illuminati in general have decided to install cameras on every major city in the country then they can face scan the populous and track everyone in a supercomputer and we will all be little ants working for the queen ant. And if we get out of line we will be imprisoned, discredited, or killed.

  16. I don't see how this is much different than requir by J.+J.+Ramsey · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Your picture is taken so that human beings can recognize your face. The main difference I see here is that computer software is used to recognize your face rather than humans. There are still some potential problems, such as the Connecticut DMV thinking the software is more reliable that it is, but I don't think it's quite the coming of Big Brother yet.

  17. Re:They already do facial recognition in many plac by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What right did you lose?

  18. And your problem is ... ? by hobbs · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The issue of better identification of people comes up again and again, but I always have to wonder - what criminal acts are these guys planning that they protest so loudly to being able to be identified by the authorities?

    Let's look at this another way. I don't worry about the government knowing that I exist, how tall I am, what color my eyes are, or how many whirls and whorls my thumbprint has. I'm not a criminal. I don't plan on being one.

    However, for those that do enjoy the occasional snatch & grab, if the police really had everyones fingerprints and pictures in a big database, don't you think that would reduce a lot of crime? And I don't mean just because they'd catch a lot more people - it would serve as an effective deterrent to crime, which seems to be in short supply nowadays.

    So go ahead, fingerprint everybody. Take a DNA sample. If it means that 20 years from now, my children will be growing up in a society free of random murders, pedophilia, assault, and all the rest, I'm for it. That's idealistic, but I'll take just 20%.

    1. Re:And your problem is ... ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You've missed the whole point. None of this stuff makes anyone any safer. Quite the opposite. Your children will be living in a police state.

    2. Re:And your problem is ... ? by Anonynnous+Coward · · Score: 1
      Your children will be living in a police state.

      No, hopefully, this moron won't reproduce.

    3. Re:And your problem is ... ? by BoyPlankton · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The issue of better identification of people comes up again and again, but I always have to wonder - what criminal acts are these guys planning that they protest so loudly to being able to be identified by the authorities?

      I dunno about you, but if I was planning on committing a crime and I knew that my photo/fingerprints were on record, which they are, then I would just wear a mask and gloves to get past those obstacles.

      While I understand your point of view, I don't think that the question should be "what criminal acts are these guys planning that they protest so loudly to being able to be identified by the authorities?" I think the question should be, "what crime did I commit to warrant being treated like a criminal?"

      However, for those that do enjoy the occasional snatch & grab, if the police really had everyones fingerprints and pictures in a big database, don't you think that would reduce a lot of crime? And I don't mean just because they'd catch a lot more people - it would serve as an effective deterrent to crime, which seems to be in short supply nowadays.

      It would also reduce alot of crime if the government implanted chips in our skin that relayed our exact location to a police computer at all times. That way they'd have no problem pinpointing who committed the crime. For some odd reason I believe that's a bad idea too.

    4. Re:And your problem is ... ? by fishebulb · · Score: 2

      Oh you are to a criminal. everyone is on some level. but in the future, with your ideas, every criminal will be caught. Every time you exceed the speed limit, ticketed. There are laws you are probably breaking everyday that you dont even realize, and most others dont

    5. Re:And your problem is ... ? by startled · · Score: 5, Insightful

      it means that 20 years from now, my children will be growing up in a society free of random murders, pedophilia, assault, and all the rest, I'm for it.

      That's a good point-- and that's why so many of these things get through. But what else is illegal? Distributing DeCSS, apparently. Giving a lecture on flaws in the latest digital watermarking scheme. In the past, it has been effectively illegal to espouse Communist values, or to be Japanese and not in a camp.

      The more power you give the government, the more extreme these laws get. Maybe it'll be illegal to criticize the president, or write a program to copy bits without government-approved copy protection built in (but hey, now I'm just getting way outside the realm of possibility).

      I'm happy to give up some power to a central government-- because, like you said, I much prefer a society without murder and assault. But it's incredibly naive to believe that the government will use any power you give it responsibly. There's plenty of corruption now-- and it increases the more power they get.

    6. Re:And your problem is ... ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And why should I accept this assertion that you have presented without evidence?

    7. Re:And your problem is ... ? by fflewddur · · Score: 1

      the real problem is not the concept of current crime, but rather what may be determined a crime in the future. i for one don't want every political rant i post online (or otherwise) stored in a government computer and linked to a chip implanted in my skin, telling them my whereabouts at any given time. can you honestly say that you trust *all* humanity to be in charge of a system like this? simply because you agree with the beliefs of those currently in power doesn't mean a thing--new generations will come along, and a political party may come to power who quickly realizes that a system exists by which then can eliminate their loudest opposition. police states aren't about cracking down on crime, they're about cracking down on dissenting thought.

    8. Re:And your problem is ... ? by 0x0d0a · · Score: 1

      The same logic *does* apply to a 1984-style scenerio, you realize. "Why don't you want the government to see everything in your life if you aren't doing anything wrong?" Yeah.

    9. Re:And your problem is ... ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The issue of better identification of people comes up again and again, but I always have to wonder - what criminal acts are these guys planning that they protest so loudly to being able to be identified by the authorities?

      The issue of police cameras in bedrooms comes up again and again, but I always have to wonder - what criminal acts are these guys planning that they protest so loudly to having cameras placed in their bedrooms?

    10. Re:And your problem is ... ? by AugstWest · · Score: 2

      Well, check out the Verichip, which just sailed PAST the FDA, because they decided it was not a health issue.

      Right, a computer chip embedded in the body is NOT a health issue. No, we don't need studies done on that, right? It's perfectly healthy, the company building it has told us that, so why should we question it?

      A radio-frequency chip embedded in the body needs no study whatsoever, this has nothing to do with the gov't pushing technology through in the name of "security" without any concern for the well-being of its citizens. Hell, if we start to die off earlier, we're less of a burden on social security.

      Which, of course, will be non-existent by the time most of the /. population will need it, but of course that's of less concern to our "elected officials" than making sure they have EVERY AMERICAN CITIZEN FINGERPRINTED like a common criminal.

    11. Re:And your problem is ... ? by Flarelocke · · Score: 1

      What, you don't like capital punishment? Only felons would be concerned about this because they're the only ones who get executed. Heck, why don't we just kill anyone who is convicted. You don't like that idea? Why, are you planning on committing a crime that would cause you to be incarcerated?

      What, you don't like spam? Only people who post their email addresses to the web get spam. You can just not post your email address.

      What, you don't like China's nuclear weapons? Why would you be so concerned, only countries that annoy China have to be worried about this. Just don't let your nation annoy China.

      What, you don't like the CBDTPA? Only criminals who pirate others' work need be concerned about this law.

      What, you don't like the DMCA? Only people who crack software need to be concerned about that.

      Innocent until proven guilty shouldn't just apply to courts of law. Apply it to all of society. Why would the government need to identify a law abiding citizen?

      For brevity's sake, I won't even bother to mention that this won't reduce crime, just make detectivework easier.

    12. Re:And your problem is ... ? by GruffGoat · · Score: 1
      I am concerned about the government having valid information about me. Not necessarily now, but who knows what the future brings. Many nations historically and throughout the world have been guided by criminal governements.

      That would concern me deeply. I would probably be declared a criminal as would most /.s. Beyond the concern over government there is also the concern about information sharing. Who guarantees that those who receive the information would not use it to my personal detriment. Ask any politician if personal information may be used to inflict harm.

    13. Re:And your problem is ... ? by col_the_limey · · Score: 1

      "The issue of police cameras in bedrooms comes up again and again, but I always have to wonder - what criminal acts are these guys planning that they protest so loudly to having cameras placed in their bedrooms?"

      Think of the Iran-Contra affair.

      The US government pressured many US publications not to make this scandal public. They pressured journalists who kept pushing the truth. Journalists were forced from their jobs because they tried to tell the public the truth.

      Think how much easier it would have been for the US government to keep the Iran-Contra scandal hidden forever if they could keep a permanent watch on the journalists who were protecting your right to know the truth.

      Don't give any government the ability to hide the truth from you. Journalists are fighting every day to tell you the truth. Don't make it easier for the US government to silence them.

      --
      Theorem: If life doesn't confuse you, then you're missing 90% of it.
    14. Re:And your problem is ... ? by Sloppy · · Score: 1

      what criminal acts are these guys planning

      They might say something wrong, such as "That girl looks sexy" (out loud in front of witnesses) because he doesn't know she's only 17 years old. They might write a harmless computer program, such as one that plays DVDs or displays an ebook. He might want to smoke a joint.

      If government were trustworthy, and doing harmless things couldn't get you put in jail, then maybe letting Big Brother keep tabs on everyone wouldn't be so bad.

      But since government keeps proving time and time again that it is untrustworthy and does abuse its power in manners that are inconsistent with protecting people, it's a bad idea.

      --
      As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
    15. Re:And your problem is ... ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're obvisouly one of those "if one has nothing to hide...." people. You would have made a good pre-World War II German

    16. Re:And your problem is ... ? by maxpublic · · Score: 3, Interesting

      The issue of better identification of people comes up again and again, but I always have to wonder - what criminal acts are these guys planning that they protest so loudly to being able to be identified by the authorities?

      Hey, you're right. And since only criminals would object to having a tracking chip implanted in their arms, let's mandate that as well. After all, what do you have to hide? If you object you must be a criminal.

      While we're at it, let's also ban any sort of privacy in communication. Only criminals want the ability to privately communicate with others, so why don't we just legalize wiretapping, opening mail, and loading surveillance software on everyone's computer?

      Hell, let's go the full distance: let's put little cameras in everyone's home. After all, if we're good, law-abiding citizens we won't mind if government records what we do; only criminals would object to such measures. If anyone objects or starts spouting off about privacy - how 20th century! - then we'll know right away that those sorts are up to no good.

      Yeah, this is surely the kind of world I want to live in. Definitely the kind of world I want my kids to grow up in. After all, if it lowers the crime rate by some small fraction, if it's "fooor the chiiiiiilldrenn", then honest upright folks will embrace it without question. Only criminals would object, and those who object, by definition, are criminals.

      Take a DNA sample. If it means that 20 years from now, my children will be growing up in a society free of random murders, pedophilia, assault, and all the rest, I'm for it.

      Provide a single empirical cite which indicates that these measures will do any of this. Just one.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    17. Re:And your problem is ... ? by stephanruby · · Score: 1

      Let's look at this another way. I don't worry about the gorvernment assigning me a social security number. I don't worry about being catalogued by the government, nor am I worried about being catalogued and classified by the private industry.

      However, for those that do enjoy the occasional bout with their credit card company, or you know the people who don't make as much money as I do. Well, if we could put all those people's social security number in a big database, don't you think that would be a lot better for society?

      Better yet, I could rig my voice mail system to screen all my incoming phone calls based on the incoming social security number. This way I could pick up the phone immediately when important people call me up and I could let the unimportant people wander around aimlessly through my voice mail system. Oh boy! <sarcasm>What a truly original idea! I'm certainly glad I am the one who thought of it!</sarcasm>

      Stephan

    18. Re:And your problem is ... ? by nels_tomlinson · · Score: 3, Insightful
      So go ahead, fingerprint everybody. Take a DNA sample. If it means that 20 years from now, my children will be growing up in a society free of random murders, pedophilia, assault, and all the rest, I'm for it. That's idealistic, but I'll take just 20%.

      If we could do this kind of thing effectively, we would be able to ensure that only those favored by the government could rape, assault and murder your children, and that your children couldn't do anything about it, if they objected to these rapes, murders, and assaults. That's a great tradeoff, I think; give up all remnants of human dignity, and everything which makes life worth living, and get abused, enslaved, robbed and murdered by the very organization you gave this up to.

      If we can learn anything from history, it's that Lord Acton was right: absolute power absolutely will corrupt.

      Ironically, criminals have relatively little to fear from this kind of thing. They seem to be able to ply their trade without much difficulty under all circumstances. Some of the dumb ones get hung when a police state decides to get rid of the competition, but the bright criminals just join the gang with the badges. We need to make sure that the cops don't become the gang with the badges.

      I am not a criminal either, and I therefore object to being treated as if I were a criminal. You might think that increasing your safety by twenty percent makes it all worth while, and you might think that these proposals will deliver that. Think about this: if treating us like criminals really slowed the criminals down, then you would feel quite safe as a prisoner in a U.S. jail. Do you really think that you would be safer in prison than in your home? The incidence of violent crime is quite high in prison, and the folks there are really treated like prisoners. We could strip search you every day before you leave the house, and afterwards too, and you won't be any safer. But, we will have made the cops into the gang with the badges.

    19. Re:And your problem is ... ? by muleboy · · Score: 1
      Here is a congressional report about what happens when the government gets even a little too much power:

      Final Report of the Select Committee to Study Governmental Operations with Respect to Intelligence Activities of the United States Senate, 94th Congress, 2nd Session, 1976

    20. Re:And your problem is ... ? by moncyb · · Score: 1

      What about the crimes of perjury, corruption, and false accusations? This would not even remotely address these problems.

      A corrupt cop or government official could easily use this information for in a whole variety of evil ways. They could use it to blackmail people. They could modify the system so that it would finger you for some crime they committed. Etc. Etc...

      This in fact would encourage lazy law enforcement. "A crime was committed at 2AM in sector 27c. Let's look up all the faces scanned in that area between 1AM and 3. Well well, John Doe was the only person scanned. Arrest him. Book him. Case closed." John Doe was only walking home from work--the real criminal avoided the cameras. Meanwhile that criminal is still at large, and may have little danger of being prosecuted for the crime as the police decided they have their man.

      There is no replacement for ensuring that police officers can be trusted, unbiased and will always search for the real criminal instead of poor John Doe. There is no replacement for making court rulings based upon reason and logic instead of technicalities and "I'm just doing my job" mentality. Until this is achieved, technologies like facial recognition should not even be considered, and the US is not even close.

    21. Re:And your problem is ... ? by blibbleblobble · · Score: 2

      Let's look at this another way. I don't worry about the government knowing that I exist, how tall I am, what color my eyes are, or how many whirls and whorls my thumbprint has. I'm not a criminal. I don't plan on being one.

      As yesterday's quote said:

      Once the police have everyone's fingerprints and DNA code on record, they can go to a shop, the scene of a protest, or anywhere, and automatically compile a list of everyone who was there.

      If you're not a criminal, you don't need to have secrets, right? (does that remind anyone of the communist party's policy on secrets?)

      Here, people have the option to say "screw your driving license", but in America, it seems much more difficult to walk to the shops, not to mention that so many places require a license to identify you that some states are issuing non-drivers-licenses.

      If they want to use thumbprints to make the license more difficult to forge, then the state can delete their own copy which is useful only for spying. The copy on the license itself can identify you.

    22. Re:And your problem is ... ? by mamba-mamba · · Score: 1

      If it were a potato chip (food) then I could see why the FDA might need to approve it. But it is a microchip. I believe the FDA was correct to say that the implantable chip is outside its perview.

      I mean, if you are against the chip for privacy reasons, then be against it for privacy reasons. Don't pervert the mission of the FDA to support your agenda for something that has nothing to do with food or drugs or public health.

      MM
      --

      --
      By including this sig, the copyright holders of this work or collection unreservedly place it in the public domain.
    23. Re:And your problem is ... ? by AugstWest · · Score: 2

      It's a micmrochip that emits radio frequencies. RF can cause cancer.

      You don't see a need for studies into whether or not this thing will cause cancer when implanted in the human body?

      That has nothing to do with my agenda.

    24. Re:And your problem is ... ? by mamba-mamba · · Score: 1

      I would like to clarify/amplify the Japanese internment issue. US citizens, not Japanese citizens, were interned solely because they were of Japanese descent.

      Personally, I don't have a problem with rounding up, or at least surveilling, foreign nationals residing in the US in time of war, provided that any rounded up are treated reasonably well. And provided that the war has been declared by the Congress.

      But the internment of US citizens of Japanese descent during WWII was a travesty, and was not justifiable either morally or legally. And in retrospect, it appears to have been totally unecessary from a practical perspective, too. That is, I don't believe any evidence has ever emerged of spying or sabotage by any Japanese Americans during the war. (Please correct me if I am wrong.)

      As far as criticizing the president goes, that is still perfectly legal.

      --
      MM

      --
      By including this sig, the copyright holders of this work or collection unreservedly place it in the public domain.
    25. Re:And your problem is ... ? by Liberal+Mafia · · Score: 1

      In that case, why not use postcards instead of envelopes for all your snail-mail letters? After all, it's cheaper to send a postcard -- and since you're not up to anything bad, you don't mind if everybody reads your most intimate letters to friends and family, right?

      If it means that 20 years from now, my children will be growing up in a society free of random murders, pedophilia, assault, and all the rest, I'm for it.

      Crime is, in a sense, a tax we pay on freedom. *You* may be willing to give up some of that freedom in exchange for a lower tax, but I never agreed to that and will not allow you to impose it upon me.

      But you *can* live in a society free of these things -- just by moving to a totalitarian country such as Singapore right now. Of course, then you'll be totally unprotected from crimes committed by the government and its representatives, but that's the trade-off you made to get that illusion of safety.

    26. Re:And your problem is ... ? by mpe · · Score: 2

      I am not a criminal either, and I therefore object to being treated as if I were a criminal.

      Indeed such a situation can easily increase the number of criminals. If people are judged as "guilty" anyway they might well rationally conclude that they have little reason to bother obeying the law.

    27. Re:And your problem is ... ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's a micmrochip that emits radio frequencies. RF can cause cancer.

      Please keep in mind that a causal relationship between RF radiation and cancer has yet to be rigorously established. While it would be wise to exercise caution with any type of implant, the FDA shouldn't reject an otherwise inert device on the basis of media hysteria.

    28. Re:And your problem is ... ? by AugstWest · · Score: 2

      It also has yet to be rigorously tested -- which is the main question most people have these days about cell towers.

      When they came to put in a cell tower a couple of streets away from me, they had a lot of studies on heat radiation, but none on RF radiation.

      I'd love to see several studies on RF radiation and cancer, but I haven't been able to find them.

    29. Re:And your problem is ... ? by mamba-mamba · · Score: 1

      First of all, your claim that RF can cause cancer is somewhat dubious. It is well known that ionizing radiation can cause cancer, but I don't think there is any solid epidemiological support for the assertion that RF causes cancer. Studies have been done, and some have concluded that their is a very slight risk, while others have concluded that the risk, if any, is smaller than the experimental uncertainty. Whenever something like this happens, it usually means that there is no significant risk. I mean, if you can barely measure it in a well designed study, then it isn't that important.

      Anyway, there are already exposure guidelines for RF, and if the chip doesn't exceed these, then there is no need for any new studies.

      I'm not defending the chip or any potential use of it, I'm just defending the FDA's decision.

      MM
      --

      --
      By including this sig, the copyright holders of this work or collection unreservedly place it in the public domain.
    30. Re:And your problem is ... ? by AugstWest · · Score: 2

      Can you point me to any of these studies on RF? I've been trying to find them for months now.

    31. Re:And your problem is ... ? by mamba-mamba · · Score: 1

      I don't know exactly. It is an epidemiological question, so you can search in the life sciences database at any university library. Try JAMA, if they have some kind of on-line presence.

      The most recent place I read about this is in the study guide for the General class HAM license. The section on RF exposure went over this issue summarily. As far as cancer goes, they said that any association between RF and cancer is extremely weak. I'm too lazy to look and see if there were specific studies sited or not.

      The bottom line (for aspiring HAM's) is that when broadcasting at certain frequencies, and certain (high) powers, exposure could be an issue. But at low power, you could never get to the limits, no matter how close you are to the antenna.

      MM
      --

      --
      By including this sig, the copyright holders of this work or collection unreservedly place it in the public domain.
  19. Out of State License ? by Tevye · · Score: 1

    When I was in a boarding high school in Massachusetts, taking driver's ed., there was no problem with any of us getting a license in Mass. and then going back to our home states. I lived in New Hampshire at the time, so I ended up getting my license at home anyhow, but as far as I know, can't Connecticut drivers can get licenses in other states? You're not supposed to register the car outside of your residence, but I think it's alright with the actual license.

    I could be wrong, it wouldn't be the first time, but I think it would be permissible to get the license in another state. It's what I might try anyways, if I lived in CT.

    --
    We're on a mission from God.
    1. Re:Out of State License ? by Dredd13 · · Score: 2

      No, you have 30 days to re-license yourself and 60-days to re-tag your vehicles. (or vice versa, I can't remember).

    2. Re:Out of State License ? by NDPTAL85 · · Score: 1

      MA has had biometric licenses for years. As more and more states get them your opportunities for getting them in states without such a system decrease.

      --
      Mac OS X and Windows XP working side by side to fight back the night.
    3. Re:Out of State License ? by _bobs.pizza_ · · Score: 1

      You usually have to have a legal residence in the state you want to get your drivers licence in...

      It's possible that a P.O. box could work for having a residence.

    4. Re:Out of State License ? by suky · · Score: 1

      You have to prove residency when getting a drivers license, usually with a utility bill showing your address. I don't think a PO Box would count, unless you can prove you have an actual street address along with a PO Box in the same state.

  20. Why is this allowable? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Dimension 7's point of view:
    What dont make sense to me is this: If its illegal for law enforcement to tap a phone without cause or suspicion, what makes it legal for then to track us wherever we go? Whats next? Implanting GPS transmitters at birth?

    1. Re:Why is this allowable? by NDPTAL85 · · Score: 1

      They AREN'T tracking you where ever you go. They are just making sure whoever is holding your license is actually YOU!

      --
      Mac OS X and Windows XP working side by side to fight back the night.
  21. Post crash reasons by rabidphilosophy · · Score: 1

    They do most of this so that doctors can put your face back together after you've been crushed by an SUV.

    --
    God sucks at running this place. Impeach God at
  22. in nj by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative


    we still have the old picture-less licenses. blows their mind at the out of state car rental counters. just renewed mine and it expires in 2006, so i guess i am hopefully good until then.

    1. Re:in nj by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except for anywhere that says "Government issued photo ID". I hope you also have one of those.

    2. Re:in nj by SinceEBCDIC · · Score: 1

      New Jersey went to drivers licenses with pictures in the early eighties. Then it was discovered that there was some fraud built into the system (something like organized crime profiting from the contracts to supply some part of the process) and NJ went back to picture-less.

      The place is the freaking dark ages; so glad I left, never to look back. Sigh.

      --

      I was born not knowing and have had only a little time to change that here and there. -- Richard Feynman
    3. Re:in nj by stealthyburrito · · Score: 1

      In Arizona, your drivers license expires when you are 60. So, I don't have to get mine renewed until 2039.

      So once I wipe out the mag-stripe on the back, I should be set.

  23. Lawsuit? by ZuG · · Score: 1, Interesting
    This is detrimental to those concerned about their privacy and what is done with data about them. Unless you live in a giant city, it is nearly impossible to make a living without a vehicle, essentially forcing you to either drive without a lisence or to give up.

    For example, I live in a small (sub)urban area in Michigan. One of my roommates is just getting her life together (mental/emotional issues), and is starting to look for volunteer work in order to build up her resume to find a sustainable job. (She currently doesn't know how to drive, or have a drivers license). There are several volunteer jobs through the local Red Cross that would be perfect for her skills and abilities, but they are well beyond walking distance and the bus either does not go to those areas at all, or does not go often enough (once an hour or less) to make it possible for her to use. Thus, she is stuck with what she can walk to/ride the bus to.

    Because of the situation, my other roommate and I have been trying to help her get a vehicle. But it's all a big catch-22. She can't (legally) drive a car until she gets her license and regristration, but she can't get a license and registration until she passes both a written and a road test, which requires her practing by driving a car.

    So, she can't buy a car to practice, and she can't practice without a car. It's a big mess. The only forseeable way around it is to let her drive one of our cars illegally until she gets good enough to pass the road test.

    While this doesn't have anything specifically to do with biometrics, it's the same catch-22. You can't work without a car, you can't have a car without a license, and you can't have a license without submitting to whatever they tell you to. Move to another state, I guess, but then what if more states pick up this idea?

    The whole thing scares me on multiple levels. It has that nasty big-brotherish feel to it, plus making life very difficult for those concerned about personal privacy (myself included). Hopefully, it will get struck down in the courts, but I doubt it. Driving has been held as a privilage, and thus open to (almost) any restrictions the state likes. [sigh] Another restriction on our freedoms. What's new?

    1. Re:Lawsuit? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They don't have learner's permits in Michigan?

    2. Re:Lawsuit? by schatt · · Score: 1

      Because of the situation, my other roommate and I have been trying to help her get a vehicle. But it's all a big catch-22. She can't (legally) drive a car until she gets her license and regristration, but she can't get a license and registration until she passes both a written and a road test, which requires her practing by driving a car. In both Arizona and California (and I assume most other stateS) you can pass the written test and receive what's known as a "learner's permit". Said permit allows you to drive with a licensed driver in the car, while you are learning to drive. The permits are good for 6 months, and once you have learned to driv e sufficiently to pass the driving exam, you go in and take the test. No catch-22 at all here.

    3. Re:Lawsuit? by Asmodean · · Score: 1

      "So, she can't buy a car to practice, and she can't practice without a car. It's a big mess. The only forseeable way around it is to let her drive one of our cars illegally until she gets good enough to pass the road test."

      She can drive as long as someone in the car with her has had a license for 4 years or more. She could also get a learners permit (at least these are the laws in CT, USA).

      --
      It's a good thing the world sucks or we'd all fall off.
    4. Re:Lawsuit? by ZuG · · Score: 1

      Michigan does have something similar, but it won't work in her case. Michigan allows one to get a level 1 learners permit which allows a person to drive with a parent or approved guardian over 21 years of age. Her parents live in Ohio, and I'm not 21. She doesn't really have any friends who could let her drive either. It really is a nasty mess.

    5. Re:Lawsuit? by NDPTAL85 · · Score: 1

      "So, she can't buy a car to practice, and she can't practice without a car. It's a big mess. The only forseeable way around it is to let her drive one of our cars illegally until she gets good enough to pass the road test."

      Hmmm. In my state, anyone with a Learners Permit is allowed to drive a car, given that another adult who already has a license is riding in the car with them. Thats how we learn here in MA. Is it not the same in your state? Why don't you run on down to your DMV and pick up a drivers manual and check your local laws out.

      --
      Mac OS X and Windows XP working side by side to fight back the night.
    6. Re:Lawsuit? by IlIlIlIl · · Score: 1

      Or, she could go for a restricted lisence. They're usually easier to get, and would allow her to drive alone, at least some of the time.

      I'm not sure about the leaners though, since I think (at least in CT) you can't get a learners once you're over the age of 18.

    7. Re:Lawsuit? by mlippert · · Score: 1
      Well I'm not sure this is the easiest solution, since it costs money, but I bet that with a learner's permit she could find a driving school that would teach her/give her practice to take the road test.

      Also, I very much doubt that a driver's license is required to OWN a car. You can buy a car and register it without having a driver's license.

      Mike

      ps I am appalled by the requirements in CT to submit biometric data, like fingerprints in order to get a driver's license.

    8. Re:Lawsuit? by SoupaFly · · Score: 1

      So, she can't buy a car to practice, and she can't practice without a car. It's a big mess. The only forseeable way around it is to let her drive one of our cars illegally until she gets good enough to pass the road test.

      Ever hear of a learners permit?

    9. Re:Lawsuit? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is what driving schools are for; they also know the way around the paperwork mess. A good one will pick you up/drop you off for driving practice, though you may need to bum a ride to the schooling sessions.

      As far as I can tell, CT (I'm there too) will provide a registration without a license. Most other DMVs are lax; the easiest thing to do would be to *call* the DMV and explain the situation, they deal with it all day long and *do* know the procedures. Most likely, they'll suggest an accredited driving school, and explain how to work around the registration issues.

    10. Re:Lawsuit? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most states have this simple way out of the catch-22: It's usually called a "learner's permit." It allows someone who is not presently licensed to drive to operate a motor vehicle, normally with the restriction that a licensed driver also be a passenger in the car. While it's fairly common for teenagers to get these permits, it's not restricted by age.

    11. Re:Lawsuit? by ZuG · · Score: 1

      To all of you who have suggested a learners permit, thanks, but it's already been checked out. Michigan laws allow someone with a learners permit to drive with either a parent or an approved guardian (approved in writing by the parent) over 21. I'm not over 21, and her parents live 6 hours away in Ohio. So the learners permit thing won't work.

    12. Re:Lawsuit? by Preposterous+Coward · · Score: 2

      So find someone who's over 21 (perhaps a driving school instructor?), get the parents to sign off on him/her, and your friend is good to go.

      --

      "Biped! Good cranial development. Evidently considerable human ancestry."
    13. Re:Lawsuit? by balloonpup · · Score: 1

      Nobody around over 21 that the parents will give written permission to?

      --
      I sing the doggie electric!
  24. It's a picture and a description ... by Titusdot+Groan · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Wow, when I read biometric data I had images of fingerprinting, retinal scanning and a dna sample. Nope, just a picture and demographic data. Is this a slippery slope concern or just a massive over-reaction?

    As licenses get used increasingly for proof of identity we can only expect this kind of increase in the security of the id cards.

    Up here in Ontario we've been doing this for years for drivers licenses and government health cards. So far there hasn't been any use of the data (that I know of) for anything other than printing the photo id cards.

    The battle to be fought here is not to prevent these cards from existing, it's going to happen. Work on ensuring that the cards are only proof of identity and are not connected in every which way to every database in existance. Fight for an internally consistent card that only proves you are who you claim to be, then every other database can just look you up. Fight against the shared databases not against the cards themselves.

    For instance the Canadian Federal government put together a big database tracking all sorts of personal information about every Canadian tax payer -- they can do this with out without id cards.

    The war for anonymity was lost on September 11th. Those of us concerned about privacy didn't get to the field. Fall back and fight for real privacy.

    And remember folks, nobody listens to the people wearing the tin foil hats!

    1. Re:It's a picture and a description ... by HiThere · · Score: 2

      To you it looks like a photo. To the computer it looks a bit different. Otherwise they could just scan in the photo and work from there.

      Actually, a fingerprint system is much less obnoxious than the camera based systems. The camera based systems allow 30 false positives to be picked out of a football crowd. The fingerprint system doesn't. Well, ok, that's (I think) a rhetorical exaggeration. But the game was in Florida. And the technology is new, so the false positives should go down. But this is of concern because it further increases the imbalance of power between the individual and the government. It's poor forecasting to just look at one point in time and say: "This is what the effects will be." In Britain and Florida these cameras are common on street corners. How long until they use the system to track drivers who run red lights? (Hint: they've already tried. It hasn't yet worked, but they've tried.)
      How long until they use it to track, O, litterbugs, loiterers, loonies, ...
      Now extend it to other letters of the alphabet....
      Until you find yourself (if you didn't, then you are fooling yourself).

      When these systems are put in place the assertion is always that they will only be used against serious crime. Anyone who believes it almost deserves the penalty that they will receive. But not quite. And the pain falleth on the just and the unjust alike.

      Don't expect the first version to work right. Expect lots of bugs. Expect the pr to say "Gee, what a waste of money!" (Or some other dismissive incantation.) Then expect it to fade from notice. But not from existence. And systems tend to extend themselves. (This kind of system is run and justified by bureaucrats, so all of Parkinson's laws apply.)

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    2. Re:It's a picture and a description ... by JimBobJoe · · Score: 1

      photo Ontario government health card? what's that?

      Actually Ontario added photographs to licenses in 1992 I believe. That was far after most US states did. And remember, several provinces still do not require photos on licenses (Quebec, New Brunswick.) Why didn't Ontario make it optional like those other provinces (well part of that is the rather passive way the assembly passed the legislation. Ontario licenses, by the Highway Act, do not have to have photos on them...but the Minister of Transportation may require someone to be photographed for a license.)

      The Ministry of Transportation does keep the photos in their database, but I believe that you can fight that with the Ontario Privacy Commissioner--in fact, I've been telling someone to do just that.

  25. Easy way around face recognition... by zaffir · · Score: 1

    Just make the goofiest face you can when they take the pic.

    --
    "Upon attaching the waterblock to my penis, I began to notice that I know nothing about computers." -- JRockway
  26. Driver's license wasn't always required! by peter+hoffman · · Score: 4, Insightful

    A driver's license wasn't always required. The first states to require a driver's license were Massachusetts and Missouri in 1903. However, it wasn't until the 1950s that all states required road test and/or examination in order to get a license (reference). Somehow the world managed to survive those 40 odd years of unlicensed drivers.

    Most people don't have any inkling as to how how much the world has changed in the last 50 years (or 100 years for those of you over 50). Politicians today can get elected on platforms that would have had them run out of town on a rail only 30 years ago.

    In the future people watching old movies won't understand the terror implicit in the phrase "ver are your paperz!". They won't recognize that phrase as being fundamentally un-American.

    Revisionist history will make sure they aren't even taught that things were ever any different. Revisionist history may not even include a mention of Washington, Jefferson, or Franklin.

    If some people get their way you won't even be able to teach yourself history. All that you will know are the "facts" The State has approved for your consumption.

    The sad thing is that already anyone who points these things out is derided as a nut.

    1. Re:Driver's license wasn't always required! by kindbud · · Score: 2

      Reading the Washington, Jefferson, Franklin link was an eye-opener. The only thing that bothers me about Dr. Seeley is the way he constantly thanks God for the things that dedicated people are doing.

      Thank God defenders of American tradition were not asleep...

      We should indeed thank God for Cardinale and Pennachio...

      We should also thank God that Cardinale and Pennachio are not alone. Their compatriots have been at work improving history standards in states like Texas, Florida, Ohio and California...


      Now, I realize the guy's with a Catholic organization of some sort, but really: don't Cardinale and Pennachio and all "their compatriots" deserve some of the credit?

      --
      Edith Keeler Must Die
    2. Re:Driver's license wasn't always required! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > All that you will know are the "facts" The State has approved for your consumption.

      Isn't that called communism? Over 1/4 of the world's population lives like that... all through history people have had to fight to keep that sort of attitude from becomming the norm. You can count on it happening, then there'll be an uprising, then it'll happen all over again. Seems we never learn from ourselves...

    3. Re:Driver's license wasn't always required! by xonker · · Score: 1

      Somehow the world managed to survive those 40 odd years of unlicensed drivers.

      Are you suggesting that the traffic patterns in the early years of the automobile were anything like they are today? I certainly hope not, otherwise I can see exactly why people deride you as a nut. It's a ridiculous proposal - the idea that if we didn't require driver's licenses for the first 40 years of the automobile, we never should.

      When a town only has a few people with automobiles, and those autos are much less powerful than the cars of today, requiring a license probably seemed unnecessary. It shouldn't be necessary to explain how the increase in the number of cars would correspond with increased regulations as to the operation of those vehicles.

      The Wright Brothers didn't need pilot licenses either. Are you going to get in a 747 with an unlicensed pilot? Would you like to live near an airport where anyone can jump in a Cessna regardless of training? No? Then shut the hell up.

    4. Re:Driver's license wasn't always required! by peter+hoffman · · Score: 2

      I agree, I should have looked for a better link than the first one I found. There is a more news-like article at the Washington Times.

    5. Re:Driver's license wasn't always required! by peter+hoffman · · Score: 2

      I was going to post an on topic reply but then I noticed your final comment: No? Then shut the hell up and realized that you are incapable of a real discussion.

    6. Re:Driver's license wasn't always required! by iserlohn · · Score: 1

      No, it's just that you are incapable of real analysis, or coming up with a clever rebuttal.

    7. Re:Driver's license wasn't always required! by peter+hoffman · · Score: 2

      The point is that today people can't conceive of a world without driver's licenses and yet we lived in such a world for ~40 years.

      Tomorrow our children will be incapable of conceiving of a country where you are free to travel without producing your papers on demand.

    8. Re:Driver's license wasn't always required! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      A driver's license wasn't always required. The first states to require a driver's license were Massachusetts and Missouri in 1903. However, it wasn't until the 1950s that all states required road test and/or examination in order to get a license. Somehow the world managed to survive those 40 odd years of unlicensed drivers.


      Maybe that's because automobile use didn't become widespread until after WWII. The US army itself was still using horse cavalry during the 1940s.


      In the future people watching old movies won't understand the terror implicit in the phrase "ver are your paperz!". They won't recognize that phrase as being fundamentally un-American.


      I've never had a police office stop me just to look at my license, and I bet you haven't, either.


      Revisionist history will make sure they aren't even taught that things were ever any different. Revisionist history may not even include a mention of Washington, Jefferson, or Franklin


      The people who would try this are obviously idiots. Now explain to me again what this has to do with obtaining a driver's license.


      If some people get their way you won't even be able to teach yourself history. All that you will know are the "facts" The State has approved for your consumption.


      What does this article have to do with teaching yourself history? Or getting a driver's license?


      The sad thing is that already anyone who points these things out is derided as a nut.


      Maybe you are a nut.

    9. Re:Driver's license wasn't always required! by BCoates · · Score: 1

      It shouldn't be necessary to explain how the increase in the number of cars would correspond with increased regulations as to the operation of those vehicles.

      Sure, but how does this make driver licences necessary? Vehicles are licenced, tested, and insured seperatly from drivers anyway, and it's not like the lack of identification makes it impossible to enforce traffic laws any more than the lack of pedestrian licences makes it impossible to enforce jaywalking laws, or the lack of id cards makes it impossible to enforce criminal law.

      The Wright Brothers didn't need pilot licenses either. Are you going to get in a 747 with an unlicensed pilot?

      No, i'm not stupid enough to do something just because it's legal. Not that anyone who owns a very expensive 747 is going to let some random shmuck fly it.

      Would you like to live near an airport where anyone can jump in a Cessna regardless of training?

      *shrug* Wouldn't really care, the odds of being hit by a small plane are probably right up there with leprosy or winning lotto.

      No? Then shut the hell up.

      Good to see civilised debate is alive and well.

      --
      Benjamin Coates

    10. Re:Driver's license wasn't always required! by Debillitatus · · Score: 2
      The sad thing is that already anyone who points these things out is derided as a nut.

      I don't think that is true. For example, I think that if you had simply put the first two paragraphs of your post, and no other, they would be completely reasonable.

      But once you start comparing having to get a driver's license to anything the Gestapo did, and refer to "the State", then things start sounding a little nutty. Sorry, but it's true.

      Does that make you a nut, or everyone else in the world a nut? I don't know, you could be right and the rest of the world wrong; as Winston Smith said, "Sanity is not statistical." But if you want to convince anyone else of your position, you need to not sound like an ideologue.

      --

      Come on, give it up, that's

    11. Re:Driver's license wasn't always required! by xonker · · Score: 1

      The point is that today people can't conceive of a world without driver's licenses and yet we lived in such a world for ~40 years.

      We also lived in a world without cars for thousands of years. We lived in a world with television, social security numbers, radio, computers, mass-produced clothing or canned food. Our children can't conceive of that now. By saying "oh, no, we have to have *shudder* driver's licenses" you're not providing a convincing argument about "producing papers on demand." Sorry, but it doesn't follow that drivers licenses lead to police states that require "papers on demand." It's alarmist overreaction. Very sloppy thinking.

      Furthermore, any intrusion that people truly don't want is preventable - that's why we have elections. The folks at the DMV may not be elected officials, but the people who appoint them are. Obviously, people didn't feel too strongly about driver's licenses, in fact they probably supported them -- but they have reacted strongly against automated systems that take people's pictures and send tickets for speeding -- and (at least in Denver) they've gotten rid of it.

      Your implicit suggestion that driver's licenses will lead to a police state doesn't hold water. In a country with 260+ million people, you have to accept some regulation and if a government is going to keep 50,000 (or more) John Smiths straight it may have to have a better system than just name, SSN and birthdate.

      Maybe face recognition is too intrusive, but you can't go around whining about how people didn't need any license to drive a car in 1902. No one is going to take you seriously, and rightly so.

    12. Re:Driver's license wasn't always required! by ipfwadm · · Score: 1

      it's not like the lack of identification makes it impossible to enforce traffic laws

      A drivers license has nothing to do with identification, its purpose has just grown to include that (same as social security numbers). Drivers licenses are about having some sort of proof that you have a rudimentary understanding of how to drive. Having a license doesn't imply that someone is a good driver, and you may say that the road test is ridiculously easy to pass, but I've known plenty of people that failed it on the first try, and rightly so. And for the average person when first learning to drive, that trip around the block is a whole lot harder than it seems to you and me now.

      the lack of pedestrian licences

      Walking is a fairly natural thing. You've done it for that vast majority of your life. Plus, there are a far fewer regulations and things to know about walking down the street than there are about driving.

      Not that anyone who owns a very expensive 747 is going to let some random shmuck fly it.

      Not that anyone who owns a very expensive car is going to let some random shmuck drive it. Which is what a drivers license is for, to show that this random shmuck (who in this case may be your son or daughter) is actually capable of operating the thing without a high likelihood of smashing it into a telephone pole.

    13. Re:Driver's license wasn't always required! by xonker · · Score: 1

      Sure, but how does this make driver licences necessary?

      Prevention, mainly. People want some assurance that the guy next to them in the huge fscking SUV has some idea how to operate it. It's little consolation that he might get a ticket after he's run over you. They're not strictly for identification, that's just a use that has sprang up since cars have become so common.

      The real problem here is that there was a gap -- a need for people to prove that they were who they say they are, for example -- and an inappropriate entity stepped in to fill the void. People are all too willing to accept the DMV acting as the default ID card arbiter because most people don't want to have to be responsible for two trips to a government office.

      Not that anyone who owns a very expensive 747 is going to let some random shmuck fly it.

      Very true, but there are some random shmucks with enough money to afford planes (maybe not 747s, but still big enough to cause discomfort when they plow into your house...) who might decide to bypass the lengthy process of getting a pilot's license. Anyway, the point is that it does make sense to require that someone is qualified to operate a plane or car before allowing them to operate the vehicle. Yes, someone can take a car on the road without a driver's license or take a plane out without a pilot's license -- but there are severe penalties designed to discourage that kind of behavior.

      Good to see civilised debate is alive and well.

      Yup.

    14. Re:Driver's license wasn't always required! by 0x0d0a · · Score: 1

      That is downright disturbing. I know that revision of history happens even in the US, but seeing it in action is really unpleasant.

    15. Re:Driver's license wasn't always required! by peter+hoffman · · Score: 2

      The problem is that totalitarian states don't spring into existence fully formed. They evolve one step at a time and at each step people say "that sounds reasonable, after all it's for our safety". Very often the people are right, each step in of itself is reasonable. The danger comes from the long term trend which can cause a country to quietly slide in real trouble.

      My observation about driver's licenses is intended to cause people to examine how this country has changed over the last 50 or 100 years and to think about what the general trend has been. Perhaps things that are being proposed today and which seem reasonable on the surface shouldn't be supported after all. Perhaps the apparent gain isn't really worth the loss.

      Revisionist history gets involved not because I think there is an organized plot to control people's minds but because people need to understand that history is not immutable. Just because you read it in an "real" textbook doesn't make it true.

      Textbooks are chosen to satisfy a constituency. That constituency is largely comfortable with the current common view of the world. If the current view is that we should all have a national id complete with biometric information then there is a risk that anyone who suggested otherwise (Orwell perhaps?) will be quietly dropped from the curriculum.

      The result is the danger Santayana warned of: those who fail to learn the lessons of history are doomed to repeat them.

    16. Re:Driver's license wasn't always required! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Democracy is a pretty way of describing mob-rule. The US is a Constitutional Republic, or at least it used to be.

    17. Re:Driver's license wasn't always required! by peter+hoffman · · Score: 2

      Pretty much everything you said, while not unreasonable, is irrelevant to my point which was that people should think at least twice about where apparently small and reasonable changes will lead. I.e., Don't fix what's not broken and The road to Hell is paved with good intentions. Totalitarian states don't spring to life fully developed. They get that way one reasonable and logical step at a time.

      At this point it might be appropriate to tell the story about a guy who jumped out of a 50th floor window while trying to fly by flapping his arms. As he shot past the 40th floor he thought "so far, so good". The point (for anyone who missed it) is that you can't just assume that because things are fine now that they will continue that way. Actions have consequences and sometimes those consequences are unintended and painful.

    18. Re:Driver's license wasn't always required! by BCoates · · Score: 1

      The real problem here is that there was a gap -- a need for people to prove that they were who they say they are, for example -- and an inappropriate entity stepped in to fill the void. People are all too willing to accept the DMV acting as the default ID card arbiter because most people don't want to have to be responsible for two trips to a government office.

      Fair enough. Perhaps it would be desireable to take steps to prevent the usage of drivers licences as identification--The police all have terminals in their cars to check out licences(they don't really work for their supposed purpose, too easy to forge), so the card is redundant, just tell the officer enough information to look you up (name, address, ssn, dob, whatever), they key it into the machine and it comes up with identifying information on the terminal and confirmation that you're legal to drive. It would be more convenient and just as effective, and would allow proof of identity to be a seperate matter.

      If people still want some sort of physical artifact to act as a licence, have the dmv print out a couple of paper licences(like they give while you wait for your plastic licence to be mailed in some places), unsuitable for leaving in a wallet any length of time, that you'd leave with your registration and proof of insurance in the glove box.

      The point being to allow the nutjobs to opt out of having any official ID without revoking their right to drive, and keep doing their job of forcing freedom on the rest of y'all whether you want it or not :)

      --
      Benjamin Coates

    19. Re:Driver's license wasn't always required! by quintessent · · Score: 2

      George Washington...

      I think I might have heard the name. Was he Martha Washington's husband?

    20. Re:Driver's license wasn't always required! by Loundry · · Score: 2

      n a country with 260+ million people, you have to accept some regulation

      How much regulation is acceptable?

      and if a government is going to keep 50,000 (or more) John Smiths straight

      What does it mean to "keep John Smiths straight"?

      --
      I don't make the rules. I just make fun of them.
    21. Re:Driver's license wasn't always required! by JimBobJoe · · Score: 1

      This is an interesting argument...but the driver's license has a valid purpose. It's not to see if you can drive a car--the silly test they administer you basically makes sure you know what the signs mean and where the gas and brake pedals are.

      A driver's license is simply a form of credit. When you take the tests, and pass them, the state considers you a good risk, and gives you credit to drive. Get a speeding ticket...that's ok...because you've got the credit for it. Eventually you'll pay off the credit (time will pass without more tickets) and the ticket will disappear. Get a DUI? Whoa...that's like getting foreclosed on...may lose your credit for a very long time.

      The driver's license is to make sure that you are using your own credit and that what you are doing is being noted on your own credit record. That's all it does--not a thing more.

      The photo though is not related to this purpose. In 1969, when my state of Ohio added the photo to the license, it was for reasons other than driving--in fact, the highway patrol had no opinion to the photo one way or another. Vermont still issues non photo licenses, as does Quebec. New York made the photo mandatory after the first WTC bombing. New Jersey made the photo mandator in January of this year (I leave it as an exercise of the reader as to why.) The driver's license not being an ID card...that's a much more interesting and reasonable argument.

    22. Re:Driver's license wasn't always required! by RFC959 · · Score: 1
      Politicians today can get elected on platforms that would have had them run out of town on a rail only 30 years ago.
      Amen to that. (Although to be fair, we should note that 30 years ago, politicians got elected on platforms that would get them run out of town on a rail today.) Always at tax time, I'm reminded of how when the (modern, post-1913) income tax was first proposed, politicians said "Don't worry! It will only be on the richest few percent of Americans, and it will only be a few percent!" I trust I don't have to tell anybody how that turned out. I pay 20% of my income to the Feds, another 5% to the state, and ANOTHER 3% to the city! And I'm not in the richest few percent. (BTW, "withholding" was another big lie. They said "It's a temporary wartime measure." That was during WWII. Somehow it didn't go away.)

      The lesson, I think, is "Step on evil as soon as you see it." The longer it sticks around, the more used to it people get, and the harder it is to get rid of. Stop it at the source.

    23. Re:Driver's license wasn't always required! by NewtonsLaw · · Score: 2

      Sorry, but it doesn't follow that drivers licenses lead to police states that require
      "papers on demand." It's alarmist overreaction


      Well you ought to take a look at New Zealand.

      While the general perception might be that it's a democratic country with a great civil rights record -- things are changing here.

      Some years ago, the government issued drivers with a "lifetime drivers' license" -- or should I say "drivers had to purchase a lifetime drivers' license"

      Now this was a legal contract -- they OFFERED the license to qualified drivers, the drivers ACCEPTED the offer, an CONSIDERATION (by way of a once-only fee) was paid and the INTENT was clearly that the license would last the driver's lifetime (these licenses had expiry dates that proved this). In short -- it had all the essential elements of a legally binding contract.

      Then, a few years back, these "lifetime licenses" were unilaterally revoked.

      Now if it had been anyone other than the government of the nation which broke such an iron-clad contract, they'd have been hit with a huge class-action law suit by all those drivers who were suddenly faced with a new system that demanded regular relicensing at a price much higher than they'd already paid for that lifetime license.

      This isn't the half of it though.

      Along with the unilateral cancellation of all those existing lifetime licenses and the introduction of the new renewable ones came the decree that any driver can be stopped at any time for any reason and be required to present their license to the police.

      Let's get this quite clear.

      If you're a law-abiding citizen, going about your everyday activities, the police have a right to stop you and demand to see your papers (no BS!).

      Suddenly a very basic tenets of modern justice (the presumption of innocence) has been flushed down the toilet.

      It seems that the police are now entitled to presume that you're guilty of driving without a license with no requirement on their part to prove that they had "reasonable cause to suspect", and it becomes the responsibility of the citizen to prove their innocence.

      Call me a wacko, but I see this (and many other changes that have gone on around here recently) as the thin end of the wedge. This (and many other) governments are starting to become aware that, having lost the respect of the people, they're now having to introduce laws that ensure compliance and control.

      Believe it or not -- NZ doesn't even have a constitution to guarantee its citizens the type of rights that US citizens have. We do have a very ineffective and weak "bill of rights" but it's already been breached by government and the mechanisms put in place to provide citizens with protection in such cases appear to be all but useless.

    24. Re:Driver's license wasn't always required! by Debillitatus · · Score: 2
      The problem is that totalitarian states don't spring into existence fully formed. They evolve one step at a time and at each step people say "that sounds reasonable, after all it's for our safety".

      This is a statement, and a point of view, which is repeated very often. However, I don't think there's much evidence to back it up.

      Think about all of the totalitarian regimes in history, and how have they formed? The Soviet Union certainly did not gradually move from a free society to a totalitarian one; there is a clear violent overthrow, a clear demarcation date. The various fascist powers in Europe right before WWII also came into power very quickly, in several cases in a revolutionary fashion. China did not evolve into a state headed by Mao; it became one quite suddenly. Elsewhere in the modern world, consider the horrible totalitarian regimes in Africa. These did not gradually evolve post-colonization, but sprung into being through violence.

      The point of view of the "slippery slope" and the gradual evolution into dictatorship is frequently bandied about, but, in my view, it is simply a misinterpretation of history. In fact, I cannot think of even one example where such a thing has happened. I'm sure it might have happened in a few cases, but it is certainly not the norm. Totalitarian states are brought into existence through violent revolution; history is full of examples of this.

      (One possible counterexample to my claim is that countries such as Western Europe and the U.S. are actually totalitarian in many ways, which is something that I've heard people claim, but is really just posturing, IMHO.)

      Revisionist history gets involved not because I think there is an organized plot to control people's minds but because people need to understand that history is not immutable. Just because you read it in an "real" textbook doesn't make it true. Textbooks are chosen to satisfy a constituency. That constituency is largely comfortable with the current common view of the world. If the current view is that we should all have a national id complete with biometric information then there is a risk that anyone who suggested otherwise (Orwell perhaps?) will be quietly dropped from the curriculum.

      This is of course true. What is taught in schools reflects the current trends, and even fads, in popular thinking. This may or may not be bad, but it is inevitable. A good example of this is the eugenics movement, which was heavily based in the U.S. at the turn of the century, and in some ways was led by the U.S. At the time, it was considered completely acceptable to espouse and teach these ideas. After WWII, this line of thought became quite unpopular (for obvious reasons), and was of course dropped from curricula.

      I think it might be a mistake to equate not teaching something in high school to trying to censor it. For example, I think we could all agree that we were given a fairly inaccurate picture of U.S. history while in high school. I don't think this was at all because my teachers, or the government, had a plot to confuse my thinking. There just simply isn't enough time to teach everything that could be relevant, or even what was thought to be relevant 50 years ago.

      Every time you add something, you have to remove something. For example, a student growing up in the U.S. today needs to know much more about world affairs than one growing up in the 1950's. So you have to cut things to make room, and things like Teddy Roosevelt and Ben Franklin will get the axe. I hear people my parents' age bemoaning the things my generation didn't learn in school that they did. They forget all the things we learned that they didn't.

      On the other hand, the libraries are open to anyone who wants to learn more about anything. If you can point to a situation where old books and old facts are being held from the public at large, then, yes, that is a serious problem. But this is quite different from deciding what to give students in a standard curriculum. Choosing to not teach a particular thing in "9th grade history" is not censorship; it is an efficiency calculation. Destroying books because of their content is censorship.

      --

      Come on, give it up, that's

    25. Re:Driver's license wasn't always required! by xonker · · Score: 1

      How much regulation is acceptable?

      Well, that's really the question. Of course the answer varies from person to person, but as a society we have to settle on something that protects the interests of the greatest number of people without crippling the government's ability to do the things that we ask of it.

      What does it mean to "keep John Smiths straight"?

      By that I mean that there are a large number of people who share the same name - John Smith being the most common example, or at least it used to be - and the government has to have some way to make sure that it doesn't confuse John Q. Smith from Backwater, Alabama with John Q. Smith from Detroit -- or two John Q. Smiths who happen to live in Backwater, Alabama. Many people find it upsetting when they're arrested for the crimes committed by another person of the same name, but it happens. They'd also not wish to be declared legally deceased when another person of the same name passes away - but that happens too. Partly because of clerical error, partly because our ID system isn't as well-tuned as it might be. Again, you have to strike a balance between collecting information that would allow a cop or coroner to ID someone with 99.999% precision and that person's right to some semblance of privacy. You might object, for privacy concerns, to giving finger prints to get a driver's license - but they might mean the difference between being held for two days without bail and getting out as soon as the police take a print and realize that you're the wrong John Q. Smith. Is it worth the loss of privacy? Well, that's up to the people to decide. You might say no, unless you've had something like that happen to you. Then you might decide it's a small price to pay not to be stuck in a holding cell with a large man named Bubba who thinks you're damn cute...

    26. Re:Driver's license wasn't always required! by xonker · · Score: 1

      Call me a wacko

      Well, if you insist...

      Look there are two issues that you raise - one of which has nothing to do with the debate about the use of licenses as ID. I agree that if I bought a "lifetime license" and had it revoked later I'd be pissed. I think anyone would. I also think the idea of "lifetime licenses" is pretty bad - after a certain age, some people just shouldn't be driving. But that's another issue.

      The second, more germane to this topic -- that asking a motorist to present a license being a presumption of guilt is a bit of a stretch.

      Stopping a motorist and searching their car without probable cause - yes, that would be alarming. Asking to see registration? Sorry, I don't see that as a huge infringement on civil liberties. Now - if the cops are stopping you ever ten feet, that's harrassment - but if you're speeding or whatever and a cop asks you to present a license, that's hardly an abuse of your civil liberties.

      If cops are stopping people just to show their license -- regardless of whether they've committed any other moving violations -- then that might be an issue. They sometimes do this, but it's rare and usually only when they're looking for something. (At least in the US.) But cops in the US ask to see a license when they pull you over for speeding or whatever - this isn't just to see if you have one, it's so they can run a check on your license and so they can write the license number down on the ticket.

      This is different from the nightmare scenario that the original poster was trying to raise - namely a police state where people are required to present "papers" (ie, permission) to travel from point A to point B. The idea that you might be restricted from travelling from town to town without express permission. This is the "slippery slope" scenario that the original poster is asking us to consider. I reject that driver's licenses are going to lead to this scenario, even by subtle degrees. Yes, our children may someday be giving retina scans to receive a license - that doesn't mean that it's a nefarious scheme to restrict civil liberties. It means that we depend on driver's licenses to serve as a de facto ID, and that we want these de facto IDs to be as accurate as humanly possible. Should driver's licenses be the prime means of proving that you're who you say you are? Well, maybe not -- but if people object to connecting the two concepts (driving and identification) then they need to raise that issue - not this shadowy spectre of a iron-fisted police state. I personally do not object to the concept of requiring a test to prove that an individual is likely to operate a vehicle safely. I also don't have a problem with the concept of requiring them to carry proof of having passed this test. I also don't have an objection to a ID card that is used to verify that I'm who I say I am. The two are tied out of convenience, and that may be problematic but it's also deeply entrenched in our culture and institutions.

      The idea that you might be asked to show ID is not indicative of oppression or a police state. And, for just a second, try to think about the guy on the other side of this equation - namely, the cop. This is a person that we're asking to protect the general populace from murderers, thieves, rapists and so forth. They have to have some method of ID'ing people, and of running at least a cursory check on people who might be a murder suspect or whatever. Should they have unlimited power? Of course not. But if we tie their hands too tightly, we effectively remove their ability to arrest people who we rightly want behind bars.

      Let's also remember that, in the US at least, driver's licenses are also used to verify that we are who we say we are for the purpose of cashing checks, using credit cards and other transactions. It's in our best interest to depend on a form of ID that is hard to forge and that defeats impersonation -- so if you lose your wallet or have it stolen someone with drastically different facial features or whatever is going to have a hard time using your credit card.

      I have trouble thinking of a scenario in which an innocent person is going to be put in harm's way by having biometric information in a database. Do I like the idea of losing a bit of privacy? No, but I'm having a tough time thinking of a good solid argument against it that isn't based on a slippery slope argument or the idea that it just makes people uneasy.

    27. Re:Driver's license wasn't always required! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've never had a police office stop me just to look at my license, and I bet you haven't, either.

      You must be white.

    28. Re:Driver's license wasn't always required! by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      Home schooling is a good answer to this situation, and one that is becoming increasingly popular across the country. With home schooling you can counter some of the crap taught in public schools, as well as expand on those topics you - as the parent, and the ultimate authority over your child's education - think are important.

      It's only too bad that this option is often not available to the poor or lower middle class, or to single parents. But people are starting to form cooperatives with like-minded parents to get around this, and I think that's a good thing.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    29. Re:Driver's license wasn't always required! by mpe · · Score: 2

      Sorry, but it doesn't follow that drivers licenses lead to police states that require "papers on demand."

      It also depends exactly what it is used for. If we have a document who's only purpose is to prove that the holder has passed some kind of certification to drive certain types of motor vehicle then there isn't much risk. When the same document is required for things unrelated to driving, such as banking, buying alcohol, getting a telephone, etc then things start to smell bad.

    30. Re:Driver's license wasn't always required! by mpe · · Score: 2

      Sure, but how does this make driver licences necessary? Vehicles are licenced, tested, and insured seperatly from drivers anyway,

      So you never have situations anywhere in the US where insurance is carried by the driver or related to a specific driver & vehicle combination

      and it's not like the lack of identification makes it impossible to enforce traffic laws any more than the lack of pedestrian licences makes it impossible to enforce jaywalking laws,

      "Jaywalking" is a peculiarly American concept. In most of the rest of the world pedestrians have right of way over motor vehicles.

    31. Re:Driver's license wasn't always required! by BCoates · · Score: 1

      Not that anyone who owns a very expensive car is going to let some random shmuck drive it. Which is what a drivers license is for, to show that this random shmuck (who in this case may be your son or daughter) is actually capable of operating the thing without a high likelihood of smashing it into a telephone pole.

      If my (hypothetical) kids are stupid enough to try to drive a car without knowing how, what would keep them from driving without a licence?

      --
      Benjamin Coates

    32. Re:Driver's license wasn't always required! by xonker · · Score: 1

      When the same document is required for things unrelated to driving, such as banking, buying alcohol, getting a telephone, etc then things start to smell bad.

      None of the things you mention are government requirements -- individual companies have decided that driver's licenses are a reasonable method of ensuring that you are who you say you are. Granted, my driving ability has nothing to do with my ability to pay my phone bill -- but this isn't a nefarious plot, nor is it indicative of a police state. Again, being asked to show a driver's license isn't the same as requiring papers to travel freely or whatever.

      You can get a ID card that is not a driver's license that banks, telephone companies and such will accept as proof of your identity. They'll accept military ID cards, or state ID cards. If you have an issue with needing an ID to get a bank account, take it up with the bank - it's not a government requirement.

      You don't need a driver's license to go from Iowa to Indiana (well, unless you drive...), you don't need a driver's license to collect social security or to own property or vote. You may need picture ID, but it doesn't have to be a driver's license - I think it varies state to state. And yes, in some (if not all) states you can register to vote at the same time you register for a driver's license but it's not a requirement. You don't even need a driver's license to go to foreign countries or to return - that's what passports are for. Why they're not requiring biometric data for that is beyond me.

      If people don't like giving biometric information to get a driver's license - then they should protest that. But most people will turn a deaf ear when the only argument you can offer against it is slippery-slope paranoid police state scenario. Why not make a lucid argument against it based on real objections? It appears to be an invasion of privacy, no further argument is necessary. Invasion of privacy is bad enough. If people deem that biometric information is an acceptible thing for the government to collect, then I guess that it's something people will have to live with.

  27. Q:So whats the problem? A: Human Nature by fiendo · · Score: 1

    Those who have power will abuse it. Can you name one government that has never wrongly imprisoned one of their citizens?

    We should only entrust the state with the bare minimum of power necessary to perform it's tasks.

    Remember: in this country *we* employ *them*--not the other way around.

    --
    I went to the city because I wished to live without deliberation.
  28. Watch as.... by loteck · · Score: 4, Interesting

    this post's mod drops like a plane with an afghani pilot.

    There are serious issues surrounding the legalities of a drivers license. There is a strong relationship to between the drivers license and the SSN (social securit number), the latter of which is not required of you to possess (but good luck trying to live without one).

    It comes down to definitions. Words like "travel", "automobile", "motor vehicle", and amoung the most important, "driver". IANAL, but you have to understand that when you enter into the realm of law, you dont just have "general meanings" for words. They are each defined very strictly, and are often redefined in various sections so as not to have any confusion as to where or to whom the law applies.

    "Motor Vehicle" is an important one. Definition in Title 18 USC 31 - "Motor vehicle" means every description or other contrivance propelled or drawn by mechanical power and used for commercial purposes on the highways in the transportation of passengers, or passengers and property."

    "Driver" is another one, definition from Bovier's Law Dictionary - "One employed in conducting a coach, carriage, wagon, or other vehicle..."

    You'll notice that both of these definitions include mention of the thing in question (a Motor Vehicle or a Driver) involved in some form of commericial business. The argument exists, in what may people think as extremists circles, that licensing, by law, is only required for those who wish to use the public roads for commercial use.

    So notice you are getting a "Driver's License" at the "Motor Vehicle Division", and you are not getting a "Traveler's License" at the "Automobile Division". Traveler and Automobile.. very different defintions on those 2 words than on the previous 2.

    So you have "extremist" views and you have people who try to debunk them (cant find a legitimate link right now, but they most definitely exist). The difference seems to be one group is actively reading the laws and applying them (how dare they), and one group is saying "these guys are idiots, OF COURSE everyone has to have licenses, thats how we've done it for YEARS, so it MUST BE RIGHT!!!"

    So again, there are lots of issues surrounding the driver's license. As one previous poster put it, if you dont like the requirements to get one, dont get one. But then life actually becomes hard, and no one wants life to be hard...

    --- Check out this guy who lives a (semi)normal life without a Social Security Number.

    1. Re:Watch as.... by BCoates · · Score: 3, Interesting
      "Motor Vehicle" is an important one. Definition in Title 18 USC 31 - "Motor vehicle" means every description or other contrivance propelled or drawn by mechanical power and used for commercial purposes on the highways in the transportation of passengers, or passengers and property."

      That makes sense, as that's a defintion from federal law, which has the power to regulate interstate commerce--so federal motor vehicle law generally only covers commercial vehicles. (i'm ignoring federal safety/environmental laws here, but those are usually just funding tie-ins to coerce the States into passing conforming state laws.)

      You don't have to have a federal driver's licence, if such a thing exists it's only for semi-truck drivers and the like, not personal vehicles.

      Looking at state law, this is from the California Vehicle Code:

      415. (a) A "motor vehicle" is a vehicle that is self-propelled.
      (b) "Motor vehicle" does not include a self-propelled wheelchair, invalid tricycle, or motorized quadricycle when operated by a person who, by reason of physical disability, is otherwise unable to move about as a pedestrian.

      "Driver" is another one, definition from Bovier's Law Dictionary - "One employed in conducting a coach, carriage, wagon, or other vehicle..."

      'employed in' here most likely means 'performing the action of', not 'is hired to'. The language in that sentence is pretty crusty...

      --
      Benjamin Coates
    2. Re:Watch as.... by GigsVT · · Score: 2

      Did you even read that mindspring link? That guy is one of those people that believes in things like issuing sight drafts against your "government collateral".

      He is a victim of a group of scam artists that operates just below the surface of society, bent on taking advantage of people who already distrust the government.

      He was already running into problems with his illegal behavior, encouraged by the scam artists, in late 1998, I wouldn't be surprised if the entries stopped there because he found himself in jail after that.

      --
      I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
    3. Re:Watch as.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      At the botton of the site he had a link to a Yahoo newsgroup. He did get a little flakey, but some of the stuff was interesting if for no other reason than to hear a different perpective.

    4. Re:Watch as.... by emptybody · · Score: 1

      Reading through his ordeal (up until he stopped updating it) I really wich people would look more closely.

      Just like the federal income tax is supposed to be voluntary, AND that it was implimented to pay for the Civil War, many things that people think are requirements really are not so.

      Just because office workers are using windows does not make it a requirement.

      --
      comment directly in my journal
    5. Re:Watch as.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you the Ben Coates who plays for the Baltimore Ravens?

  29. two words by 2MuchC0ffeeMan · · Score: 2

    Joe Lieberman.

    why do i think he's responsible for this?

    --
    Runnin' On Empty .... I'm Still Alive
    1. Re:two words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      why do i think he's responsible for this?
      Probably because you are completely uninformed as to the basics of government. Lieberman is a Senator, which is a federal position elected by the citizens of Connecticut. He has nothing to do with establishing the policies and procedures of the Connecticut Department of Motor Vehicles, which is a state agency.
    2. Re:two words by Anonynnous+Coward · · Score: 1

      While you may be right as to the lack of clue of the parent poster, you are equally ignorant if you think a United States Senator doesn't have any influence in the goings on of the government in the state he represents. The fiscal implications alone grant him substantial influence.

    3. Re:two words by benzapp · · Score: 1

      Lieberman would like nothing more than to be able to track all of us at will. That sick bastard.

      --
      I don't read or respond to AC posts
  30. I live in Connecticut... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And I can't say this bothers me. Look, the people at the DMV are going to see my face. The people at the DMV know my home adddress, my home phone number, my work address, my work phone number. They know my SS#, they know what year I was born, they know a ton about me. Do I really care that they're going to know about .001% more? Nope.

    What's the worst that could happen? My face gets a near-match to someone who's wanted? I have to spend about 2 minutes in a little room, show someone my license, let them say "Opps, sorry..." and point me to the door? Not a problem.

    Generic response to the generic "slipperly slope" argument:
    I'm an indivdual. I don't care who knows that. If the DMV wants me to submit an essay about my foundest childhood momment I'd probably have fun writing it and submiting it to them. I don't really care who knows trival things about me.

    1. Re:I live in Connecticut... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sure it doesn't bother you living in Connecticut, but do you have cameras installed at every intersection like many American cities? In that case, they can track your every movement automatically in a computer.

  31. Moderation by blixel · · Score: 1

    This system of moderation is almost completely useless.

    One mans humor is another mans flamebait. One mans insightfullness is another mans troll post.

    The only thing this moderation system is good for is getting rid of first posts.. which rather than wasting space in some database as a -1 should just be deleted anyway.

  32. Solution by glowingspleen · · Score: 5, Funny

    Just squinch your face up. Sure you'll have a wacky license picture, but you'll stay anonymous on the cameras...

    1. Re:Solution by Darkninja666 · · Score: 1

      the software works on the bones in your face, and distance between your eyes,nostrols,ears, etc. So unless you can rearrange your face, it will still work ( as much as it is feebly able to).

      --
      Secure multi-mediation is the future of all webbing...
    2. Re:Solution by kyras · · Score: 1

      That's why I say, wear a mask. It's cheaper than plastic surgery.

      --
      Tastes like burning! - Ralph Wiggum
  33. Re:I don't see how this is much different than req by meggito · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Yet...

  34. Re:I don't see how this is much different than req by fiendo · · Score: 1

    The difference is that they are now not only storing all of this new info in a database, but they are also using the database to do realtime verification of your identity. The card is no longer the end-all be-all. If the database gets corrupted, hacked, stolen, modified, you are screwed and can look forward to possibly being incarcerated while they sort it all out.

    from the article:
    "To provide a complete end-to-end security process, DMV has adopted Viisage's face recognition matching technology to verify that the applicant's image matches a stored image in the database for that applicant."

    --
    I went to the city because I wished to live without deliberation.
  35. Gosh darn it... by kko · · Score: 1

    you're all a bunch of whiners... Out here, in the middle of the Caribbean we got a unique ID (that is the same all across our country, unlike your ID systems), It's got our fingerprints on it, and it's got plenty of security features, unlike most of your ID systems. Let's face it: with your systems (driver's licence, and library card! what a joke...) anybody can become someone else by either forging his ID, or leaving the state. And that's great for felons on the run. Are any of you complaining on /. about single ID's, and biometric info felons? Murderers? Dope-pushers? Con-artists? Do you need to assume a new identity in a flash? Nope? I thought so. Why whine then? We have no problems with "big brother" in my country, but it is easier to track a felon in my country than in the US. That's what it's all about.

    Note to conspiracy theorists: shut the hell up. Don't even reply to this. Go get a life.

    --
    No, seriously, I just come here for the articles.
    1. Re:Gosh darn it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      note to all who dont believe that men in government conspire to increase their power over the men they govern: go read a history book. Don't even have kids. Go get a clue.

    2. Re:Gosh darn it... by Darkninja666 · · Score: 1

      That may be a good system. However do you know who has access to your data? Better yet, do you know what they are going to do with it? Has your goverment (assuming its not Cuba) writen into law what can and can not be done with it?

      I would not feel so rightous, if I was you, if I can go to work as a simple librarian and have full access to your data. I just might feel mightly pissed off one day and "accidently" delete your ass from the database! Then how would you prove your you?

      --
      Secure multi-mediation is the future of all webbing...
    3. Re:Gosh darn it... by kko · · Score: 1

      I don't feel righteous on this, though the company that I work for implemented the (country-wide) ID system...
      very few people have access to the database. All of them work for government agencies.... none of them with "write-access", since it's supposed to be sensitive information (doh.... you've watched "The Net" a bit too many times)...
      Credit card companies (or anyone else) who wants info from your ID can get it, by asking you to show your ID (in person).... The company I work for thought it all out before making any stupid mistakes, as I believe any company implementing such a sensitive system should....

      --
      No, seriously, I just come here for the articles.
    4. Re:Gosh darn it... by kko · · Score: 1

      Oh, I forgot, there are laws as to how ID's are to be used (accessed, and the like.....)....

      --
      No, seriously, I just come here for the articles.
    5. Re:Gosh darn it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      None of the people who have access to the database have write access? How does it get updated? Does your country have zero population growth?

    6. Re:Gosh darn it... by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      I think there's a conspiracy. A conspiracy of the incredibly stupid, losers with an abnormally low brain cell count, who jealously try to punish others in any way they can because their own lives are so pitifully pathetic. They'll malicious little nothings whose sole joy is raining on everyone's - anyone's - parade.

      Wouldn't happen to know any of these folks, would you? Living in the Caribbean, perhaps? Not even an American, and therefore not at all invested in a conversation concerning American I.D. systems?

      Thought not.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    7. Re:Gosh darn it... by kko · · Score: 1

      I believe I expressed myself incorrectly. In my country, there's an agency involved with the actual creation of ID's (and their db maintenance, etc....). It's called "Junta Central Electoral". It deals with ID's and all the voting crap (presidents and the like), and only they have (secure) write access to the ID db... Other agencies have only read access...

      --
      No, seriously, I just come here for the articles.
  36. I *implemented* WV's Facial Image DMV DLID system! by bjanz · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Hi folks. Subject line is *fact*. I developed the central image server and was the lead engineer on Polaroid's implementation of the WV DMV DL/ID system. WV uses *both* fingerprint *and* facial image recognition. Fingerprints are optional, but the facial image recognition is used on *all* applicants. The FIR system can be *tuned* to reduce both "false negative" and "false positive" results. The facial image is stored - it's needed to print the license and verify the user for the next issuance. I'm willing to write an article on the subject, if there's any interest. Email me at bjanz@bit-net.com. And, if you're interested, I can provide names who will verify that I did indeed run the WV and Indiana projects. \burt

    --
    There is no such thing as bad weather - only inappropriate clothing.
  37. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 2

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  38. Re:Undue Restrictions-You own you! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    True, however you do own your own body. You do have the right to dictate what can be done with it.
    Your "biometrics" belong to YOU, not the state.

  39. The illusion of "freedom" has served its purpose by flacco · · Score: 4, Interesting
    This whole "freedom" concept was useful as long as we needed something to hold up to shame our communist enemies. Now that they are gone, this "freedom" pretense is expendable.

    Line up for your tattoos, workers. Time to brand some cattle. Shut up and don't complain, or we'll ship your jobs to those former communist states where labor is real cheap.

    Well, we're going to do that anyway, but no need to tell you now.

    --
    pr0n - keeping monitor glass spotless since 1981.
  40. What's new here?!? by Debillitatus · · Score: 3, Insightful
    I'm imagining that over the next few hours, we'll see the traditional /. backlash that we're expecting, hear the words "Big Brother" about a thousand times, etc.

    But my question is, what is new here?

    For example, in every state that I've lived and gotten a driver's license in, I was required to submit all of this information. I had to give biometric information, my NY state driver's licence has my height and eye-color, and other states have required my weight, and so on. Also, every driver's license I've ever had has a picture on it, which was digitized and entered into a database.

    I can understand your position if you think that it's a violation of privacy for you to have to submit to a picture, and to give basic biometric information. I disagree, but I can understand where you're coming from... But, if this is your position, then it must be true that the current situation was intolerable to you. Anyone who thinks that this new development is somehow different than the current situation is just having a knee-jerk reaction.

    --

    Come on, give it up, that's

    1. Re:What's new here?!? by BCoates · · Score: 2

      There's a big difference between height, weight, hair color, etc... and a fingerprint or (if it worked) face biometric. The former (and the photo) make it nontrivial for one person to use another's licence, but they aren't enough to uniquely identify someone in an automated fashion--the police don't go get a printout of everyone 6'1" 210lbs brown hair/brown eyes when someone of that description commits a crime because they'd get a uselessly long list.

      But a fingerprint can be lifted from a crime scene and be matched to one or a few people with relative ease... For me, it's not so much as a fourth-amendment type privacy concern as it is forcing me to assist in my own prosecution, violating the spirit, if not the letter, of the fifth amendment.

      --
      Benjamin Coates

  41. What is next? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I want to know what happens to those people who get in an accident and loose their facial structure as in burn victims or even simple plastic surgury? How are these people going to prove to the system that they are who they say they are? The next thing you will see is the use of our DNA as our social security identification. Man imagine the identity theft on that one. I smell the world of Gattaca coming!

  42. Re:Well-Bio... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    " If you really think anything the Connecticut DMV is asking for is something no one else in government already knows, well, that's cute. "

    Who else has his biometrics?

  43. I feel so much safer! by Robber+Baron · · Score: 2

    I will be able to sleep much more soundly now knowing that I'll never have to worry about those damn Conneticut terrorists hijacking airplanes ever again!

    Seriously folks, we already know that this face-recognition garbage doesn't work anyway...

    --

    You're using her as bait, Master!

  44. The Right To Bear...Vehicals? by JoeShmoe · · Score: 3, Insightful

    You know, I think everyone who takes the stance that "driving is a privaledge, not a right" is flat out wrong. I belive that driving is a right. I believe that it is just as important as the right to bear arms. The only reason that it isn't explicitly spelled out in the US Constitution is because the technology just didn't exist. The forefathers couldn't have conceived of a world where the government could somehow prevented them from using a horse.

    But ask yourself...what would happen if the procedures that applied to cars were applied to cars? You want a gun? First take a mandatory training class. Now get a practice gun that says you can only use a gun within a shooting range for a year. Now fork over your complete life's history, DNA, fingerprint, whatever to become a registered gun owner. Now be required to get gun insurance in order to purchase a gun. Now get a ticket for not keeping your gun stored in the proper location. Now have your gun impounded and lose your gun license for getting too many tickets.

    That's what we would have if guns were given the same treatment under the law as cars. Yet you won't see that happen. Even thought a lot of those things are probably a sensible idea! They are adding to the burden of gun ownership which directly violates the second ammendmant.

    Now I ask you, which is more important, a gun or a car? Back in the 1700's, you have to pretty much to with gun. A gun could provide food for your family. A gun could protect you from robbers and highwaymen. A gun could protect you from wild animals. A gun could make sure that your newly formed government didn't decide to come and oppress you (or at least do so over your dead body). A gun put you on equal terms with the lawmakers...as long as the numbers of you outnumbered the numbers of them.

    Today in the year 2002...which is more important, a gun or a car? A car provides me with a means to earn a living at a job that might be otherwise out of my range of trave...a car provides food for my family. A car gives me the ability to flee danger should I live in a remote area...a car protects me from robber. A car gives me a secure mode of transportation through dark and troublesome terrain...it afford me protection from wild animals I wouldn't have walking. A car allows me to escape from a situation where I am being persecuted...a car protects me from n oppressive government. A car puts me on equal terms with those in authority...as long as I keep driving until they stop following.

    Everyone is fooling themselves into believing you don't need a car in today's society. Walk, ride a bike, take a bus. But if push came to shove, what of those options will save you from any of the terrors I mentioned above? Would we all sleep easy if cars were outlawed entirely and we were forced to use a public transportation system? Go only when and where they allow us to go? Allow our movements to be tracked from start to finish? This is the future that "driving is a privaledge" is heading us towards.

    Stop it people, for the love of god, stop it. A car and a gun are both useful tools, that happen to have the side effect of being capable of causing damage and carnage. But there is no deny the benefit they both provide to our society. The tables have turned...I can pretty much get along without a gun in the yer 2000...the same way someone who carefully arranges their life can get along without a car. But I'm sure glad that if the situation were to change...if my wife were being stalked, or some hoodlums were hanging around my neighborhood...I can count on the fact that I can be guaranteed a means of protecting myself. Why on earth shouldn't the same be true for a car?

    - JoeShmoe

    .

    --
    -- I wonder which will go down in history as the bigger failure: the War on Drugs or the War on Filesharing
    1. Re:The Right To Bear...Vehicals? by mph · · Score: 1
      But ask yourself...what would happen if the procedures that applied to cars were applied to cars?
      I can hardly imagine such a world!
    2. Re:The Right To Bear...Vehicals? by dangermouse · · Score: 2
      The forefathers couldn't have conceived of a world where the government could somehow prevented them from using a horse.

      Don't be absurd. These men were not writing in the Stone Age, and they showed remarkable foresight and solid understanding of the perpetuity of their acts; go read some of their writings, and then come back and tell us that they couldn't possibly have conceived of some oppressive act by a government.

      In regard to your gun/car analogy, you've thrown in the subject of utility as if it has something to do with the Second Amendment. It doesn't. The point of the "right to bear arms" clause is to provide an additional safeguard against usurpation of government power, embodied in the militias controlled by each State. Again, you might want to do some reading... The Federalist No. 46, by Madison, would be worth a look. (Incidentally, in all of the Federalist papers, utility of weaponry for purposes of hunting and self-defense is never mentioned.)

      Driving is a privilege. I agree with you that this type of data collection is a step in the wrong direction, but using such fallacious arguments does not help your case in opposing it.

    3. Re:The Right To Bear...Vehicals? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They are adding to the burden of gun ownership which directly violates the second ammendmant.


      You're making all the other gun nuts look stupid with your ignorance of spelling and, more importantly, the Constitution. I cannot for the life of me get one single gun nut to explain to me what they think "WELL REGULATED" means in the Second Amendment if it doesn't mean government regulation.


      A car and a gun are both useful tools, that happen to have the side effect of being capable of causing damage and carnage


      Ummm, excuse me. Guns are designed to cause damage and carnage. Why do you think they make wad-cutters or black talons - because they look neat?

    4. Re:The Right To Bear...Vehicals? by GigsVT · · Score: 1

      Driving is a privilege.

      This implies that it can be taken away for an arbitrary reason.

      So... if the government decided to take away your license tomorrow because you are of the opinion that the 2nd amendment is a safeguard against an oppressive government, it would be OK?

      Obviously it would be, since you never had a right to drive in the first place.

      --
      I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
    5. Re:The Right To Bear...Vehicals? by lkaos · · Score: 2

      Almost got me on this one. A little too long though :) Started to get bored and therefore began to actually think about what you were proposing...

      The reason that our forefathers saw it necessary to provide explicit protection for the right to bear arms was in order to make sure that people had a means to overthrow the government should the government become tyrannical. This is why the 4th ammendment contains the "well-regulated militia" clause. They didn't intend for any bum to run around with a gun, but instead wanted to make sure that a community could create a militia in order to defend themselves (which the British weren't allowing them to do).

      For those who responded that our forefathers were very insightful, well, that isn't entirely true. A lot of what is contained in the bill of rights is very specific (such as the 3nd ammendment - quartering of troops) or my personal favorite, the $20 figure of the 7th ammendment.

      I dunno, I find it hard to belief that driving a car in an inalienable right. Being secure in one's possessions is though so I definitely think that the handling of private material should be severely - and publicly - auditted to ensure our privacy.

      Good try, but no dice man.

      --
      int func(int a);
      func((b += 3, b));
    6. Re:The Right To Bear...Vehicals? by dangermouse · · Score: 2
      This implies that it can be taken away for an arbitrary reason.

      No, it doesn't. It means that it is not an ability that I hold inalienably. If driving is a right, then it is within the scope of the government's duties to ensure that everyone enjoys that right. Yet nobody is arguing that the government should issue cars to people who can't afford them. (The analogy, if it isn't clear, is defense at trial.) I refuse to regard driving a car as being on the same level as expressing myself freely, and that is the implication that people are making when they use the word "right".

      So... if the government decided to take away your license tomorrow because you are of the opinion that the 2nd amendment is a safeguard against an oppressive government, it would be OK?

      No, that would be a violation of the First Amendment, in that it would place on me a restriction not placed on others on the basis of my political views. Cute, though.

    7. Re:The Right To Bear...Vehicals? by dangermouse · · Score: 2
      Sorry, that was a poor analogy, actually. I retract it, and plead caffeine deprivation.

      My point, however, stands. There is no constitutional guarantee against the government banning the use of motor vehicles outright. Therefore, the power to do so is granted to the States. Therefore, you do not have the right to drive a motor vehicle.

      In the common sense of the word, you may have a right to do so under lower law... but that law is easily amended or rescinded, and that is not the sense in which "right" is being used.

    8. Re:The Right To Bear...Vehicals? by GigsVT · · Score: 1

      There is no constitutional guarantee against the government banning the use of motor vehicles outright.

      So then that makes my point.... Were you trying to disagree with me? :)

      --
      I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
    9. Re:The Right To Bear...Vehicals? by JoeShmoe · · Score: 2

      Yes, that's it, attack my opinion based on my failure to grammar-check it.

      The second ammendment It doesn't mean government regulation if said regulation interferes with it's primary purpose: ensure the right to bear arms. If the government required gun insurance, they automatically anyone who could not pay would be denied their right to bear arms. So in that situation, "regulation" would not be constitutional.

      Requiring someone to register is the first step toward recinding a right. You have to know where the guns are to take them away. Assuming martial law was declared in the United States, the first thing the government would probably do is open up those nice fat gun license records and set about disarming them one by one.

      Whether or not this is resonable or constitutional depends on how upbeat or bleak your view of the future is. But the fact remains that there must be limits to "regulation" or else it is possible to regulate something out of existence.

      You say guns and cars differ in intent. I say they differ in common usage. Potato, pahtahto. I could use a gun to crack open a walnut. I could use a car as a dedicated hit-and-run device. If guns are designed to cause damage and carnage then so is dynamite, butcher knives and sledgehammers. The fact that all three of those things are considered weapons is incidental to their primary designation as tools.

      Now I agree...an automatic gun with copkiller bullets is primarily designed as a human killing tool. But a .22 rifle or a blunderbus loaded with rocksalt are also guns, and the primarly design for them would be hunting and intimidation. So if you want to split hair on semantics, go ahead, but I still consider the "gun" category broad enough to include functional, tool-type uses.

      - JoeShmoe

      .

      --
      -- I wonder which will go down in history as the bigger failure: the War on Drugs or the War on Filesharing
    10. Re:The Right To Bear...Vehicals? by dangermouse · · Score: 1
      Um, perhaps the triple negative confused you. ;)

      To rephrase: The Constitution does not guarantee a right to drive a motor vehicle, because it does nothing to prevent the government from preventing the people from driving. By saying nothing on the matter, it grants the States the power to restrict their peoples' driving as they see fit. So you have no fundamental right to drive.

    11. Re:The Right To Bear...Vehicals? by maxpublic · · Score: 2

      They didn't intend for any bum to run around with a gun,

      They most certainly did. Some quotes, from the folks involved:

      "To preserve liberty, it is essential that the whole body of the people always possess arms, and be taught alike especially when young, how to use them." - Richard H. Lee

      "Are we at last brought to such humiliating and debasing degradation, that we cannot be trusted with arms for our defense? Where is the difference between having our arms in possession and under our direction, and having them under the management of Congress? If our defense be the real object of having those arms, in whose hands can they be trusted with more propriety, or equal safety to us, as in our own hands?" - Patrick Henry

      "A Strong body makes the mind strong. As to the species of exercise, I advise the gun. While this gives moderate exercise to the body, it gives boldness, enterprise, and independence to the mind. Games played with the ball and others of that nature, are too violent for the body and stamp no character on the mind. Let your gun therefore be the constant companion of your walks." - Thomas Jefferson

      "...to preserve liberty, it is essential that the whole body of the people always possess arms, and be taught alike, especially when young, how to use them; nor does it follow from this, that all promiscuously must go into actual service on every occasion. The mind that aims at a select militia, must be influenced by a truly antirepublican principle..." - Patrick Henry

      "The best we can hope for concerning the people at large is that they be properly armed." - Alexander Hamilton

      "Every free man has a right to the use of the press, so he has to the use of his arms." - Tench Coxe

      "The supposed quietude of a good man allures the ruffian; while on the other hand, arms like laws discourage and keep the invader and the plunderer in awe, and preserve order in the world as well as property. The balance of power is the scale of peace. The same balance would be preserved were all the world destitute of arms, for all would be alike; but since some will not, others dare not lay them aside...Horrid mischief would ensue were one half deprived of the use of them;...the weak will come prey to the strong." - Thomas Paine

      "The possession of arms is the distinction between a freeman and a slave. He, who has nothing, and who himself belongs to another, must be defended by him, whose property he is and needs no arms. But he, who thinks he is his own master, and has what he can call his own, ought to have arms to defend himself, and what he possesses; else he live precariously and at discretion. And though for a while, those, who have the sword in their power, abstain from doing him injury, yet by degrees he will be awed." - James Burgh

      "I ask, sir, what is the militia? It is the whole people, except for a few public officials." George Mason

      There are quite a few more quotes along these lines, but I think you get the point.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    12. Re:The Right To Bear...Vehicals? by GigsVT · · Score: 1

      So, since we have no fundamental right to drive, the government can take your license away fro arbitrary reasons, even if they just don't like you.

      --
      I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
    13. Re:The Right To Bear...Vehicals? by dangermouse · · Score: 1

      You're talking in circles. Go back and read my previous response to that ridiculous statement.

    14. Re:The Right To Bear...Vehicals? by GigsVT · · Score: 1

      I think we're just going to have to give it up. It's probably just semantics anyway.

      --
      I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
    15. Re:The Right To Bear...Vehicals? by mpe · · Score: 2

      I cannot for the life of me get one single gun nut to explain to me what they think "WELL REGULATED" means in the Second Amendment if it doesn't mean government regulation.

      Relevent meanings of "well" would appear to include "suitable", "favourable", "satisfactorily", "skillfully", "easily".
      Relevent meanings of "regulated" would appear to include "put in order", "control by law", "work correctly".
      Anyone got an 18th century dictionary handy?

  45. Biometric Information by RNLockwood · · Score: 1

    As far as you being fingered by the facial recogniton programs from your data the failure rate of the software is really high. They will get hundreds if not hundreds of thousands of false matches from the software. If they are looking for 1 person in 10,000 in the population and there is a 10% failure rate they will have 1,000 false positives per 10,000. for for a database of 5 million they might have 500,000 false positives. If they tweak the application to only report the very most likely they then up the risk of missing the person they are looking for.

    It makes it look as if they are doing something and provides moves public money to the companies that provide the equipment, databases, and software.

    Nate

    --
    Nate
    1. Re:Biometric Information by finitimi · · Score: 1

      I agree that it won't work and that it's just more "feelgood" regulation.

      The reason I know it won't work is because of my recent experience with the incompetence of the people who carry out license renewals. The last time I renewed my Connecticut driver's license the person taking my picture held up the line for 20 minutes because she couldn't get a good picture of me. Seems like the reflections from my eyeglasses were causing her trouble. I finally took off my glasses so as she could get a picture which would satisfy her, even though the resulting picture looks less like me.

      I have a Connecticut Pistol Permit as well, which I generally find easier to maintain.

    2. Re:Biometric Information by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're definatly right about the technology not working. There's no way it could ever be used to identify anyone even remotely on a reliable basis. Why,...you'd have to have a scenario in place where technolgy increased at a rate of doubling every 18 month......uh, hey guys? I think we have a problem here. No, seriously!

  46. Little brother. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "There are still some potential problems, such as the Connecticut DMV thinking the software is more reliable that it is, but I don't think it's quite the coming of Big Brother yet."

    WHAT! Government employees who overly rely on their tools instead of their brains? Say it isn't so.

  47. Europe by ZaneMcAuley · · Score: 3, Interesting

    We already have photo's, signatures etc on our licences, they change nearly every year. We use a european model licence (and passport) for every member state. Soon it will include (if not already) a chip on it. So what. It makes my live easier when travelling around europe having this single model. To get this kind of technology accepted, they are marketing it using the FAST TRACK approach. i.e., you get through checks faster at airports etc if you have this that or the other kind of ID.

    --
    ----- Whats wrong with this picture? http://www.revoh.org:1234/whatswrong
  48. A quest for the Holy Grail. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "So go ahead, fingerprint everybody. Take a DNA sample. If it means that 20 years from now, my children will be growing up in a society free of random murders, pedophilia, assault, and all the rest, I'm for it. That's idealistic, but I'll take just 20%."

    Of course it's unrealistic. Man in all the time he's been on this planet has never come up with a workable solution (technical or otherwise) to the detrimental side of his nature. A police state, were the few watch the many, would at the apex of order, quickly slide into chaos. A solution that does a poor job of even addressing the symptom, let alone the disease.

    1. Re:A quest for the Holy Grail. by mpe · · Score: 2

      A police state, were the few watch the many, would at the apex of order, quickly slide into chaos. A solution that does a poor job of even addressing the symptom, let alone the disease.

      It slides into chaos because the few have "information overload". A classic example would be the German Democratic Republic, who had files on everyone, more hardware in their telephone system dedicated to bugging than actually handling telephone calls, a huge army of informants.

  49. grow a beard and wear eye liner by infonography · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Then remove them after the picture. The human face is a lot more variable then face recogition will allow for.

    I wonder how long it will be before American Indian style war paint becomes both a fashion statement, a count measure and a act of defiance.

    --
    Sorry about the writing. Robot fingers, you know? Cliff Steele in DOOM PATROL #23
    1. Re:grow a beard and wear eye liner by Vulture_ · · Score: 1

      Actually, by doing that, no human would recognize that you are the person in the photo, either. Thus you'll be assumed to be trying to use an obviously fake ID, get arrested, and, shortly thereafter, your rectum will have a sperm count, courtesy of Bubba, if you know what I mean.

      --

      The only way the typical /.er can pick up a chick is with a forklift. -- AC

  50. Yup, that's the open and free debate I want... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You my lame-ass friend, are a poster-boy for the NAZIS. "If you don't like what I say or it's not true, don't say anything at all."

  51. requirement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    MI requires a MI drivers license to register a car. If you produce a license from another state, no plate.

  52. So what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nobody has been able, as of yet, to clearly show how they would be injured by the use of biometric identification. Does giving the .gov a retinal scan make you incapable of living exactly as you are now? Will thumbprints on your license make you unable to buy beer? Would a DNA sample take away your ability to be a librarian, sous chef, IT professional, or even police officer?

    The answer is NO, unless of course you are a criminal. If you are a criminal, then you should worry. How many of you are criminals, though?

    Why would the FBI care what you check out from the library? Why would the .gov care that you like to go to McDonald's on Tuesdays? Why would the CIA want to know about how you cheat on your wife?

    They dont.

    The only people that greater security will hurt are the criminals. If you have deluded yourself into thinking that society will ever degrade into a 1984esque Big Brother scenario then you will be sorely disappointed. As long as people are running the world, we will have the basic rights we need. Privacy is not one of them.

    Kludge

    1. Re:So what? by MiTEG · · Score: 1
      Does giving the .gov a retinal scan make you incapable of living exactly as you are now?

      The government could make us all shave our heads and wear uniforms, and it still wouldn't make us incapable of living our lives exactly as we are now. The point is, who would want to live their lives that way?

      --
      The future isn't what it used to be.
  53. Re:I *implemented* WV's Facial Image DMV DLID syst by Darkninja666 · · Score: 1

    So in other words, you just said that you were willing to help others with unjust things for money. Is that not the definition of whore? I would not be proudly proclaiming this fact, its rather disgusting. And I like many other geeks chose to work for business that don't conflict with our ideals (no matter how stupid that seems).

    --
    Secure multi-mediation is the future of all webbing...
  54. falsely conviced by chocolatetrumpet · · Score: 1

    Issue: should parents search the rooms of their children? If the child has nothing to hide, he will consent, right?

    I don't smoke but some of my friends do. One day while hanging out in my room a friend's pack of cig's fell out of his pocket. My mom found them in my room. I was grounded for 3 months!

    Now who will consent to search if he has nothing to hide?

    --
    Spoon not. Fork, or fork not. There is no spoon.
  55. Rights/Disclosure by Skrap · · Score: 2, Interesting

    A question which I don't think has been asked enough is "Do we have a right to know what is being done with our information?". When medical surveys are conducted, they survey-takers are required by law to disclose what information is being taken and for what purpose the information will be used. Shouldn't government be held to the same standard? I'd feel better about handing my info over if I knew that it wasn't going to be used to track my movements, or in some other underhanded way.

    Are there any medical professionals out there who know the details of what is required of medical research in terms of informed consent of the subjects? Also, why that consent is required, and can that be applied in this case?

    Just curious...

  56. I favor registration! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I for one am in favor of mutant registration. What is it that the mutant comunity has to hide, I wonder, that makes them so afraid to identify themselves. I have heard rumors of mutants so powerful they can enter our minds and control our thoughts, taking away our God given free will. I think the American people deserve the right to decide if they want their children to be in school with mutants and to be taught by mutants. The truth is that mutants are very real and they are among us. We must know who they are and above all we must know what they can do!

    1. Re:I favor registration! by Darkninja666 · · Score: 1

      I know that its a qoute from a movie (if you don't know which, you are not a GEEK), and it illustrates the point quite effectively.

      Now all you have to do is substute a particular group (ie "terrorist", "Pedofiles", "Jewish", "Palastian","Gay", "Cristian", "Satanist", "White", "Black", "Alien", or whatever group is out of favor with the current admistration/world) for the word "mutant".
      This is why its a bad idea. We may have to have some kind of national id, but without the proper laws to stop people (by people I do mean everyone, including me) from using the data improperly, we will all be going to communist hell in a handbasket!

      --
      Secure multi-mediation is the future of all webbing...
    2. Re:I favor registration! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thank you sir for understanding the point of my post. You have successfully identified the irony of how we sacrifice our own liberties by giving more power to the government to take away the liberties of those who we feel "don't deserve" them. IE terrorist, murderers, criminals etc. Now by no means am I in favor of terrorist or the like, but I for one do not believe that we must give up any of our own freedoms and liberties to the government in order to eliminate those kinds of people.

  57. UK by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    While photo drivers licenses have now arrived here, I still have a single piece of pink paper, nothing on it but black ink. And it expires in 2036. Yes, I get very strange looks when hiring a car in the US.

  58. Re:I *implemented* WV's Facial Image DMV DLID syst by 0x0d0a · · Score: 1

    Wow, I just commented on that.

    WV sucks -- the mandantory facial recognition. The Microsoft grant to the state board of education that's made IE mandantory, a Microsoft-chosen person responsible for determining tech education in schools, and student surveys on owned products in the home (which go to MS marketing research) mandantory in public schools. WV has the lowest literacy levels, the highest cancer rate, the lowest average income, and almost the highest age of any state in the United States.

  59. S. Carolina sold 3.5M DMV photos for $5000 in 1999 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Also, the South Carolina DMV sold 3.5 million driver photos for $5000 in 1999. There is a lot of info at Charleston.net if you are interested.

    They sold the pictures to a company called Image Data for use in fraud prevention. The idea is that a merchant can buy a special terminal from Image Data that scans the bar code on a South Carolina driver licence. The bar code gets sent to Image Data, and they send back the driver's picture for display on the terminal, so the merchant can verify the person's identity.

    Other states have also tried to sell their info to Image Data, including Florida and Colorado, among others. The governors of these states stopped the sales, after all the bad press from the South Carolina deal, although some of the Colorado photos were released before the deal was halted. News that the database was funded in part by the Secret Service added to the outcry.

  60. Re:I don't see how this is much different than req by btellier · · Score: 3, Informative

    The difference is that the authorities can't use a computer to see into your pocket and get all your personal information (name, address, SS#, etc), however they can set up video cameras everywhere, even in public. and scan your face and have all that info and more.

    Do you think the government should know where you are at all times? That's what they're shooting for.

  61. Re:I don't see how this is much different than req by guanxi · · Score: 2

    I agree. There's no consequential difference between computer technology and old analog equivalents.

    I mean, can you believe some people bother with all this digital stuff, much less argue -- and I'm not making this up -- they argue over which operating system to use? Why doesn't Malda just make Slashdot a dry erase board on his front door?

    Seriously, this argument comes up all the time. Slashdot users actually argue that technological change doesn't matter? Hey, why don't we legalize machine guns? I don't see how this is much different than other weapons, which have been legal for thousands of years.

    end of rant.

  62. International driver's license? by guanxi · · Score: 2

    I don't know much about them, but maybe you can get one of those.

    1. Re:International driver's license? by sweet+reason · · Score: 1

      I don't know much about them, but maybe you can get one of those.

      you can get one. the big trick is getting cops and others to recognise what they are, let alone accept them as identification. many people have never even heard of them.

      --
      Everything should be made as simple as possible, but not simpler. -- A.E.
  63. A New World by circletimessquare · · Score: 4, Insightful

    A lot of these arguments I see here are wonderfully coherent arguments pre-September 11th. But unfortunately, they are all rather knee-jerk reactions after September 11th, because they are spoken in a vacuum that ignores the reality we live in today.

    A show of hands for how many people think we have eliminated the networks that planned September 11th? Am I scare-mogering? By invoking September 11th am I calling upon Fear, Uncertainty, Denial to serve the interests of those who wish to destroy our freedoms? Am I an apologist for the future Stalin/ Hitler/ Pol Pot in our midst? By my arguments am I destroying our freedoms in order to protect them? Knee-jerk territory my friends, knee-jerk reaction. It is almost eight months, no more (!), since September 11th, and y'all are going about your thought processes in complete denial, aren't you?

    There is a difference between explaining a situation and excusing a situation, so those of you who tend toward paranoid schizophrenia, please don't attack me personally if you reply, try to keep it above the belt and reply to the substance of what I am trying to say, and here it is:

    The West has a problem. A huge one. Our current state of national existence is living under a threat to our security that has never existed beforehand in our history. Before September 11th, George Bush was seen as a buffoon. Now he enjoys wonderful ratings and is seen as a hero. Why? Human psychology, my friends. The USA, en masse, is rallying around the commander in chief. It is circling the wagons. You don't attack those who would defend you. The US Government was an overtaxing bloated bureaucratic anachronism before September 11th. Now, they are our saviors.

    Again don't attack me, I am explaining the psychology in the US to those of you chronically out of touch with the reality we live in today- I am not excusing it, get it? Because a herd of buffalo, once it starts charging, has no intelligence, and will trample the fields that feed it just because somebody fired a few rounds by their flanks. Many decades hence, if we remove a lot of our own rights, there may be a lot of regret about our reaction to September 11th, but right now, we are in the thick of it. People are afraid.

    So what am I saying? Y'all sound rather hollow, ok? Because you offer no protection from the kind of folks who committed September 11th. You invoke theories and possibilities of a police state, but the democratic tradition in this country is strong and deep, and the terrorists are REAL and in our midst, plotting our doom. You stand in the way of a herd of trampling buffalo, and you shout slogans that mean nothing to the mob before you, running over their own rights.

    Folks, if you want to protect our freedoms, you have to find new arguments, that is all I am saying, and here is the kicker- you have to invoke those arguments that address the real problem: not our freedom, but our safety! I am with y'all, but I'm just saying: NO ONE IS LISTENING TO YOU. YOU SOUND TIRED AND SHRILL. I agree with you that our rights are in jeopardy, and they need to be saved, but you are doing nothing to appease the approaching mob who will trample our freedom in the name of our safety, get it? THEY DON'T CARE ABOUT THEIR FREEDOM THEY CARE ABOUT THEIR SAFETY. YOU MUST ADDRESS THIS.

    "Those who would give up essential liberty to purchase a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety."
    --Benjamin Franklin, 1759

    Gee what a wonderful quote. Any volunteers to write this on a big banner and hold it up in front of a herd of charging buffalo? I didn't think so.

    People are scared. They are covering their asses, they are not listening with their ears wide open and their minds in full-tilt. They are scared. You must invoke arguments that include their safety, because none of you do, and safety is what the herd of buffalo is worried most about.

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:A New World by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Any volunteers to write this on a big banner and hold it up in front of a herd of charging buffalo?


      Hmm... I think we killed all the buffalo, didn't we? That solves that problem!

    2. Re:A New World by BonThomme · · Score: 1

      Nothing new about it. This is the Old World - always has been. The human race has been both literally and metaphorically bashing each other over the head to obtain resources since before we came out of the trees for good. Yes, even your adversary's fear can be a resource. We've just gotten very good at forgetting that. Franklin's words are prescient. His point is that a society that's foolish enough to believe it can obtain safety by surrendering freedom is doomed to have neither. He was just riffing Aesop, and it's ironic that two generations ago, most 10 year olds would already know this.

      The simple fact of the matter is that you as an individual are the most qualified to protected yourself, despite what your government might tell you. Why? Because you have the most incentive to do so. It's called self-preservation, and it's the reason you're sitting in front a computer today reading these words. Any countless number of your ancestors were terribly good at it. If they weren't, you wouldn't be here. The passengers on the flight that went down in Pennsylvania were quickly reacquianted with it, and only because of it, did the hijackers fail to attain their ultimate objective. If you sit around convinced that someone else is going to save you, you become the ripe target the terrorists make you out to be. No database cataloging your DNA, fingerprints, and retinal scan will change that. Ever.

      It's emblematic of western society and our en loco parentis governments, that nothing is our own fault anymore. If you don't take responsibility for your own failure, you're certainly not going to take responsibility for your own protection.

      If you are unable or unwilling to get out of the way of the charging herd of buffalo, you can turn the herd with a few well-placed gun shots, presuming the government hasn't already taken your gun...

    3. Re:A New World by truesaer · · Score: 1

      Are people in this country really scared? I'm not so sure. I live in Michigan, and I don't think people here are really that worried about terrorism, in the sense of their safety being in direct jeopardy. I'm not anyway. That doesn't mean we're not paying careful attention to the war, and foreign policy. It just means that despite what so many people seem to say I am still capable of rational and logical thoughts. I'm am not peeing my pants while waiting for the government to save me being killed.

    4. Re:A New World by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A show of hands for how many people think we have eliminated the networks that planned September 11th?

      A show of hands: how many terrorists out there are registering for driver's licenses? If a criminal needs an ID he/she will purchase a forged one. The requirement for collecting personally identifiable information to obtain a license in the name of protection from terrorism is the most insanely idiotic argument I have ever heard.

    5. Re:A New World by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

      Nothing new about it. This is the Old World - always has been.

      Uh no, wrong. The scale of the attack. Our unpreparedness. I disagree with you entirely- BUT... let us assume I agree with you 100%? Say you are theoretically correct. What do you say about our nation's psychological reaction to the attack?

      You are saying nothing about our nation's psychological state-of-mind following the attacks, regardless of the truth of your assertion. So, you are in denial- you don't take this into account.

      If you sit around convinced that someone else is going to save you, you become the ripe target the terrorists make you out to be. No database cataloging your DNA, fingerprints, and retinal scan will change that. Ever.

      Your whole self-preservation chest-thumping sounds wonderful. But, uh, it is wrong. Are you forgetting that humans form societies? Humans form large social groups. I'm laughing while I write this, these simple truths sound silly: "the sky is blue." They form supergroups- nations. And these nations act as units to protect their interests and their safety and their identity. Look at an ant colony. It's natural. Social hierarchies amongst humans is nothing you can disregard. It is, in fact, our source of strength. And, since you like him, to invoke Aesop for you: "no man is an island".

      It's emblematic of western society and our en loco parentis governments, that nothing is our own fault anymore. If you don't take responsibility for your own failure, you're certainly not going to take responsibility for your own protection.

      No one is talking about this. Stay on target my friend.

      If you are unable or unwilling to get out of the way of the charging herd of buffalo, you can turn the herd with a few well-placed gun shots, presuming the government hasn't already taken your gun...

      Uh, forget what I said about saying on target- you might take me literally! HAHA. OK, sorry, I am not attacking you personally, that just sounded funny. ;-P

      Look, guns don't solve problems and arming the general populace is never a solution. Period. I won't rail for five thousand paragraphs about this as gun ownership seems to be one of those issues, like abortion rights or evolution, that are intractable beliefs that some people just never seem to get over. So I won't argue with you.

      But I will assert this: tired old gun arguments are not helping the situation. You are in denial. You must revisit your beliefs and come up with a better solution to the threats to our safety we find ourselves amongst today.

      Just ask yourself this: what use would have guns done in one of the terror airplanes on September 11th? Fill the fuselage with pressure-sucking holes? Revisit the last 100 hundred people you have seen in your life, the good and the bad. Do you want to give a gun to every one of them? Do you want to put them all on an airplane with yourself? Self-preservation indeed!

      Are you so omipotent that every bullet that flies from your gun does good? Are you so omnipresent you can guarantee the same from everyone's gun? Does a quick familiarity with statistics reveal that most that is done with guns is bad, not good? OK, I said I wouldn't argue with you, but gunlovers make me ill, sorry.

      --
      intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    6. Re:A New World by Nightspore · · Score: 1

      Okay. How about this:

      Ignoring the underlying causes of terror and trying to bomb a billion desperate, disenfranchised people into submission will ultimately destroy our sorry, panicked asses.

      That simple enough?

      BTW: What's going on is not about fear. It's about the will to exploit fear to consolidate power.

      - Night

    7. Re:A New World by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

      A show of hands: how many terrorists out there are registering for driver's licenses? If a criminal needs an ID he/she will purchase a forged one. The requirement for collecting personally identifiable information to obtain a license in the name of protection from terrorism is the most insanely idiotic argument I have ever heard.

      Follow the bouncing ball: the Terrorists had fake IDs from Virginia because the IDs were easy to forge. So Connecticut is making IDs that are harder to forge. So, what is your agument exactly? Somebody is making it harder for terrorists to forge IDs. The problem you have again is what?

      You, my friend, are still in denial of the reality we now live in. Please no more knee-jerk reactions. You must provide more critical arguments, as you current argument will stop neither the government, nor the terorrists.

      --
      intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    8. Re:A New World by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

      Until September 11th, I worked at 5 World Trade Center. I'm scared. Enough said.

      --
      intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    9. Re:A New World by Rayonic · · Score: 2

      What a diatribe. Well, I feel admonished, but how are we going to come up with arguments that sound pro-safety? The best we've come up with so far is pointing out the fact that these new gestapo-like measures won't actually increase our safety.

      Hey, I've got it. We're being too honest. The other side - Congress, the FBI, etc. - aren't afraid to bend the truth a bit to set their arguments in a pro-safety light. We should be just as dishonest and sensationalist right back at them.

      I can just see it now: "Terrorists tracking us with our faces!" "Criminals using government backdoors to steal your identity!" Don't get all high and mighty on me, it'd work.

    10. Re:A New World by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

      Ignoring the underlying causes of terror and trying to bomb a billion desperate, disenfranchised people into submission will ultimately destroy our sorry, panicked asses.
      That simple enough?


      Who said anything about bombing a billion people? Stay on target. You are WAY out there.

      BTW: What's going on is not about fear. It's about the will to exploit fear to consolidate power.

      Is it absolutely, utterly, beyond your imagination that the US Government just might, in one small, tiny possible way, be composed of largely, basically, good people, trying to undertake simple, prudent measures to increase our safety? Or is every waking second of your life an episode of the X-files? You are not living in denial my friend, you are living in... the twilight zone? That didn't sound fair, that could be construed as a personal attack, so I'll say this: you are WAY WAY WAY WAY WAY off base about reality.

      --
      intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    11. Re:A New World by circletimessquare · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The best we've come up with so far is pointing out the fact that these new gestapo-like measures won't actually increase our safety.

      Two things:

      1. It will increase our safety, but at the cost of our liberties. The question is, how to increase our safety without sacrificing our liberties. It is an honest question. A diatribe? Well, you are right, it was a diatribe too. ;-P

      2. People are so damn quick to invoke Hitler, Pol Pot, Stalin, etc. Uhh... no one is saying you have to wear a yellow star of david on your driver's license and the word "Juden." You are in knee-jerk territory again. I am asking for new arguments, not old ones. In addition, that is fear-mongering. FUD does not help you, since you are trying to fight FUD, which you are saying is being used to rob you of your rights. So why are you using FUD again? What purpose are you serving? Interesting how that works, doesn't it.

      Hey, I've got it. We're being too honest. The other side - Congress, the FBI, etc. - aren't afraid to bend the truth a bit to set their arguments in a pro-safety light. We should be just as dishonest and sensationalist right back at them.

      Oops, I guess you answered #2. Should have read your entire post first. Not much to say now, as you've heeded the call, and joined the dark side.

      --
      intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    12. Re:A New World by kadehje · · Score: 2, Informative
      People are scared. They are covering their asses, they are not listening with their ears wide open and their minds in full-tilt. They are scared. You must invoke arguments that include their safety, because none of you do, and safety is what the herd of buffalo is worried most about.
      Well, how about this for an argument? Let's tell them this herd of buffalo what will happen to their beloved safety if and when the U.S. should ever become a police state.

      Example 1: Nazi Germany. Not a hell of a lot of freedom there. Back then, the threat to Germans' livelihoods was not terrorism, it was hyperinflation and the Great Depression. So the Germans made a deal with Hitler to trade their freedoms in exchange for decent employment and material comfort. Well, the safety of 6 million Jews and others Hitler considered enemies were pretty thoroughly compromised between 1933 and 1945.

      Example 2: Stalin's Soviet Union. Very similar to Hitler, both in the circumstances leading to his acension to power, and in the way he treated those he felt threatened his power base. As a matter of fact, Stalin may have killed up to 40 million people during his 30 year rule.

      Example 3: Twenty-first century Israel. How ironic, considering that within the lifetimes of many of those living there the Jews were themselves the targets of one of history's great atrocities by a police state. And now, by and large, they have become one themselves. Granted, Prime Minister Sharon and his predecessors have not been as evil as Hitler and Stalin, but the tendancy since Israel's founding, and especially since 1967, has been towards increasing government power and declining individual rights for the sake of trying to prevent terrorism. And look where this policy has gotten them: absolutely nowhere. Suicide bombings at supermarkets, on buses, and in nightclubs and restaurants have become literally a weekly occurrence. While Israelis are still certainly freer than many other nations' citizens, they are undeniably less free than they were 35 years ago, and will probably be less free a generation from now than they are today. In fact, if Israel decides that the terrorist situation is worth going to all-out war for, this decline in rights may accelerate. And look how much safer Israelis are now in exchange for giving up many of their rights. Not much, if at all.

      Bottom line: Police states tend to be no safer than democratic states, and in the long run can prove to be even less safe than free states. In addition to all the kinds of external threats that free states like the U.S. face, police states usually add one more threat to the mix: citizens' own government. IMHO, the Israeli situtation is a good lesson to Americans that giving up freedoms to the government in exchange for safety is a bargain in which the government usually doesn't hold up its end of the bargain for very long.

      Instead of giving up our freedoms, we must find a way to get these herds of buffalo to defend their own interests and directly attack the threats of their safety and freedoms. It can be done. In fact it was done on September 11, where the passengers of Flight 93 gave the hijackers the finger and took control of their own destinies. They made sure that no more Americans on the ground would become additional victims the attacks (the hijacking of 93 came after the crashes in New York and Virginia), even if it meant the deaths of everyone on board that plane.

      A couple of months later, the infamous shoe bomber was stopped by people who took personal responsibility over safety and freedom. Imagine how much safer and freer we could be if we could convince everyone to take responsibility for themselves. No, it still won't be a perfect world; once in a while a terror attack will manage to take place despite the best abilities of those best positioned to stop it. The only reason why those on the first three planes did not try to stop Sept. 11 is because they had no way of even imagining the plans of the hijackers. Occasionally sickos will again manage to outimagine sane people and carry out attacks; no government however free or totalitarian is going to stop these attacks either.

      However, even in these circumstances, we can minimize the collateral impact of these future attacks by getting our asses immediately back off the canvas, implementing the appropriate measures (I don't consider things like installing Jersey barriers to deter future truck bombings of major buildings to be an assault on liberty) to prevent a similar attack from ever happening again, and moving on with our lives without relying on Uncle Sam to tell us how everything is going to be OK. Determination is the most potent weapon against terror, not guns or bombs. If the government or media can steer this herd of buffalo toward one goal, with time and effort we can steer it toward the goal of protecting both liberty and safety simultaneously. If we manage to do that, then we can all then laugh as Saddam Hussein, Osama bin Laden, and all those who agree with these guys' tactics for expressing their political ideas get caught in the stampede.
    13. Re:A New World by Sabriel · · Score: 1
      Just a FYI: the planes had to fly well below the height required for depressurisation to occur (else obviously they could not have impacted any buildings, as even the towers weren't anywhere near that high). Holes in the fuselage would not have resulted in the passengers being asphyxiated.

      Hyperbole is a poor debating tactic in this context; we are not (I hope) that gullible, nor are you wielding a Presidential campaign fund. :)

    14. Re:A New World by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I lived in western Berlin during the cold war. Terrorism, car bombs, passenger trains explodeing, libraries and schools being bombed, and public spy exchanges where just stuff that happened. Then there was the mild, yet everpresent threat of being right smack at SAC with loads of nukes sitting around. Nuclear warfare, anyone? Hell, my father was almost blown up twice, once he watched the train a few hundred feet in front of him blown up by a terrorist bomb. I rode on trains that where known to be occasionally bombed.

      I'm not scared. I was surprised September 11th, surprised flying a couple of planes into WTC and the Pentagon was all they did. Hell, I was waiting for the mushroom clouds and nerve gas. Surprise, surprise, someone just might want to kill you. That is life in society. It happens all over the world. Do you really think the forefathers put the right to bear arms in the constitution just so they could shoot up some animals? I know what you have been through is harsh. But, unfortunately, it is a reality check into the way people really are, and life really is like.

    15. Re:A New World by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

      Dude, invoking Hitler, Stalin, Pol Pot, etc. is a tired old argument. Invoking FUD that our Democracy, as deep and strong as it is, even remotely resembles those historical idiocies or is close to it, doesn't help answer the fundamental problem before you: protecting our freedom AND OUR SAFETY. You get no points from anyone for the same old stale Hitler/Stalin/Pol Pot FUD.

      Ah! But you invoke Israel in the same breath! Interesting equating going on there.

      Granted, Prime Minister Sharon and his predecessors have not been as evil as Hitler and Stalin, but the tendancy since Israel's founding, and especially since 1967, has been towards increasing government power and declining individual rights for the sake of trying to prevent terrorism. And look where this policy has gotten them: absolutely nowhere. Suicide bombings at supermarkets, on buses, and in nightclubs and restaurants have become literally a weekly occurrence.

      You are doing 2 things which I find absolutely incredible:

      1. You are drawing a connection between Israel's policies and suicide bombers. Are you forgetting the friggin' suicide bombers!!?? What the heck did the civilians of Israel deserve to be suicide bombed? These suicide bombers are not attacking Israel's government. They are bombing every day people going about their lives. Do THE BOMBERS not figure anywhere in your equation? "Look, you have a bad policy that limits freedoms, and it goes out and miraculously coalesces from the ether and returns as bombs." THE BOMBERS ARE AT FAULT NOT THE ISRAELI GOVERNMENT. How the heck can you blame them for those atrocities?

      2. Israel is supposed to put up with this near daily barrage of attacks and do what? Sit on its hands and go "to act in a way which may be construed as limiting rights is not intellectually acceptable to me." Familiarize yourself with human psychology my friend. You can not, in any stretch of the imagination, expect Israel TO DO NOTHING. It has to do something! If someone comes up to you and starts smacking you around are you supposed to just sit there muttering "I will not take away the rights of the individual smacking me by holding him away from me." You are big and smart and all-knowing. Will you go and lecture Israel about how to protect their people? I didn't think so. Beware the breadth of your own words.

      IMHO, the Israeli situtation is a good lesson to Americans that giving up freedoms to the government in exchange for safety is a bargain in which the government usually doesn't hold up its end of the bargain for very long.

      The intractable situation of Palestinians versus Israelis HAS NOTHING WHATSOEVER TO TEACH AMERICA. I won't waste my breath to tell you how it is, gee, i don't know, a little different? Use your imagination to figure out a few examples to see how it is TOTALLY DIFFERENT.

      A couple of months later, the infamous shoe bomber was stopped by people who took personal responsibility over safety and freedom.

      Personal Responsibility, apparently, is a big buzzword. What if anything, should the US Government do? Nothing? Because it does not involve personal responsibility? All responses are supposed to come from personal responsibility? How the heck is this supposed to be so?

      If the government or media can steer this herd of buffalo toward one goal, with time and effort we can steer it toward the goal of protecting both liberty and safety simultaneously.

      No one is steering the mob. It arises from simple human psychology, fear. The government is not in control of the mob. The media is not in control of the mob. The mob is not in control of the mob. No one is in control. It is a phenomenon of human psychology that arises from the actions of individuals motivated in similar ways that results in a spontaneous social organization that has no real person in control. Chaos theory. Emergent phenomenon. No more paranoid schizophrenia please about secret controls and master plans.

      --
      intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    16. Re:A New World by Qrlx · · Score: 1

      Don't let your fear run your life. "Fear is the mind-killer" and all that.

      Sure, it's easy to say round up all the arabs, pass a bunch of restrictive laws, but will that do anything? Some of those 9-11 guys were getting fake IDs from some lady (now mysteriously dead) in Tennesse (too lazy to google). So a better fake ID would do nothing to prevent a crooked DMV worker from handing them out to a terrorist. (In fact it might be worse, if the authorities think "you have the new super-ID, you must be legit" and put too much creedence into your forged ID.)

      Another point: Remeber that shoe-bomber guy? Eric Froess or something like that (again, too lazy to google) Well, the point is when al-qaeda wanted to attack again, they KNEW we were PROFILING and called on a white guy to carry out their attack.

      I'm sorry your shit blew up on Sep. 11. But you're cowering under a rock and trusting The Government to make all the right decisions. Well' after 9-11 America was scared shitless. We made some hasty, reactionary decisions, like many portions of the USA Patriot act that had nothing to do with what happened on 9-11 now that they're scared shitless is not the best plan. Don't be scared. It makes more sense to realize that the shit that went down on 9-11 has been years in the making and the only reason it blindsided so many people is because we've had our heads in the sand for so goddam long.

      Now would be a good time to pull your head out of the safe, comfy sand and take a good look around.

    17. Re:A New World by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

      the planes had to fly well below the height required for depressurisation to occur (else obviously they could not have impacted any buildings, as even the towers weren't anywhere near that high).

      At the point in time in which the planes were taken over? Can you recite to me the altitude of the planes when they were taken over and when shots might start flying? Can you guarantee me there would be no bad repercussions to shooting inside a plane to the safety of, I don't know, let me use my imagination: other passengers? Rudder-control mechanisms? Fuel storage? Trays of delicious-tasting airplane food? I didn't think so. So what are you saying to me- people should carry guns on planes? What exactly is your point? Are you feeling high and mighty because you can point out that the planes were close to sea level when they hit the towers? OK, I am sitting here applauding. You are really smart and clever. And in the larger context of the argument I am making your point is what?

      Hyperbole is a poor debating tactic in this context

      You are right. It is. But maybe pointing out the poor wisdom about bringing guns on planes is not a poor debating tactic after all.

      we are not (I hope) that gullible, nor are you wielding a Presidential campaign fund. :)

      No I am not, but if the idiocy of gun lovers continues in this country, I may be inspired.

      --
      intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    18. Re:A New World by Sabriel · · Score: 2
      Is it absolutely, utterly, beyond your imagination that the US Government just might, in one small, tiny possible way, be composed of largely, basically, good people, trying to undertake simple, prudent measures to increase our safety?
      I believe (dunno about the original poster) the vast majority of US Government personnel are basically good people, and that a majority of those may even be fundamentally good people.

      I believe that a minority at the top are not fundamentally good, and possibly not even basically good (eg: the congress critters who kowtow to corporate bribes, er, campaign donations). This minority has power far beyond its numbers, as it can enact law.

      I know that a series of minor evils can be made by people, knowingly or not, who'd never commit one great evil.

      I know that humans are fallible; the larger and more powerful the organisation, the more numerous and consequential the number of mistakes it can make. The US Government is very large and powerful indeed.

      In other words - trust people, not government. The founders knew that all too well.

    19. Re:A New World by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

      I am scared for us all. I am still cogent, logical, lucid. I am not a flailing adrenalin-loaded idiot. (Some might disagree with that assessment, but that is their right, I am only trying to argue my point ;-).

      This is my point: a lot of the arguments I see out there are old, are tired. Post-September 11th, a lot of people are listening to them a lot less. I am simply saying that people who defend liberties in this country have to tweak their messages to involve September 11th and the threats to our safety it involves, or less people will listen. That is all I am saying.

      I don't want to round up Arabs. I never implied that, I never even thought about that. Where the heck are you coming from? We are not talking about that. You are WAY out there.

      Our liberties must be preserved, but those who go about preserving them are not responding properly to September 11th. Can y'all hear me on this one?

      --
      intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    20. Re:A New World by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

      I agree with you 100%. Well said. It says bad things about human accountability, but is in line with human psychology, unfortunately.

      But the US Government has to do SOMETHING. How can people expect it to do nothing? Fat cats in Washington sucking at the Corporate trough is a disgrace. The founders would personally take them out and smack them on the ass. But what I am saying is another issue: the government must do SOMETHING. Regardless of the evils extant, implied, illusionary, right there staring us smack in the face, etc. If you stand there screaming it should do nothing, personal responsibility, etc., blah blah blah, it doesn't change the fact the government will do something, and a lot of every day people in this country agree it should do something.

      So that argument is closed. The argument now is, what can be done that keeps our liberties intact, but protects our safety? Am I naive? I hope not. But I am hopeful. I still believe in the USA. (Tear streaming down cheek, flag waving, US Eagle, etc. ;-P )

      --
      intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    21. Re:A New World by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

      I can't argue much with you. To do so would be patronizing, as I have no idea what you really went through.

      All I can say is that from my personal experience, September 11th can't just be responded with...

      Surprise, surprise, someone just might want to kill you. That is life in society. It happens all over the world.

      I'm sorry, I just can't accept that.

      Do you really think the forefathers put the right to bear arms in the constitution just so they could shoot up some animals?

      No, it was Native Americans, but I am going to dodge the larger gun issue and just say that personal responsiblity is not the answer. Gun-ownership is not the answer to September 11th. Aditionally, personal responsibility is not the complete answer. The US Gonvernment is part of the response.

      --
      intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    22. Re:A New World by curunir · · Score: 2

      Wow...what you said makes a lot of sense...but it makes some very big assumptions.

      1) Terrorist attacks are the US's biggest problem.

      Ok...last time I checked, roughly 4000-5000 people died on September 11. Yes, it's tragic. But due to the visibility of the event, it's importance has been blown way out of proportion. Considering that millions of people die each year in this country, this represents a *very* small percentage. Things like car accidents, gun violence and lung cancer are far more pressing issues...even malnutrition. If we devoted half as much effort to helping to feed people living below the poverty line as we do toward stopping terrorism, everyone in this country wouldn't have to worry where their next meal will come from.

      2) The US needs to actively stop terrorist attacks.

      This may sound counter-intuitive, but I don't think we need to take such an active stance in preventing terrorist activities. Terrorists perpetrate acts like those that happened on 9/11 because of the publicity that they generate. They ensure that the issues important to the terrorist are front-page news. And US news agencies play right into their hands. A certain part of the motivation toward committing terrorist acts is that it will occupy our entire attention for a long period of time.

      For analogy's sake, try this one on for size. Back in jr high school, I was a geekish, extremely white boy who was considerably smaller than pretty much anyone else at the school. The school bullies immediately targetted me and began to pick on me. The first month of school was pretty bad...I got beat up a lot. But I never fought back, ran or resisted in any fashion. Pretty soon, the bullies came to the conclusion that picking on me was boring...and stopped. They just couldn't get a rise out of me and never saw the fear in my eyes that they needed to fulfill their reason for bullying others.

      So, while it may be a stretch to cast the US into the "victim" role and the terrorists into the "bully" role, there is a parallel there. By having 24/7 updates of the events for the next 6 months, we've sent terrorists a clear message. Doing this type of thing *will* get our attention. If we had resumed normal daily routine after a couple of days, there would be less of a reason for terrorists to try this kind of thing again.

      3) Our "buffalo herd" reaction was a natural consequence of the 9/11 events.

      The "buffalo herd" reaction that we're currently having is a direct result of the media coverage of the events. More sensable coverage would not have elicitted such a rise out of the "herd." If the media kept things in perspective, there would be no chance of stuff like this (the story we're talking about) happening.

      4) Safety is more important than freedom.

      Ok...this wasn't the case for the GI's who fought in WWI, WWII or any war since then. Simply put, some things are worth dying for. Many of us are willing to accept the inherant risk in valuing our freedom over our safty.

      --
      "Don't blame me, I voted for Kodos!"
    23. Re:A New World by Sloppy · · Score: 1

      Are people in this country really scared? I'm not so sure. I live in Michigan, and I don't think people here are really that worried about terrorism

      There's almost certainly a correlation between fear and geographic location. Most people in this country don't live or work within sight of the missing towers or the pentagon.

      One thing to keep in mind, though, is the people in government and mass media, don't have the same distribution as the whole population. A lot of TV people who were used to seeing the towers every day, saw them burning, and now don't see them at all. A lot of government people see the pentagon and know they could have easily been targeted instead.

      These people shape public opinions and policies, which I think is why things are getting so distorted-looking to The Rest Of Us.

      --
      As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
    24. Re:A New World by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

      If we devoted half as much effort to helping to feed people living below the poverty line as we do toward stopping terrorism, everyone in this country wouldn't have to worry where their next meal will come from.

      This is a classic argument. Do you punish the criminal? Or do you explain his crime in the larger context of society? The man who steals a loaf of bread to feed his family certainly can be excused. But I don't see how that kind of crime can even begin to be equated with the terrorists of Sept. 11th. Once a criminal crosses a certain line, he is wholly evil and responsible for his or her crimes and must pay for them outside of the context of society. You can argue until you are blue in the face about where that line actually lies, but you can not argue that, wherever that line may be, that the terrorists did not cross it. Of course their actions can be explained in the context of their upbringing, but what are we supposed to do? Remove all personal accountability? Society as a whole is responsible for every crime?

      But I never fought back, ran or resisted in any fashion. Pretty soon, the bullies came to the conclusion that picking on me was boring...and stopped. They just couldn't get a rise out of me and never saw the fear in my eyes that they needed to fulfill their reason for bullying others.

      Oh my gawd, what are you smoking? Let's extend your analogy to more accurately reflect reality. The bullies at your school wanted to recreate a 13th Century theology and it was their holy duty to wipe your existence off of the face of the Earth by any means possible because you stood in the way of divine justice, of which they were the agents of. How does that change your analogy a little? Geez.

      The "buffalo herd" reaction that we're currently having is a direct result of the media coverage of the events.

      Mob mentality is an emergent psychological phenomenon independent of any controlling force. The government is not pulling the strings. The media is not pulling the strings. The fear is real, palpable, and emergent from individual behavior. Please, no more conspiracy theories please, that is old tired argument territory.

      Safety is more important than freedom. Ok...this wasn't the case for the GI's who fought in WWI, WWII or any war since then. Simply put, some things are worth dying for. Many of us are willing to accept the inherant risk in valuing our freedom over our safty.

      I am not arguing for safety over freedom. I am saying you can not argue freedom wholly without any consideration of safety. Does freedom provide safety? I think it does. Do the terrorists come from free societies? No. So can we argue about freedom alone? No. Should we worry about those in our midst who do not value freedom, and ensure our safety from them? Yes. By compromising our freedom? No. How? That is the question I pose to you.

      --
      intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    25. Re:A New World by gibbsjoh · · Score: 1

      "A society that values priviledge over principle soon loses both" - Eisenhower

      People aren't only scared, they're pretty stupid and very gullible too.

      --
      -- "...I'm a bad guy because I, well, I sing some rock-and-roll songs." M. Manson
    26. Re:A New World by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

      "A society that values priviledge over principle soon loses both" - Eisenhower

      People aren't only scared, they're pretty stupid and very gullible too.


      Clap, clap, clap. A round of applause for this wonderful quote and the witty observation. Do you have anything concrete to add? Or do you just like looking down your nose at the American populace? What gives you the right to do that? I guess some of us are more priviledged than others... oops, too ironic for ya. ;-P

      --
      intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    27. Re:A New World by Qrlx · · Score: 1

      Hey, I see your point but If I just agreed with you, slashdot would get kinda boring.

      I'm not saying you want to round up Arabs. That was just an example of how reactionary thinking is not smart thinking.

      You are completely right, people are scared for their lives and don't give a rat's ass about idealistic things like libery and freedom anymore. (Well I care, but those poll-takers never call me.)

      How do we go about preserving our liberties in the face of "you're either with us or with the terrorists?" If people are going to buy into that, then we're doomed. If you can't criticize anything that the prez does, because we've instictively circled the wagons in a time of crisis, then I guess we have to wait out the crisis and hope sanity returns. Which I think is what's starting to happen.

      It *has* been eight months or so since 9/11 (give or take, if you count daylight savings time) and I do think that things are "gettting back to normal". I flew a bunch a few weeks ago and people seemed to accept the increased seccurity measures without making much of a fuss, and the lines moved along quickly. People are shopping, people are going to Disney WOrld, the situation in Israel is bigger news than whatever's happening in Afghanistan.

      My biggest concern is that "getting back to normal" means people remain blissfully ignorant of the world around them as they drive their SUVs through the suburbs...

    28. Re:A New World by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

      Slashdot just got real boring, because I agree with you. ;-P

      People jet around in these gas-guzzling SUVs blissfully unaware of where the expensive gas they use comes from. And I agree people are getting "back to normal" now by obsessing over the kinds of things we cared about before September 11th again- the size of J.Lo's butt, shark attacks, the reality of Titney Sphere's breasts, etc. While the underlying reasons behind September 11th have not moved one iota. I am afrain the when/ if question of another September 11th is more when and less if. It seems sometimes 99% of our reactions so far will make not one difference. Flag waving, you're either with us or a terrorist, etc. They sound good, they look good. So tell me something- have the terrorists really stopped? Have the reasons for their hatred of us gone away?

      --
      intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    29. Re:A New World by BonThomme · · Score: 1

      Uh no, wrong. The scale of the attack. Our unpreparedness. I disagree with you entirely- BUT... let us assume I agree with you 100%? Say you are theoretically correct. What do you say about our nation's psychological reaction to the attack?

      Scale of the attack? 4000+ people? Sorry, that doesn't even make the top 50 in the atrocities man has perpetrated on himself. Consult your history. Our 'unpreparedness' is exactly my point. We've done a great job of deluding ourselves that we're above it all. No one can touch us. Worst case, our government will protect us. Wrong on all counts.

      You are saying nothing about our nation's psychological state-of-mind following the attacks, regardless of the truth of your assertion. So, you are in denial- you don't take this into account.

      It hasn't changed. Note the subject of the original post. The sentiment is 'the government will protect me.' What's the big change except the expectation that, golly, the government has to be a whole lot more intrusive to protect me, since they obviously weren't intrusive enough before.

      Your whole self-preservation chest-thumping sounds wonderful. But, uh, it is wrong. Are you forgetting that humans form societies? Humans form large social groups.
      So what? They are not mutually exclusive. An individual has a duty to himself and a duty to the society he belongs to. The fact that you think one precludes the other illuminates why you think the way you do.

      Aesop for you: "no man is an island".
      Aesop? Wrong. Try John Donne.

      If you don't take responsibility for your own failure, you're certainly not going to take responsibility for your own protection.
      No one is talking about this. Stay on target my friend.


      No, that's precisely on point. You are foremost responsible for yourself - that includes your own protection. You should spend some time contemplating why you don't see the connection.


      Uh, forget what I said about saying on target- you might take me literally! HAHA. OK, sorry, I am not attacking you personally, that just sounded funny. ;-P


      The gun is as valid a metaphor as your herd of buffalo. If you weren't so busy tripping over your own ego, you'd see that. Your words can turn a mob of panicked citizens as bullets (fired into the air) can turn a herd of buffalo. And not coincidentally, your words can also be taken from you as easily as your bullets.

      (long anti-gun polemic)
      Obviously, this is a favorite topic of yours since you can't resist hearing yourself talk about it. A lot more people are killed and injured by automobiles than by guns held by ordinary citizens. And again, it's not the cell-phoning, puppy-lapping, big-gulping motorist at fault, it's that 'defective' automobile. Gee, why does that abdication of personal responsibility sound so familiar?

      As for the poor souls aboard the Pennsylvania flight, the basic individual survival instinct that you scoff at is the only thing that stopped the plane from doing a 1-point landing on the White House. Once some of the passengers understood that the only people who were going to save them were themselves, they took action. Obviously, the terrorists were not expecting that from a plane load of bourgeois Americans. The public knowledge that at least some individuals on a flight will fight to retake the plane does a lot more to prevent more of the same than having airport security give you a colonoscopy every time you pass through.

      You claim to desire a solution to the problem posed by the original post instead of the usual /. caterwauling, but your own words belie a far greater interest in your own sophistry.

    30. Re:A New World by Saint+Aardvark · · Score: 1

      Wow...wow. Honestly, this is inspired. It'll be hard to make this not come across as sarcasm, but dude, that is inspired. Truly insightful. I congratulate you.

    31. Re:A New World by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

      Scale of the attack? 4000+ people? Sorry, that doesn't even make the top 50 in the atrocities man has perpetrated on himself. Consult your history.

      OK, you are right. We should do nothing. Oh wait, we should do something? WTF are you saying? THE SCALE IS NOT IMPORTANT WISEASS? DENY IT'S THE BIGGEST F***ING THING TO HAPPEN IN THE US SINCE THE CIVIL WAR.

      Our 'unpreparedness' is exactly my point. We've done a great job of deluding ourselves that we're above it all. No one can touch us. Worst case, our government will protect us. Wrong on all counts.

      I agree with you that we have deluded ourselves. The CIA is a f***ing joke. The Philippines told us about this plot 7 years before September 11th. The fact the terrorists got visas 6 months after September 11th is pure disgusting. But how the hell can you argue that the government can not protect us? What the hell are you saying? Are you supporting anarchy? Just WTF are saying my friend?

      Oh gawd, I just read the rest of your invectives. So tiring. I'm glad you like arguing, yelling, I am just too tired to counterpoint you each time, so I'll make it easy for you: I am an idiot, I am an asshole. I am egomaniac. I misquote Aesop. I see no metaphorical value in the idea of the gun. I want everyone to abdicate personal responsiblity and live like sheep under a dictatorial government. I laugh at the survival instincts of everyone who died on every doomed flight since the dawn of time just because I am that sort of disagreeable kind of fellow who doesn't believe in survival instincts. ;-P Happy now? OK, now listen:

      I said this: Freedom is being threatened, but all I hear is tired old arguements. I want our safety protected too, in a way that does not threaten our freedom. You are an argumentative fellow, I can admire that, but all I see so far is inflections off of things I say, reactions, knee-jerks. Say something concrete, forward-thinking, and positive. Don't hurl polemics at me. SAY SOMETHING ORIGINAL. I asked an honest question: can the Slashdot crowd think of a way to protect us from terrorists without sacrificing our freedoms? I didn't say it to sound snide. I didn't say that to laugh at people from some Ivory Tower of intellectual superiority. I ASKED AN HONEST QUESTION. Let's keep it positive, fuckface.

      Oh shoot! Sorry! HAHA ;-P

      --
      intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    32. Re:A New World by curunir · · Score: 2

      You can argue until you are blue in the face about where that line actually lies, but you can not argue that, wherever that line may be, that the terrorists did not cross it.

      I was arguing no such thing. If a terrorist is found, he should be punished for his actions. All I was saying is that the magnitude of the events of 9/11 have been exaggerated. We have much larger problems than terrorism which are being ignored due to the way that our government and the media have sensationalized the events.

      The bullies at your school wanted to recreate a 13th Century theology and it was their holy duty to wipe your existence off of the face of the Earth by any means possible because you stood in the way of divine justice, of which they were the agents of.

      Why is it that the only people who spout off about this "holy war" bullshit are people who have no real knowledge of arab religion or culture. If you think they'd still give a rats ass about us if we didn't have such a major presence in the middle east, then you're seriously smoking something. How do you think we'd feel if arabs decided to occupy texas, oppressing the current residents and arming it to the extent that it could easily destroy the entire rest of the US...might you be slightly upset? I'm not trying to justify their actions. But their motivations are *not* solely religious.

      Mob mentality is an emergent psychological phenomenon independent of any controlling force.

      You think Americans would feel as strongly as they do if they hadn't been force fed images of the towers collapsing for two whole months? Now who's smoking something? Sure there is no controlling force, but there can certainly be catalysts for that mob mentality, whether that catalyst is a result of some conspiracy is a topic for someone more paranoid than myself...I don't really care.

      --
      "Don't blame me, I voted for Kodos!"
    33. Re:A New World by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

      I can't argue with you really. You make sense. I am just saying that some of what you say does not get at the whole picture. I am not going to argue with you, but just hear me out on your points:

      1. We have more important things to worry about.

      Agreed. But this is the worst thing to happen on US soil since the Civil War. It needs a serious reaction. And it isn't the only thing we are doing. Life does go on, but a big reaction is needed. Not the ONLY thing we do all day, but a big part of our activities nonetheless.

      2. There are more motivations behind the Terrorists than just religion.

      Again, agreed. Occupation. Invasion. But what are we to do? Become completely isolationist? Try to run the whole world? Both are extremes. The truth is in the middle. And some of what is in the middle involves what we have done in the Middle East, and what we still will do. Why must we do anything? We have to do something! Can we make mistakes and make things worse? Of course we can! But does that mean we should do nothing? Is some of the terrorists gripes have to do with bad things we have already done? Yes, but how could anything we have done possibly compare to what they have done? How are we responsible for that kind of evil?

      3. the mob mentality is fed by the media.

      Again, agreed. But the media is not controlled by the government. the media is controlled by ratings. the media shows people what they WANT to see. the media does not control the US populace. the media reflects the conscience of america.

      --
      intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    34. Re:A New World by kadehje · · Score: 1

      Perhaps you misunderstood the intention of my last post.

      First of all, the Stalin and Hitler discussions are not FUD. These are facts that, at least in general principle, few if any respected intellectuals will dispute. Sure, there may be some that might say that the 40 million figure I mentioned regarding the size of Stalin's massacres might be incorrect, but even if it turned out to only a few million, the general point holds. Now, if you can come up with a few dictatorships or police states that have (a) significantly mitigated existing threats to their subjects' lives and security compared to the prior state of affairs and (b) did not introduce their own threats to their subjects' lives and security to replace the ones referred to in (a), then you may be able to come up with a reasonable argument. However, to dismiss Hitler's and Stalin's atrocities as FUD does not do justice to the facts and does a great injustice to the victims of those atrocities.

      I did not intend in any way to that Israel's actions have inspired the suicide bombing campaigns or that the government is for any reason to blame for them. All I meant was the fact that the suicide bombing has continued and in fact recently has accelerated despite the Israeli government's campaign to stop terrorism. This fact, in addition to the tendancy of individual freedoms to be sacrificed in an attempt to promote common safety, I used as evidence in my previous argument that sacrficing individual freedoms in no way guarantees individual safety.

      I did not state that the government should do NOTHING against terrorism; however the attitude that some people have that government should DO EVERYTHING and the governed simply relying on their government to take care of things needs to be eliminated. Everyone in society, including those in government, has a responsibility to confront terrorism. As for the appropriate role for government's in combatting terrorism: I feel that use legally accepted means to determine those who have either comitted acts of terrorism or those that have shown a clear and present intent of performing imminent attacks, apprehend and try them according to legally accepted principles, and if found guilty, appropriately punished as murderers or those involved in a murder conspiracy. Israel's recent actions in the West Bank may in fact be justified if it turns out Israel has evidence supporting their claims that the people they are arresting are in fact militants connected with past acts of terrorism or clearly involved in a conspiracy to conduct future attacks on civilians.

      However, I feel that legal principles must be adhered to: if existing principles are broken or new principles created for the purposes of combatting terrorism, then the government is in effect demonstrating the fact that its policies can be manipulated by the terrorists, which in effect encourages further terrorism campaigns. For example, in the U.S., torture is not currently a legally accepted means of collecting evidence in criminal cases. If the U.S. decides to allow torture of those suspected to be connected with terrorism since the government decides it is absolutely essential to collect evidence related to terrorism regardless of the measures used to get it or the quality of evidence collected from these measures, then this step is effectively some degree of capitulation to terrorists.

      Furthermore, I feel that in no way that the rights of innocent citizens be restricted in response to terrorism, since this is a more important policy change departure than such a legal change as allowing evidence from tortured people to be introduced in criminal trials. Profiling, on racial or other purely demographic grounds, is unacceptable. Secondary security measures at airports (i.e. those performed on selected passengers in addition to those performed on all passengers) should be done on those selected purely at random, unless a certain individual has demonstrated an increased risk through prior behaviors and connections (such as living with or having frequent contact with known terrorists). Similarly, enacting new laws solely to deal with terrorism without indicating how these new laws will materially reduce risks (e.g. the Patriot Act) is unacceptable. Bottom line regarding my opinion of government's role against terrorism: attacking known conspirators and their logistical supporters using previously acceptable means is OK; using terrorism and FUD as grounds to change laws and social policy is not acceptable, and is more often than not counterproductive.

      I do agree with you that the government did not actively play on people's fears in the wake of the attacks. I disagree on the media's actions. Though they might not control the mob, media outlets do have control over what gets shown on their airwaves. And mobs hardly ever get started spontaneously; large groups of people generally need to have some external stimulus that turns them into a mob. I found the coverage on CNN, Headline News, and Fox News to be incredibly sensationalistic in the latter part of September and the early part of October. Replaying one of the planes hitting the WTC or one of the towers falling on Sept. 12 or 13 as part of a story on the attacks is one thing. However, the coverage I saw on CNN one day about two weeks afterwards was horrifying, and from what I could tell, had no journalistic purpose. During my lunch hour at work, they had CNN playing in the cafeteria that day. CNN was interviewing some terrorism expert as part of their 9/11 coverage. Instead of putting showing the expert live or showing the news anchor with a caption along the lines of "On the phone: Dr. " at the bottom of the screen, they showed a sequece of films that from what I could tell served solely to play to people's fears and inspire a mob mentality among the American public. They showed, FIVE TO TEN TIMES per shot, (a) one of the planes hitting the WTC, (b) people jumping from the burning parts of the tower (from what I could tell it was one clip of two people jumping that was being looped), (c) Tower Two's collapse as viewed from off the southern tip of Manhattan, (d) footage of the collapse at street level including shots of those running from the debris, (e) footage of the second tower collapsing. How can this kind of coverage be viewed by a respectable journalist as anything other than fear-mongering? It wasn't like any of the clips they showed were newly televised footage. And even if they were, is it really necessary to play a 5-second clip of one of the planes crashing in a continuous loop?

      I didn't watch as much coverage from the three major broadcast networks, but it appears that CBS and ABC were considerably more responsible in how they aired certain material. Yes, they showed the gory stuff too, because it was news. But I certainly don't remember any looping of the planes crashing or the towers falling. In fact, after about two weeks, ABC essentially stopped showing the plane crashes stating that continuing to do so for reasons other than providing important context that other clips could not provided for a story would be insensitive and irresponsible.

      So while your point may often be valid about mobs being uncontrollable once they get going, mob action can clearly be instigated by those both inside and outside the eventual mob. The major media outlets are in the best position of anybody in society to evoke emotion in the public. If the media chooses to instill fear into those not directly impacted by the attacks by focusing on the natural fears of those that were there, the media should be held accountable for the consequences of their actions. If I made the proverbial breach of free speech and proceeded to yell "Fire! Oh my God, fire! We're all going to die! Everybody run for your lives!" in the crowded theatre and dozens of people died in the stampede, I would certainly think you would hold me responsible for my actions. Even if there was a fire, I could have announced this fact in a different manner that would have created a much more orderly evacuation, like saying "There's a small fire in this room. Please look around the theater for the nearest exit and walk quickly and calmly out of the building." When hearing or reading a media story, a responsible person should try to take all biases, even unintentional ones that stem from one's background, and motivations into account before simply accepting every story at face value.

    35. Re:A New World by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

      I read your entire post. You are arguing lucidly on everything. But I have 3 things to say regarding your points:

      1. There was miscommunication on the FUD situation. In my original post I plead with the Slashdot crowd not to invoke Hitler/ Stalin/ Pol Pot, etc. Why? It is FUD in that context. What you said about those folks and what they did is not FUD, I agree with your depcitions of their monstrosities. But invoking their memories in the context of CT putting more intrusive identifiers on licenses is FUD. Unneeded. Tired. Yawn. That is what I am saying. We are nowhere near those sitautions in America. Am I saying we never will be? Of course not. Could we be drifitng in that direction? Possibly, but by inches, not yards. We came damn close with McCarthy in the fifties. We must be eternally vigilant. But trotting out those tired old ghosts does not further your argument in this context. The point of my whole post was to disavow the old tired arguments in exchange for new ones.

      2. Your concerns about the slippery slopes and privacies are well-spoken. I can not argue with you, at all. It is my fear too. I am asking Slashdot for ways to ensure safety without ruining freedoms. I am not being snide. I am not making the argument in order to eventually lament it is impossible or something. It was an honest question! Can we ensure safety without encroaching on freedoms?

      3. Your point about media, strikes me, as well, to be honest, out of touch. The media is not controlled by our Government. It is not controlled by bigwigs in smokey rooms. It is controlled by ratings. The media in the US is pretty much a reflection of our shared conscience. What sells is put on TV. If people do not like it, they change the channel. So the channel has to keep their attention. If you don't like the sensationalism, in a way, you don't like a component of human nature. But guess what? We have free speech in this country, so the media can show whatever it wants. The good, the bad and the ugly. Lots of sex and violence. It sells. It fascinates humanity on a gut level. We watch it constantly. We get what we ask for in the first amendment. And your unhappiness with this is fine, no problem. Just don't watch! But if your unhappiness turns into a desire to change the media... then you yourself have just gone down a slippery slope, haven't you? I am not implying that you are, I am just saying you should make peace with the sensationalistic quality of American Media unless you want to go over to the dark side. It is what it is because of what we are BECAUSE of our freedom of the press.

      --
      intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    36. Re:A New World by BonThomme · · Score: 1

      DENY IT'S THE BIGGEST F***ING THING TO HAPPEN IN THE US SINCE THE CIVIL WAR.

      'in the US' being the operative phrase. Does remote geography make it less horrific? Does the fact countless millions of US citizens died on foreign soil make it less so? Well sure it does, because the time and place of 9/11 call into question your own survival. You need to realize that a large part of the world has lived their entire lives with exactly that reality. Get inside their heads, and you'll have no problem understanding why they're pretty indifferent about killing you.

      You make my argument better than I do. In one breath, you rail that the government must do something, and in the next, you say the CIA is a joke. The problem is, the CIA is not a joke (though INS certainly is). The CIA is the premier intelligence agency in the world. Unfortunately, that is not enough. A monolithic (government) agency can not defend against a distributed threat (terrorism). No amount of misguided legislation will change that. A distributed threat must be met by a distributed defense. The most distributed defense you can get is the individual. As an example, a woman who takes a self-defense course is taking responsibility for her own defense. She's made the decision that a monolithic organization (police) cannot adequately protect her from distributed threats like muggers, rapists, and car-jackers. That doesn't mean police are useless, it means the best defense is the police *augmented* by the personal ability to defend yourself. In the end, it's not about guns or karate, it's about attitude. If the first question you ask yourself is "What can the government do?" you'll find your freedoms steadily eroded. If your first question is "What can I do?", you've got a whisper of a chance of preserving those freedoms for your children. Those are your choices.

    37. Re:A New World by maxpublic · · Score: 2

      Look, guns don't solve problems and arming the general populace is never a solution. Period.

      And disarming the general populace is? Please, don't make me laugh.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    38. Re:A New World by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

      I am glad you can paraphrase JFK.

      You are saying personal responsibility is the answer.

      OK, wonderful, YAWN. Didja read my post dood? I said no more tired old arguments. Give me something fresh. Gee, remember my post?

      Let me rephrase the question for you:

      can the US Government do anything to ensure our safety without infringing on our rights?

      Maybe by your silence on this issue, you see no way of this happening.

      Here's some logic for you. The US Government must do SOMETHING. The US populace demands it. It can bomb Easter Island until it doesn't exist anymore, but it must do SOMETHING, OK? So, WHAT MUST IT DO? The question is posed...

      --
      intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    39. Re:A New World by BonThomme · · Score: 1

      You are saying personal responsibility is the answer.
      OK, wonderful, YAWN.


      And THAT, is the exact source of the problem.

    40. Re:A New World by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

      And disarming the general populace is? Please, don't make me laugh.

      OK, I'll make you laugh gunlover. Disarming the general populace is a solution to reducing crime. Choke on the truth. Better yet, go watch a gun-toting Western where everyone with a gun on their hips is a paramount of infinite, never-failing justice. BECAUSE THAT'S THE ONLY FUCKING WORLD WHERE GUNS WORK.

      Hold us all hostage with your misguided beliefs. Like creationists you vermin are.

      Give you guys one bit of common sense and you reply with so much clangityclangclang discord of the mind you are left dumbfounded by the pits of the self-disillusionment. From your cold, dead hands indeed. The mind is already dead and cold. A mind closed to any well-founded, well-intentioned argument that might encroach on your cult-like belief system.

      --
      intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    41. Re:A New World by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

      News Alert! Personal Responsiblity is the answer to every question posed by mankind.

      HAHA! Your reductionism is amusing. YOu have some sort of cult-like belief system there. Is your mind completely closed? Do you have the answer for everything in personal reponsiblity?

      Gawd! Why do I even try!

      --
      intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    42. Re:A New World by maxpublic · · Score: 2

      Look at this - an anti-gun fuckwit of the first order. According to the National Center for Health, death statistics for last year (approximates):

      auto accidents - 45,000
      falls - 13,000
      poisoning - 7,000
      fires - 4,000
      drowning - 3500
      suffocation - 3100
      medical mistakes - 2700
      gun accidents - 1500
      other - 12,000

      please note that you're more than eight times as likely to die in a fall as to be shot accidentally (mostly down stairs) and two and a half times more likely to drown (most often during recreational activities).

      Of the 27,000 murders committed last year, more than 90% of them did not involve a firearm. They were instead perpetrated with 'weapons of opportunity', the favorites being blunt objects, knives, and bare hands. Which means that if someone tries to murder you, they'll be inclined to use whatever blunt or sharp object is close at hand. Banning guns would at best eliminate 2,700 murders, although there's nothing to prevent the murderer from using some other object to achieve his end, as 90% of his compatriots do.

      So therefore, we should ban ladders, stairs, swimming pools, any form of public recreation having to do with water, baseball bats, kitchen knives, and all remotely heavy objects that can be wielded as weapons. Oh, and don't forget *bare hands*.

      Also according to the FBI, somewhere between 200,000 and 800,000 crimes were *prevented* by the use of a firearm by the intended victim. In only 1/10 of 1% of thes cases was the firearm actually discharged, and in these few instances it was often into the air to discourage the attacker. That means at the very least that 200,000 robberies, rapes, and murders were prevented by the deterrant use of a firearm - unless, of course, you think the FBI is lying.

      Provide some statistics - empirical ones like my own, taken from the National Center for Health and the FBI - which support the idea that if the citizenry was disarmed crime would decline.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    43. Re:A New World by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

      i'm tired of arguing with gunheads.

      it never gets anyone anywhere. you guys are like mental damage to route around. there is no getting you out of your entrenched clangityclangclankclank of mental solipsism. you are tired. you are dead grey matter. you are history. there is no converting you to truth, there is only outliving you, which is will what happen, eventually as history plays itself out.

      since you probably have a gun in your house somewhere, your demise may be somewhat accelerated by your own stupidity, unfortunately.

      --
      intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    44. Re:A New World by Saeger · · Score: 2
      Thanks for the entertainment. :)

      can the US Government do anything to ensure our safety without infringing on our rights?

      Certainly.

      They can start by 'declaring' that our safety cannot be ensured, that the government is not our mommy, that personal responsibility is not some trite oldfashioned idea as you seem to think, and that the ~3,000 deaths on 9/11 was a tragic yet small price to pay for enduring freedom. But to answer your question more directly: the one thing that the government could do to improve our safety the most is reduce our dependency on arab oil, and by extension, our arrogant meddling in those countries to secure that crude for ourselves.

      Anyway, the real reason I replied was to inform you that you've just earned the honor of being #4 on my /. Foe shitlist! (I know, big deal)

      You're in line right behind 1) a blatant plagiarizing karma whore, 2) a super-authoritarian IT jerkwad, 3) a super-authoritarian parent who thinks violent competition is too harmful for his kid to be exposed to.

      You made my list for simply pissing me off with your elitist tone, and for being anti-gun to the point of stupidity. Congrats. If you were JUST anti-gun, or JUST an arrogant prick, we might be friends (not likely)... it's the combination that sickens. ;-)

      --

      --
      Power to the Peaceful
    45. Re:A New World by Saeger · · Score: 1
      there is no converting you to truth

      Man you are scary. I sincerely hope you are never in a position of power to impose your righteous will on me (because I'd shoot you). You've got the conviction of a Hitler on this issue...

      --

      --
      Power to the Peaceful
    46. Re:A New World by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I dont want my government to tell me it can't ensure my safety. Even though I know security isnt 100%, I don't want to hear it.

      I'm one of those "stupid" people who thinks that the perception of safety isn't such a bad thing if it makes living life easier. I dont need to face facts, my government can do that for me, and thats what my taxes are for first and foremost. peace of mind is a great thing.

    47. Re:A New World by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

      you would shoot me?

      sit for a moment, and contemplate the obscene irony of what you just said.

      thank you for proving everything i've ever said about gun ownership.

      ever hear of a martyr? geez, and i'm the hitler...

      --
      intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    48. Re:A New World by danro · · Score: 1

      C:\>tracert life.liberty.pursuit-of-happiness

      I agree completely with your oppinion about gun ownership.
      But I find the first char[3] of your sig kind of ironic. It would make a lot more sense like [root@cts /]# , but maybe the C: explains why you need to run this tracert. I would too, if I was trapped by the Evil Emire... =)

      Sorry, couldn't resist the temptation...

      --

      "First lesson," Jon said. "Stick them with the pointy end."
    49. Re:A New World by Saeger · · Score: 1
      Only ironic from your point of view because that is what you choose to see.

      From my POV the 'i'd shoot you' comment -- though intended sarcasticly, and intended to get a rise -- is perfectly reasonable in the context of me defending myself against your armed pro-disarmament army (if you were in power.. as I said)

      --

      --
      Power to the Peaceful
    50. Re:A New World by Rayonic · · Score: 2

      > Not much to say now, as you've heeded the call, and joined the dark side.

      A little lying doesn't mean we've joined the Dark Side, as long we don't get carried away.

      As you're so apt to point out, people are behaving like animals right now. Or more specifically, like a herd of rampaging buffalo. Animals aren't people, and can't be treated as such. When you bring your dog to the vet, and it doesn't want to hold still for it's shots, do you calmly explain to the dog the importance of regular immunizations? Can you? No, it gets restrained, distracted, or tranquilized.

      I know the notion of treating people like animals is very unpopular, but if they're going to act like animals then that's how they should be treated. If you could tell a few lies and keep the herd of general populace from trampling their own rights, wouldn't you? It's for their own good, and maybe even the only humane thing to do.

      Fighting FUD with FUD is fair game. This is one of those rare cases where the ends justify the means (and I know that's been said before, but in this case it really might be true.) Of course, this whole facial-recognition-for-drivers-license thing doesn't seem like that big a deal, but it hints at a larger trend.

      No offense, you're a bright guy, but why must people like you always point out when humans are acting like animals, but then balk at the idea that they be treated as such? I'm no Social Psychologist, but that seems counter-productive.

    51. Re:A New World by mpe · · Score: 2

      This is a classic argument. Do you punish the criminal? Or do you explain his crime in the larger context of society? The man who steals a loaf of bread to feed his family certainly can be excused. But I don't see how that kind of crime can even begin to be equated with the terrorists of Sept. 11th.

      In order to punish a criminal you first need to identify and capture them. All there is with the September 11 actions is a conspiracy theory involving a Saudi exile.

    52. Re:A New World by mpe · · Score: 2

      Why is it that the only people who spout off about this "holy war" bullshit are people who have no real knowledge of arab religion or culture. If you think they'd still give a rats ass about us if we didn't have such a major presence in the middle east, then you're seriously smoking something. How do you think we'd feel if arabs decided to occupy texas, oppressing the current residents and arming it to the extent that it could easily destroy the entire rest of the US...might you be slightly upset?

      The analogy would work better if you also had these Arab occupiers systematically demolishing Texan cities, looting and killing people.

    53. Re:A New World by mpe · · Score: 2

      Agreed. But this is the worst thing to happen on US soil since the Civil War. It needs a serious reaction. And it isn't the only thing we are doing. Life does go on, but a big reaction is needed.

      Sensible reactions would be attempting to identify who was responsible, which is tricky since those who were involved obviously planted false "evidence"; they would also include asking some very pointed questions of the FAA and NORAD; also considering such things as if all aircrew should be trained in martial arts.
      Bombing a country the US dosn't like isn't really a sensible response.

      But what are we to do? Become completely isolationist?

      That might help, but it's a bit late now that all the weapons have been supplied, at the US tax payers' expense.

      Try to run the whole world?

      I really don't think the US wants to pay the price for that...

      And some of what is in the middle involves what we have done in the Middle East, and what we still will do.

      Taking sides is never "in the middle".

      Is some of the terrorists gripes have to do with bad things we have already done? Yes, but how could anything we have done possibly compare to what they have done?

      You are right it's impossible for any "terrorist group" to do anything even remotly comparable with the sort of things the US has done. Do you really thing Osama Bin Laden could obliterate the US federal government and install an Al Queda puppet government in it's place? Could they reduce even one US city to rubble?

    54. Re:A New World by mpe · · Score: 2

      Disarming the general populace is a solution to reducing crime.

      How exactly do you propose to disarm criminals, passing a law requiring them to disarm is rather pointless. Let alone that if someone wants a weapon they will find one. Be it a bit of tree or a bit of aircraft cabin fitting...

    55. Re:A New World by mpe · · Score: 2

      The sentiment is 'the government will protect me.' What's the big change except the expectation that, golly, the government has to be a whole lot more intrusive to protect me, since they obviously weren't intrusive enough before.

      In order to be more intrusive they would need to take on additional tasks. Which makes little sense. Since on that morning the US government simply didn't manage to do the things they should have done. You could argue that having radar based air traffic control is "intrusive" too.

    56. Re:A New World by mpe · · Score: 2

      You make my argument better than I do. In one breath, you rail that the government must do something, and in the next, you say the CIA is a joke. The problem is, the CIA is not a joke (though INS certainly is).

      You can also make the case that some part of the FAA and who ever was running things at NORAD and The Pentagon is in the "joke" catagory. If anything the implications of The Pentagon being hit are even more serious than the WTC.

      A monolithic (government) agency can not defend against a distributed threat (terrorism). No amount of misguided legislation will change that.

      Especially if a terrorist organisation is capable of evaluating and reacting to what is, after all, a threat to it's own aims and objectives.

    57. Re:A New World by mpe · · Score: 2

      It makes more sense to realize that the shit that went down on 9-11 has been years in the making and the only reason it blindsided so many people is because we've had our heads in the sand for so goddam long.

      It's by no means clear that the heads are out of the sand even now.

    58. Re:A New World by mpe · · Score: 2

      Example 3: Twenty-first century Israel. How ironic, considering that within the lifetimes of many of those living there the Jews were themselves the targets of one of history's great atrocities by a police state. And now, by and large, they have become one themselves. Granted, Prime Minister Sharon and his predecessors have not been as evil as Hitler and Stalin,

      A example missing from the list, which probably should be there, is late 20th century Serbia.

    59. Re:A New World by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      Yet another fanatic little college boy who can't argue with the facts, or provide any empirical evidence to support his position. I guess when I posted statistics from the NCH and FBI that was a bit too much for you to handle.

      And all that rhetoric! Boy, if this is the best you can do you need to take a speech class or two. At least some basic English. Your response wasn't just pathetic, it was embarrassing.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    60. Re:A New World by mpe · · Score: 2

      Israel's recent actions in the West Bank may in fact be justified if it turns out Israel has evidence supporting their claims that the people they are arresting are in fact militants

      Arresting some possible terrorists is no excuse for holding ambulances at gunpoint, booting out journalists and systematic destruction of civilian infrastructure and government. Let alone that Israel appears to be deliberatly bluring the distinction between potential terrorists and police/militia. IMHO it is hypocritical to argue for the right of Israel to defend itself without also arguing for exactly the same rights for the PA.

    61. Re:A New World by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

      HAHA! thank you, thank you, thank you. people are always like "what's with the c colon dood? are you some sort of MS lackey?" they don't get that i'm in an MS app, trying to get out, searching for... life, liberty, pursuit of happiness ;-)

      --
      intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    62. Re:A New World by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

      maxpublic, you never come over for lighthearted sex anymore, why is that? remember june? you and i on the beach, naked, rolling in the surf? why can't you and i go back to those idyllic days of us together making sweet, sweet love? oh i do love you so. i pine for you my lost lover, sniff.

      --
      intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    63. Re:A New World by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

      yes, if were proposing that a wave of my magic wand and all guns would disappear would be rather stupid. but i am not saying that.

      think about a transition time period.

      no way! whodathuinkit!

      i will leave you to nitpick a million reasons why a transition period would not work. then i will not respond to your nitpicking because i am tired of this.

      gun=technology to kill, unnecessary in any other regard, therfore, we can lose it.

      a bit of tree (wtf?)- useful for many things besides hurting someone

      aircraft cabin fitting- useful for fitting together aircraft cabins... geez...

      gawd, why am i wasting my time...

      look, a gun, kills. it is a technology whose only purpose is killing other people.

      knives cut bread. and can disembowel people. but it is also made to cut bread! therfore, you do not get rid of knives because they have a variety of uses.

      pray tell, what the hell else are guns made for?

      and before you answer with the usual list of wonderful things like "the biathalon" ;-P ... i can swat flies with a copy of hustler. i can use a copy of hustler to serve as kindling in a fire. i can make origami with my porno mag. but THAT'S NOT SAYING A LOT IS IT???

      look! we can't outlaw guns because i can prop the door open with them in a jiffy! it's a doorjam!

      why! why do i bother arguing with gunheads! WHY!!!

      --
      intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    64. Re:A New World by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

      gee what a graceful retraction from your stupid aggressive comment. "oh! i was only joking see! hehe." moron.

      armed pro-disarmament army? wtf? do you live in a bunker in the south pacific? who the hell are you? do you have all of your faculties? what planet do you live on? you see ghosts of "armed pro-disarmament armies" marching around your head???!!!"

      gawd, we really are all doomed: people like you carry guns.

      yeah, if i were in power. HERE ME NOW ALL GUN LOVERS! I AM THE GRAND OVERLORD OF ALL ANTI-GUN EFFORTS. SLAY ME WITH YOUR MIGHTY PIECE OF QUICKSILVER JUSTICE DELIVERED IN A WISP OF DELICIOUS SMITING SMOKE. OH BRAVE PALADINS OF THE SECOND AMENDMENT! STAND BEHIND THY MIGHTY PILLAR OF TRUTH, JUSTICE AND THE AMERICAN WAY!

      morons looking for somebody to shoot for some reason. people with issues. i really am stupid. i am laughing at aggressive stupid thugs with something to prove and a gun by their side. maybe we all really are doomed. mankind... so much power and so much stupidity, all rolled into one. we really are our own worst enemies.

      i have seen the doom of mankind. well-meaning, earnest, blind fools with a gun by their side looking for a reason to shoot somebody. it's nice to know someone will take up the mantle of lee harvey oswald, john hinckley jr., bernie getz, et al. well-meaning sanity-challenged disturbed losers with a gun by their side. weep for us world. armageddon, thy a name is beavis and butthead.

      --
      intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    65. Re:A New World by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

      HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA

      oh gawd, you made my day!!!! did i make you wet your pants to??? you mean WE CAN'T BE FRIENDS.

      HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA

      it's bloody glorious!

      you, my fine-feathered roll on my lap and call me honey friend, are a THUG.

      look in the mirror. know thyself. know thy place in the world. know YOUR SOUL. know where you and your ilk stand on the food chain of moral life.

      --
      intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    66. Re:A New World by Saeger · · Score: 2
      No, I don't own a gun, nor do I have a fetish for glorified gun violence, nor am I paranoid about government spooks coming to get me (yet), but I can understand your need to characterize all "gunlovers" as such.

      I also realize that our government today has much bigger guns than its armed populace can ever hope to have, making the point of the 2nd ammendment a bit moot if we should ever really need to rise up and kill a few tyrants (terrorist methods would be more effective than a militia anyway). But, the FACT remains that Americans have the inalienable RIGHT to bear arms... and it's a FACT that people-with-guns prevent more crime/harm from occuring than they "cause" in the first place. A couple thousand accidental shootings per year (a favorite talking point of antigun peeps), besides being a drop in the bucket, is not a reason to ban the tool.

      I think you're just a frightened, untrusting authoritarian schmuck who simply finds the idea of "ordinary" people owning weapons "offensive" because everyone besides your oh-so-cultured self must be a gunhappy drooling moron. Maybe YOU want government to be your mommy, but I sure don't... I'd much rather put my trust in an armed populace and deal with the personal responsibility that comes with great freedom. Death isn't the worst thing that can happen to you ya know.

      "gee" .. "gawd" .. golly... do you talk like that in real life too?

      --

      --
      Power to the Peaceful
    67. Re:A New World by Saeger · · Score: 1
      it's bloody glorious!

      I thought you sounded fishy. Go back to England you elitist prick.

      you...are a THUG.

      You assume wrong Mr. Righteous. You are many times more thugish in your will to see guns removed from the hands of free people (or should I say morons?), than I am in defending that right. You don't push me around, I don't push you around... simple.

      --

      --
      Power to the Peaceful
    68. Re:A New World by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Couldn't think of anything decent to reply with, huh?

    69. Re:A New World by mpe · · Score: 2

      yes, if were proposing that a wave of my magic wand and all guns would disappear would be rather stupid. but i am not saying that.

      Except that there is no proposal to eliminate guns from the entire world. Not even from an entire country, Japan actually did this, it actually worked too. At least until the US decided to enguage in literal "gunboat diplomacy".
      Typicall "gun control" calls for specific people such as police and soliders having (even being issued with) guns. You'd still need a magic wand to ensure that all these people are honest and incorruptable.

      gun=technology to kill, unnecessary in any other regard, therfore, we can lose it.

      There are uses of guns which do not involve killing anyone. Some of them are olymic sports. Even the killing part does not necessarly imply killing people.

    70. Re:A New World by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

      couldn't? or wouldn't? gun nuts do not have ideas you can logically argue with. it is a quasi-religion. if i logically sat there and spoke common sense to him for 1,000 paragraphs i would not have made one tiny impression on him. i am so TIRED of their ilk. and as an anonymous coward, you are one to talk. at the least maxpublic stands by his words. you have no integrity whatsoever. you are one to criticize.

      --
      intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    71. Re:A New World by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

      i am from new england. i grew up on a rural farm, a 2 century old farm house built by the original farmers of the area. a barn, animals. same house my mom grew up in. my granddad would take me out shooting in the 500 acres of woodland behind our house when i was growing up, with rifles the family has had for over a century. our nearest neighbor lived a mile away through a swamp. my ancestors fought in the american revolution and the civil war. choke on the truth asswipe.

      and btw fuckhead- I AM GOING TO PUSH YOU AROUND. because you and your creed SUCK. you're repugnant beliefs hold this great nation hostage. so go run to your bunker and stack up on ammo and stay there until armageddon comes. free normal society from your hideous presence, asshole.

      i am mr. righteous. i righteously denounce your stupidity. and i don't need justice to flow from the point of a gun, unlike you. i need justice to flow from my thoughts, my mind. UNLIKE YOU AND YOUR F***ING GUNS.

      WE ARE COMING TO PUSH YOU AROUND. GO RUN TO YOUR BUNKER COWARD. HIDE BEHIND YOUR PATHETIC LITTLE GUN. REPLACE LOGICAL THOUGHT WITH THUGGISH GUNPLAY TO REINFORCE YOUR STUPID BELIEFS.

      FREEDOM HAS NOTHING TO DO WITH GUNS. GUNS IN FACT CHOKE YOUR FREEDOM. THEY CHOKE THE FREEDOM OF EVERYONE AROUND YOU. GUNS ARE TYRANNY OVER THOUGHT. TRY TO PROCESS THAT IDEA.

      but i don't think it will do any good *sigh*. quasi-religious beliefs can not be changed. the thought processes on that truth i don't think will ever fire in your frontal lobes. you are permanently, mentally blocked. all that remains is for my kind to outlive your kind. so be it. history will show the truth, and you, my stupid, well-meaning, mentally blocked friend, are history. i pity you. i know you mean well, but you just can't get over the one false conrnerstone of your beliefs. it can not be deconstructed, because you will never agree to part with the bad foundation.

      so be it, i make peace with your presence. the logic of the true identity of the gun and what it represents to society will outlive your quasi-religion and save this country. that is enough for me. i embrace you. you are well-meaning, but misled. you have not been able to escape your upbringing, your mental grasp has not looked over the horizon of your background. maybe someday you will see beyond your small world. try my friend, i know you mean well. see the other side of the leaf you have never looked at before, try

      --
      intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    72. Re:A New World by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

      should ever really need to rise up and kill a few tyrants (terrorist methods would be more effective than a militia anyway). But, the FACT remains that Americans have the inalienable RIGHT to bear arms... and it's a FACT that people-with-guns prevent more crime/harm from occuring than they "cause" in the first place. A couple thousand accidental shootings per year (a favorite talking point of antigun peeps), besides being a drop in the bucket, is not a reason to ban the tool.

      so you have just equated the reality of thousands of gun deaths each year, which you admit to, to a COMPLETE F***ING FANTASY of a science fiction dystopia of tyranny where brave militiamen rescue us with their trust sidearms. YOU ARE A DELUDED FUCK. "oh no! the tyranny is just around the corner! you'll see!" YOU NEED MEDICATION YOU STUPID ASSHOLE FUCK.

      do you not see your own delusion staring you in your face? look what you just did: reality of thousands of gundeaths= POSSIBILITY of the need to fight a future tyranny. WHO THE FUCK ARE YOU??? JOHN WAYNE??? PAUL REVERE??? YOUR F***ING DELUSION IS STARING YOU IN THE FACE.

      i'll break it down for you:

      REALITY

      VS

      UNREALITY

      get it?

      you are a deluded insane asshole! seek professional help!

      as for your authoritarian-loving, the-bureaucracy-is-my-mommy view of me: go on with your bad self. yes, that is all i really am. there is nothing else to my position except that i suckle from the nipple of GW BUsh. Yep! That's me! NOthing else to my position whatsoever! I'm an elitist self-righteous snob. That's me! Absolutely nothing cohesive or logical in my position. Everything I've said flows from my love of the almighty bloated authoritarian government. You know me so well!

      i could say YOU ARE WAY OFF FUCKING BASE, but it is as if I am going to defend myself from someone who has proven to be delusional? better to let you alone in your disturbed shell of a mind. better not to break the pretty little pictures of your "reality." you know me SO WELL and ALL I REPRESENT.

      YOU KNOW NOTHING ABOUT ME ONLY BECAUSE YOU HAVE NEVER LET YOUR MIND LOOK ON THE OTHER SIDE TO EVEN ENTERTAIN THE POSSIBILTY OF A WORLD THAT DOES JUST FINE NO TYRANNY WHATSOERVER WITHOUT YOUR FUCKING GUN.

      --
      intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    73. Re:A New World by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

      might does not equal right.

      i would like you to entertain that possiblity.

      especially in everyday domestic life.

      get it?

      i am not talking about nations at war.

      i am not talking about your score in the biathalon.

      stay on target, stay on target!

      --
      intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    74. Re:A New World by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      Jesus H. Christ, Napoleon. Time for your meds. Really. I'm goddamn glad you aren't in a position of power.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    75. Re:A New World by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

      The passion you hear in my voice is not insanity. The passion you hear in my voice is not a Napoleon complex. It is righteous indignation. Righteous indignation over the taking of America hostage by a minority of gun-loving wackos. Passion equates the will to power. If my voice is not in power today, it will be tomorrow. Not mine personally, as this has nothing to do with my ego, but the passion of millions of others just like me. I am but one of millions who despise the tyranny of the gun in domestic life in America. And that passion is daily refueled and reborn in millions of souls over the truth they see in the news and in person over the insanity that domestic gun usage wreaks upon the streets of our country. Your days are numbered gun apologist. Run to your little bunker.

      --
      intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    76. Re:A New World by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      Yada yada yada. Nah, it has nothing to do with indignation. Rather, you're just scared shitless that your neighbor is as much a whacked-out loon as you are and might decide to blow your head off some day.

      The thing is, it most likely will never happen. And according to the FBI, if your neighbor *does* decide to kill you (and I could sympathize, if he has to listen to your insane drivel all day) then there's a 90% chance he'll use something other than a gun to do it.

      Really, that should make you happy.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    77. Re:A New World by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

      Yada yada yada. Nah, it has nothing to do with indignation. Rather, you're just scared shitless that your neighbor is as much a whacked-out loon as you are and might decide to blow your head off some day.

      maybe there is hope for you yet! you articulate reason, but you just don't recognize it. here, i'll help you put the pieces together, pieces of reason you just articulated from your very own mouth:

      YES max I AM scared of whacked-out loons with guns. blowing away their ex-girlfriends. blowing away a 7-11 clerk. blowing away a police officer. blowing away someone who doesn't believe in guns! i am VERY AFRAID. sit for a moment, and think about the glimmers of realization that FLOW FROM YOUR VERY MIND.

      now, the question is, are you scared? if you are, you are NORMAL. not in my weird quasi-napoleonic, will-to-power-the-authoritarian-state-to-crush-goo d-people-under-the-foot-of-tyranny or wherever the hell you think i come from, but just flat out REALITY NORMAL. don't believe me? go to your local walmart and poll 100 people if they are afraid of a lunatic with a gun. hey einstein, what are the statistical odds the number out of a hundred random walmarters WILL BE SOMEWHERE ABOVE 90???

      i tend to overstate the obvious with gunlovers. they are logic-challenged. i think you can appreciate what "normal" means by now.

      if you are not afraid, i could postulate a number of reasons. one, you are an omnipotent god-man ala the matrix, who can dodge bullets. two, you paint your body with the special blood of animals or monsters you have killed and it wards off bullets or something in a mixture of greek and native american folk beliefs. OR, maybe it is because you believe... drum roll please... you think your gun will protect you! whadyathink maxipadlick? am i close???

      WELL GUESS WHAT!!! IT DON'T!!!

      i can go on for about 100 paragraphs explaining the fucking obvious as bricks reasons why a gun does not protect you, through flat-out statistical analysis of common scenarios of everyday life, but i suppose the brick in your frontal lobe has prevented reality from making you realize that so far in your life, so i don't think my little missive in slashdot will make much a difference. i will pray for your children instead.

      The thing is, it most likely will never happen. And according to the FBI, if your neighbor *does* decide to kill you (and I could sympathize, if he has to listen to your insane drivel all day) then there's a 90% chance he'll use something other than a gun to do it.

      you know, i often run into that when bitchslapping gunlovers around online... they frequently outright threaten my life, or allude to it, as you just did. martydom for pathetic little ol' me is undeserved, should any idiot without enough faculties to appreciate the grand irony of killing a gunhater not understand that.

      any wonders as to why i run into this alot? any wonders that this will-to-kill is closely tied to their need to will-to-gun? any question as to who is closer to tyranny? me, who debates and screams online? or to gun-lovers, who walk around with the tools to take human life?

      the psychological reasons run deep. i think a lot of gunlovers have a control issue. they fear losing control, they think guns will ensure it. but owning a gun is like inviting a demon into your home. fear of bad consequences usually leads to actions that ensure those bad consequences. it is a common occurence all over life: the self-fulfilling destiny. buying a gun is just the first step down that path.

      but the fear-of-losing-control types, the types who invoke fantasies of tyrannies and conspiracies rising up and taking away their freedoms, are probably the most harmless of a stack of sicko gunlovers that go to the other end of the spectrum- those who take pleasure in death, those who get excited about violence, those who dream about destruction. but i still find it odd then that even though they are a minority, a small but palpable minority as they are, i still see that psychology elicted in the frequent allusions to my death i hear when i talk to gunlovers. so maybe with gunlovers there is common thread of a will-to-violence. they see a need for violence to solve problems, so they buy guns, and having the means to take life, they probably at some point in their life use that route to solve their problems, rather than via nonviolent means.

      in a different time, a different world maxpublic, you would be a minuteman. they fought real oppressive tyranny. we live in a mature democracy. now the will-to-kill instinct tends more towards those who threaten stability in domestic life. the days of the minutemen are long dead and gone by centuries now. why can't you see that? OPEN YOUR EYES LUGNUT. c'mon now, i can see the engines of new thought dawn! c'mon now, try a little harder, you can get there, i believe in you maxpubichair! I BELIEVE IN YOU!

      eh, not really, you are probably beyond redemption... you are probably just like so many other frontal lobe-blocked slimes out there...

      reflect on your nature dood, your desire to violence, your fetishization of the gun.

      "it will protect me! my gun will keep me from harm! i might have to use it someday! shoot somebody... oh dear! what a strong but strangely enticing vision! me shooting people! it makes me feel powerful... the power of the gun... can't let anyone take it away... my precious..."

      HAHAHAHAHA

      --
      intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
  64. Re:So whats the problem? Ask Henry Roberts. by Eternal+Vigilance · · Score: 1

    Stuff like the following story happens even in cases where the authorities don't have much to gain (other than perhaps a closed investigation). Think of what happens when you start to piss off somebody with real juice.

    What terrorist act would the additional DMV information be likely to stop?

    While I don't promote violence of any kind, I believe I'm far more likely to suffer at the hands of my own government than at the hands of terrorists. Rather than hope unpleasant stuff won't happen, or hope that someone else will act so I don't have to, I'm finally willing to do something about it.

    Perhaps that starts by simply saying what I believe.

    "What?! You don't support them communists^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H terrorists, do you?"

    - I love my country, but not always my country's government



    http://www.courttv.com/news/2002/0411/innocent_ap. html

    BALTIMORE (AP) -- Henry Roberts was arrested, charged and convicted of murdering his nephew in 1991. Like many defendants, he professed his innocence each step of the way.

    This time, though, the defendant was right.

    Police reopened the case two years ago after two witnesses told them that Robert Tomczewski, 29, had admitted to shooting Henry Harrison, 21. Roberts, they said, was innocent.

    Tomczewski, who has been in and out of prison since 1992, was arrested for the crime in May 2000, a day before he was to be released from prison for an unrelated crime.

    Tomczewski admitted to the killing in a plea deal on Monday.

    Once they believed they had the right man, prosecutors went to try and release Roberts. They were too late: The 66-year-old had died behind bars in 1996.

    "I think that everybody was acting on the information that they had before them, doing the job to the best of their ability," Patricia Jessamy, Baltimore's state's attorney, said Wednesday.

    Roberts, a retired steel worker, had no criminal record and was critically wounded when Harrison, 21, was murdered in front of him in his East Baltimore home on May 11, 1991.

    - article continues at courttv.com -

  65. It's just a cert on top of your regular license by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You can apply for an international license only if you have an existing driver's license from somewhere else. The international license is just a certification that sits on top of your regular license so that, when you drive in another country, they can say "oh yeah, you've got the license". It also doesn't alleviate you from registration or insurance restrictions on being licensed elsewhere, short of driving around indefinitely with a binder (supposedly temp. auto insurance) at the maximum rate for bad drivers.

  66. Re:I don't see how this is much different than req by GigsVT · · Score: 1

    These "it's OK, it's not big brother yet" people burn me up too.

    I guess there are no consequential differences between e-mail and paper mail?

    No consequential differences between placing an order online, and one on the phone?

    No consequential differences between doing math on paper, and programming a computer to do it for you?

    In all these examples, the difference is speed, and added capabilities that are allowed by high speed digitally stored programs. It sure would be a bitch to hire 100 people to watch 100 video screens and compare those to 10,000 pictures of known political dissenters, but a single computer could handle that in the not so far future.

    Like you, I don't understand why these retards don't get it either. I think it's more because they are apathetic about politics, and they use these silly arguments to rationalize their lack of action while the police state slowly solidifies.

    --
    I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
  67. A little story... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    a) Paper ID's are a necessary evil

    I don't know if it happens much nowadays, but i've heard of lots of cases from all over the world of "living-dead" people... people wrongly considered dead by the coroner, striped of it's ids by the state and then appear in flesh.

    Solution: you can make provisions to reinstate the ids and have fail overs in the system. Easy to implement even if almost nothing can be done regarding to lost propertie in the between. At least is easy to recover the ID.

    b) Electronic IDs are more or less problematic

    Can be duplicated easely, but also can be replaced as easely.

    c) Biometrics

    Can't be replaced or reinstated. Prone to ID theaft and NO SOLUTION if that happens! Actually you end up to 2 personnes equal (even if one is only digital and another is flesh and blood).

    Placing a chip inside the skin isn't a solution because that can eventually be dublicatable and if not it will be robed! (yup chop chop nasty but will happen!)

    cheers...

  68. GPDL alternative? by s4ltyd0g · · Score: 1

    Maybe we need to take a cue from the open source community. Why not create an alternative, free licence? One you could pass on to your friends and they would have the right to use it and copy it and pass it on (-;

  69. America by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    At what point is enough enough ? As previous poster have said the road to hell is paved with good intentions. Once a right is given up it is NEVER regained. Sure, If we had a system where every person was required to register their DNA/fingerprints, etc, sure it WOULD lead to a reduction in the crime rate, but surely that is something for the people to decide, not politicians. My point is where do you draw the line ? We could use statistical analysis to determine that as a individual there is a 80% chance that you will commint a criminal offence of some nature. By the logic of this arguement it would make sense to detain you BEFORE any offence was commited 'in the public good'.
    Each step SEEMS sensible, but the end result is unpalitable. If we start down this route where do we stop ?

  70. Re:I don't see how this is much different than req by cybermage · · Score: 2

    There's no consequential difference between computer technology and old analog equivalents.

    On the off chance that your post isn't some kind of subtle, ironic humor that has eluded me, there's a huge differences between computer technology and analog in the situation: economy, obedience, and networking.

    Now that you've got a network of surveillance cameras, is it cheaper to have humans watch them or computers? Computers can do the work 24 hours a day, do the work faster, and do the work without distraction.

    Ask a computer to do something that is morally questionable, like restroom surveillance, and it'll do what you tell it. Try getting human operators to do that.

    If a human operator spots someone suspicious on camera, they probably don't know who they are to look up further details. If they do know the suspect, they still need to interface with a computer to access additional information (e.g., any outstanding warrants). A computer can handle all these things automatically:

    1. Camera gives computer location and face.
    2. Face matches DMV record, gives address, SS#, etc.
    3. Records from DMV connect to law enforcement, warrants found, law enforcement dispatched.

    All that while suspect is still in front of same camera. Try expecting that performance from analog face recognition. No consequential difference, indeed!

  71. You wanna use some crummy password? by crovira · · Score: 2

    Its going to be YOUR licence for REAL. Nobody will EVER be able to steal your wallet or car and get into some form of legal shit and stick YOU in it.

    Biometrics is security based on what you ARE not what you (and anybody else can) know.

    I'm a shit-load more paranoid about 'em NOT using biometrics and making all kinds of (in)human errors.

    --
    MSBPodcast.com The opinions expressed here are my own. If you don't like 'em... Think up your own stuff.
  72. Spoken like someone who hasn't YET had .. by crovira · · Score: 3, Interesting

    a fender bender with some idiot who was DWI.

    Driving is a privilege and a responsability. Too many people kill and maim too many other people because they can't behave responsably.

    You want to rant. I've got a cemetery full of ranters for you and hospital wards and prosthetic companies solely filled and supported by morons who think they can handle a few tons of hurtling metal when they are so mentally deficient they shouldn't be allowed to walk home alone at night.

    --
    MSBPodcast.com The opinions expressed here are my own. If you don't like 'em... Think up your own stuff.
    1. Re:Spoken like someone who hasn't YET had .. by ahodgson · · Score: 1

      Bet whoever hit you had a driver's license. Yet, oddly enough, that state certification didn't prevent them from being an idiot.

    2. Re:Spoken like someone who hasn't YET had .. by hound3000 · · Score: 1

      Like the original comment you replied too, I too agree driving is a right. But like almost all of our rights, it is regulated. And should be. Convicted felons lose their right to vote, and process a gun. People who DWI should also be regulated for endangering public safety. Their rights to drive end when they endanger my right to life.

      Driving is a right, and should be regulated, (to a *limited* point) but not with Biometric information that has nothing to do with how I drive, or how sober I am when I do it.

    3. Re:Spoken like someone who hasn't YET had .. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The issue is not about responsibility or driving competence,
      we already have a tons of laws against irresponsible behaviors and
      few here will claim those without driving skill should drive.
      The issue is whether the government the right to require payments
      or control whether even competent drivers should drive. It is about
      controlling your life. Today they are in position to control whether
      you can drive down the street or not. This is a basic human right.

      Hospitals are full of accident victims, much in the same way that
      they are full of AIDS victims. I don't hear you claim that "sex is
      a privilege", the next thing we logically are expect to read from
      those who post such insights. Using the same logic, should we also be
      required to obtain license for sex?

    4. Re:Spoken like someone who hasn't YET had .. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Convicted felons lose their right to vote

      That is a gross violation of human rights in a country where 2% of the population is in jail. All the government has to do is to declare a person guilty of a crime, and they can't vote. Do that enough times to a minority group, and they'll never get a chance to change the system by voting.

      Which will leave them no option but to SMASH THE STATE!
    5. Re:Spoken like someone who hasn't YET had .. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Like the usual ranting fool you take liberties with the facts and rely on little more than unfocused emotion and crap you heard on TV.

      Its unusal for a typcial car to be even two tons.
      Only SUVs, vans and full sized luxury cars get that heavy anymore.

      And had you been awake at any point past the 6th grade you would have learned that velocity kills, and the more mass your vehicle has in a collision, the less velocity is imparted to your person.

      On the subject of DUI fatalities, most kilings are done by first time offenders. A career drunk has enough sense to take back roads and drive slowly.
      And most alcohol related fatalities have to do with pedestrians ranging from having had a single drink to full blown drunk getting run over by sober drivers.
      But since they can call it alcohol related, they can stuff it in with the DUI catagorys. Then use those numbers when they go after funding for future years.
      Why do they want a thumbprint for drivers licenses ? So they can sneak into your private life and find out how wuch goat sex porn you are viewing ?
      Nothing quite so fancy as that. Thumbs are very durable in the event of a crash. Even in the case of some fires since fingers are quite dense tissue. So when you burn up in a crash after trying to merge onto the interstate while eating a cheeseburger and trying to beat your kids, they can then identify you after your clothes, license, guts, hair, and face and fatty tissue areas have burned off.

    6. Re:Spoken like someone who hasn't YET had .. by mpe · · Score: 2

      Driving is a privilege and a responsability. Too many people kill and maim too many other people because they can't behave responsably.

      It might not be a bad idea if the only situations where people could gain or lose a driving licence were actually related to driving. Yet you have situations of people self evidently a menace to others on the road keeping licences and people having them confiscated over issues unrelated to driving.
      Let alone when did a bank acount or a bottle of beer become a car? The point of the document is to demonstrate that the holder has an acceptable competance in driving the types of motor vehicles indicated.

  73. Mass Transit by EEBaum · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Yet another reason we need a better mass transit and long-distance-train system in the U.S.

    --
    -- I prefer the term "karma escort."
  74. What do you have to hide? by lophophore · · Score: 0, Flamebait
    I don't see what all the fuss ia about. A secure, easily authenticable ID is not something to be feared, unless you are a criminal.

    I have nothing to hide. Even the dreaded (by some) national ID plan does not bother me in the least.

    Explain to me how and why a secure, easily authenticatable ID is going to reduce or degrade any constitutionally guaranteed freedoms in this country. See, you can't.

    I *want* a biometrically authenticatable ID system, I want to have the FAA and airport screeners know I am not a risk so I can go through the airport security quickly. I want the INS and other federal agencies to be able to quickly identify and deport people who would harm my country. There is nothing to fear from this, unless you have something to hide.

    --
    there are 3 kinds of people:
    * those who can count
    * those who can't
  75. Get over it. There was a song about it ... by crovira · · Score: 2, Insightful

    in the sixties and early seventies called "The Price for Security if Freedom."

    Fact is that in the 'States, you have the perfect to privacy on your OWN property. In most other places in this world, you don't even have that. If somebody can see in, they can see in. That's IT.

    You DON'T have ANY rights anywhere else.

    You NEVER DID. Specially on some public commons.
    Yes... You ARE being watched so don't be ashamed of anything you do and don't do anything you'd be ashamed of because you ARE being watched.

    At least the system in the 'States is not preemptive. You CAN go out to rob a liquor store or murder the neighbor's kids. Its just that you can never again expect to get away with it. You WILL be caught.

    An entire genre of crime fiction will become "passé." The rationale for the cerebration and observation of Sherlock Holmes will disappear when we can all go to the instant replay.

    And surveillance cuts both ways.

    Your rights will never again be blithely ignored by some bully with a badge who tries to re-arange your facial features with a door frame. (But then again YOU'll never again be able to blame somebody ELSE for your own stupidity.)

    Get over it. There a 1.2 trillion dollar hole in the economy, a hole in the New York skyline and in downtown New York filled with damn near three thousand people killed there. And I was almost one of 'em.

    I feel your pain.

    Now smile for the camera and shut the fuck up.

    --
    MSBPodcast.com The opinions expressed here are my own. If you don't like 'em... Think up your own stuff.
    1. Re:Get over it. There was a song about it ... by flacco · · Score: 2
      You DON'T have ANY rights anywhere else.

      You NEVER DID. Specially on some public commons. Yes... You ARE being watched so don't be ashamed of anything you do and don't do anything you'd be ashamed of because you ARE being watched.

      Oohhhh, I didn't know that. So that explains the looks I get when I wear my strap-ons to the supermarket.

      --
      pr0n - keeping monitor glass spotless since 1981.
  76. i'll tell ya how to fight this.. by JimBobJoe · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This can work in most states. Most of the time the legislatures did in fact pass laws requiring that photos be on licenses. (New York is an exception, a photo is not required on a license, but the commissioner of motor vehicles can require a photo if s/he wants. And of course Vermont doesn't require a photo at all.)

    Anyway, state legislatures however have generally not passed laws authorizing their DMV's to keep the photos in archive. (NJ and CO are however exceptions--the only ones so far I've found.)Most states have privacy laws that prohibit the collection of data which is not authorized by statute.

    I just took a gander through CT law, and I see the requirement for a photo license, but no requirement for digitally archiving the photo.

    So here is the crux:

    *a photo is required on a license by CT law
    *no statute exists that says that the photo has to be archived
    *since CT issued non digital licenses without archiving photos for many years, your argument can be that the DMV can carry out their duties without archiving all the photographs--in particular, yours
    *i bet CT does have some privacy laws that prohibit the collection of data which is not authorized by statute, nor collecting data which is necessary to carry out duties required by statute
    *with all the above, go file a mandamus action ordering the dmv commissioner to remove your photo from the database

    If all the above is the case, I would ask you put some money into it and get a lawyer--to set up good precedence.

    Here in Ohio, the same thing can be done (no money for lawyer right now though. :-( Better yet, here in Ohio, the legislature did require that photos from commercial licenses be archived...but not those from regular operator licenses. So here's it's even easier to argue that if the legislature did not authorize the collection, and the bmv survived fine without doing it, then it is not necessary to carry out their duties, and is a violation of Ohio privacy law.

    I'm not a lawyer, I don't even play one on television, but I like to think that I know something about this topic. :-)

  77. Okay. by mindstrm · · Score: 2

    Can you show how mis-identified drivers licenses are somhow of such important to impose statewide image recognition and other biometrics?

    I doubt it.

    A driver's license is a *license to drive*. Period. Anything else is auxilliary.

    If they want to issue state ID that is required for certain transactions with the state, then that is another issue.

  78. Celebrity tracking by Animats · · Score: 2
    A great application of this technology would be celebrity tracking. Get one of these systems (Visionincs has a time-limited demo), load it up with some back issues of People and pix of politicians, and tie it to a webcam in some location that gets high celebrity traffic. You might even be able to get one of the tabloids to fund this.

    Let's see how that goes over.

  79. Just a wild thought... by mindstrm · · Score: 2

    But what about a learner's license? Do they not have such a thing? You know.. a license with terms and conditions requiring, among other things that you must have a licensed driver over a certain age in the car with you, and must drive during daylight hours, and perhaps not over certain speeds or on certain roads? That is how most places do it.

    What about something like, say, driving school?

  80. Re:I don't see how this is much different than req by harlows_monkeys · · Score: 2
    The difference is that when they take your picture for a human to recognize, that's just a picture. When they use a machine, it is no longer a picture...it is now biometric information. It sounds so much more frightening that way.

    Like you, the only problem I can see is that the state might be too trusting of the technology. However, I see nothing inherently big-brotherish about the technology. It neither increases nor decreases the privacy issues associated with drivers licenses.

    People who go ballistic over this, but don't see a problem with the old system, are just Luddites at heart.

  81. Re:I *implemented* WV's Facial Image DMV DLID syst by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    An article about the state of and current limits of the technology would be interesting but i recomment you submit to somewhere like kuro5hin instead, if you want reasoned feedback.

  82. Georgia already has thumbprint IDs by SaturnSS · · Score: 1, Informative

    When I got my Georgia drivers license ab out 5 years ago I had to have my thumbprint encoded on the back of the card.

    I think this is a good thing, it's not like the government has planted a tracking device in it. If anything it has the potential to reduce identity theft, which is a big problem in the US

    --
    85% of Americans think this signature sucks
  83. What do you mean start? by Mashiki · · Score: 1

    The police and goverment already do...thou not in an offical capacity.

    --
    Om, nomnomnom...
  84. Re:I *implemented* WV's Facial Image DMV DLID syst by ArsonPerBuilding · · Score: 1

    Were you giving him money so he could eat and make house payments, or was Polariod doing that?

    Thought so, now STFU, he has to eat somehow.

    --
    1 tequila 2 tequila 3 tequila floor
  85. Not just the guilty ones by hether · · Score: 2

    To those who are saying you don't have anything to worry about if you aren't guilty of something, I ask you to look at the number of times the police or the government have busted down the wrong door, and killed some unsuspecting person. It happens all the time, especially with drug raids during the so called "war on drugs". What makes you think it won't happen to you?

    --

    Most people would die sooner than think; in fact, they do.
  86. It is time... by Tacky+the+Penguin · · Score: 1

    to get one of those international driver's licenses that we get all the spam about. (Just get it from someone other than the spammer)

  87. Move to Mass. ;-) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm sorry, I just had to say it. Being a resident of Mass myself.

    Peter

  88. Fair to you or me? by optisonic · · Score: 1

    Submitting this type of information should not be a requirement for living. Here you must travel long distances to do basic tasks. Without 24/7 affordable public transportation, there is no equivalent so you basically cannot perform life tasks during off hours. This means on a daily basis and not outrageous pricing such as taxi cabs which aren't feasible for the masses anyhow. Either we require data from all U.S. citizens worldwide, or we make it on a volunteer basis. It is unfair to require driving people in particular regions to live like 1984 while the others maintain their individual privacy. Video scanning in particular is too easy to abuse. You don't see fingerprint scanners built into door handles yet facial image scanners (video cameras connected to computers) have been used in many public locations recently. This means that at any time you could be tracked and logged. Such information is of the type private investigators and others use for monetary or personal gain. Humans run these systems and humans have a long history of abusing great power. This power is too great for most humans to use and those that would are always subject to making mistakes and the chaos factor. Accidental or unintended leaking of this data en mass could be a serious catastrophe. The list of things I could do to you if I had access to this information is too long to even begin here. Sort of like a mini FBI database, but with pictures and information on basically everyone (most people drive with proper licenses).

    In short, don't create something you can't control out of fear or inadequacy. Spend time on a proper solution that treats people fairly and doesn't jeopardize their quality of living.

  89. Re:I *implemented* WV's Facial Image DMV DLID syst by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He has to eat, yes, but the fact that he took such a position and apparently fulfulled its requirements with zeal make him a prostitute and a traitor. There are other jobs that don't involve facilitating a police state. OK, it's West Virginia--maybe not.

  90. Re:They already do facial... (2nd part OT) by Sharkyfour · · Score: 1

    Do you really think the DMV here in CT will inform us of the facial recognition and other biometric data collection when they start collecting it? Probably not. I'm willing to bet they'll just tout it as a newer, updated, and more secure license format, and make some huge hoopla over the verical format for minors, just to make sure everything else gets looked over by the media. (on a related note: Thank God my license doesn't expire 'till my 22nd birthday. I've seen a few vertical-format licences from surrounding states and think they're ugly as sin. Having "Under 21 Until..." in huge red letters is ugly enough but still gets the job done. Vertical is overkill.)

  91. Re:I don't see how this is much different than req by SecurityGuy · · Score: 2
    It's the inevitable roll downhill that bothers me. Having a social security number annoys me only to the extent that it's an awful parody of a retirement plan. Giving it out wouldn't be a big deal either if it weren't for the fact that it has become the key to your financial identity. That might not be a big deal, either, after all you knowing my credit rating is an invasion of privacy, but not as bad as having to watch Rosie O'Donnell. Maybe. Where it really all goes to hell is that all you need is something close to my name and my SSN to get *credit* and *buy stuff* in my name.


    So yes, I get a bit nervous when you say "but all we've done is digitize it". I don't like the idea that if I get pulled over and my physical drivers license doesn't match the almighty database, I'll inevitably be the one who's wrong. Or should I say a dangerous terrorist whose papers don't match because he has something to hide?

  92. most likely scenario by slam+smith · · Score: 1

    If you buy one of these recievers, I'd imagine the most likely thing to happen is that the only channel available would be the Fat Albert bathroom channel.

  93. if you have nothing to hide by HanzoSan · · Score: 2

    why fear being tracked? sure theres corrupt law enforcement but most arent.

    I dont mind being tracked if it will keep the USA from turning into another isreal.

    When things get so bad you cant walk out your house anymore, you'll be wishing there was surviellance.

    --
    If you use Linux, please help development of Autopac
    1. Re:if you have nothing to hide by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > if you have nothing to hide

      I still have curtains in my bedroom ... and I'm not doing anything illegal there ...

      > why fear being tracked? sure theres corrupt law enforcement but most arent.

      Hitler would have loved the society of today ... all opposition tracked .... WOW! KZ camp for them. But of course the human gene pool has changed significantly since then .... ?!

      > I dont mind being tracked if it will keep the USA from turning into another isreal.

      It will not, the 9/11 terrorists looked like plain ordinary citicens, or at least did nothing illegal, until those planes crashed, and by then it was too late.

      > When things get so bad you cant walk out your house anymore, you'll be wishing there was surviellance.

      I'll prefer my freedom and privacy ...

  94. Re:I don't see how this is much different than req by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It sounds to me that you are just terrified to death of technology. If the software 'falsely' matches your face to a criminal (due to error or malicious intent) you just use other means to establish your indentity.

  95. Privacy? Thats what your private property is for by HanzoSan · · Score: 1, Troll



    Isnt that why people buy houses and own land? Build yourself a gate and you'll have privacy.

    But why do idiots demand privacy in public places?
    How else can you stop terrorists, drug dealers, and other criminals if you dont have law enforcenment which keeps up with the technology the criminals have?

    I mean if criminals use cellphones and computers, shouldnt our government be able to track everyone by their cellphone? shouldnt stuff like carnivore exsist?

    I dont mind it exsisting.

    The way i see it, the only way to control crime, is to have good law enforcement, and the only way to have good law enforcement is survailance.

    Think of it this way, 911 wouldnt have happened if we had better security, right now we have next to none because everyone wants their privacy at the superbowl, or the movie theather, or on a highway on route 46.

    Honestly, survival comes first, unless we want to end up like isreal with suicide bombers bombing people on their way to work, I think we need to build some kinda security.

    Hell I dont think we have anywhere near what we should have, We should have elaberate bomb shelters, we should have cameras in all of the subways and places where alot of people will be, and we should use facial recognition, fingerprint recognition, etc etc

    --
    If you use Linux, please help development of Autopac
  96. You have a point there by HanzoSan · · Score: 2

    Drivers licenses arent meant to be ID, but we need some incentive to make everyone get ID.

    I actually support a national ID card, terrorists wouldnt be able to get the card, and it would be easier to hunt them down.

    Also we wouldnt have illegal immagrants in our country working illegally, robbing people, starting organized crime, and other bad stuff because it would be very easy to track them

    The guy who never has his ID card, gets questioned, police arrive, ask for his fingerprint and other information and check their database, if hes not in it, he gets deported

    --
    If you use Linux, please help development of Autopac
    1. Re:You have a point there by maxpublic · · Score: 2

      I actually support a national ID card, terrorists wouldnt be able to get the card, and it would be easier to hunt them do

      Criminals can get any kind of i.d. they like, and very good copies at that. National ID cards would have no effect on criminals or terrorists, only on honest citizens (e.g., tracking the movement of said citizens).

      If you honestly think that terrorists wouldn't be able to get i.d. cards, I'll point out the painfully obvious and you can chew on this for a bit: criminals are barred from purchasing guns illegally, yet being criminals they don't care and have an easier time getting a gun than an honest citizen! Anyone who's been to the sleazier sections of any large city can discover fairly quickly how simple it is to purchase a handgun, and at a cheaper price than most stores.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    2. Re:You have a point there by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      or perhaps it could be encoded as a UV barcode on your forhead or wrist.. America- land of the (apparently) free, Home of the Up and coming Anti Christ..

    3. Re:You have a point there by mpe · · Score: 2

      I actually support a national ID card, terrorists wouldnt be able to get the card, and it would be easier to hunt them down.

      There has never been a document made which cannot be forged. Or where it has not been possible to buy a "real" one.

      Also we wouldnt have illegal immagrants in our country working illegally, robbing people, starting organized crime, and other bad stuff because it would be very easy to track them.

      Except that any with links to organised crime will probably be able to produce documents demonstrating that they are US citizens.

  97. Re:Privacy? Thats what your private property is fo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So you want to give up ALL your freedom, just to get SECURITY? WELL GET OUT OF THE USA THEN!!
    Punk.

  98. Destruction of freedom not required for security! by HanzoSan · · Score: 2



    Surviellance in certain Zones in the city should be allowed, hell Surviallance based on civilian request should be allowed.

    Meaning if you live in an area of high crime, or you live in new york, you can request this security.

    When you mention security vs freedom, you forget to mention democracy!

    People should choose how much security they want, where they want it, and how much freedom they want and where.

    But the fact is, we need more security if we are to survival PERIOD, as far as freedom, we need freedom, but its a matter of where this freedom should be, not a matter of destroying freedom in exchange for security.

    Alot of people in the south, or outside of big cities dont like, need or want surviellance, they dont want security, they have shotguns and will defend themselves to protect their freedom.

    But ask someone from new york city what they want, see what THEY say, or ask someone living in harlem or south central LA what they want, and see what they say.

    I think, what we need honestly, is high security in certain cities, or certain parts of cities which are high risk.

    New york should be completely locked down, especially the economic sectors. The economic sectors of LA must be locked down, the inner cities must be locked down.

    Its simple, when you want to work in new york, or live in new york city, you deal with the extra security.

    This is fair, because the people in new york and other big cities have to worry about terrorism, and crime all the time. It should be a vote, new yorkers should use their tax dollars to pay for the security if they vote for more security. I do not believe we should federalize security.

    The situation here seems like one state introducing more security, perhaps the people who live there wanted this? Perhaps they dont want to have to deal with a 911 situation.

    If I were in new york, or washington i'd be scared and i'd definately want a national ID card, the fact that I do live in a city means I wouldnt mind a national ID card and surviellance.

    Security = Survival, Freedom = Enhanced Survival but you cannot have Freedom without Security to protect that Freedom and you cannot have survival without Security to ensure your survival.

    So Lets do it by a state by state basis, if a state is too secure for your liking and you dont feel you have enough freedom, move somewhere else.

    Think about it in the way of a democracy, lets allow the people in their seperate states decide what they want.

    I'd like to see someone from New York near the trade towers claiming they dont like security, so far i see a bunch of slashdotters who most likely dont live in Washington, or NewYork.

    --
    If you use Linux, please help development of Autopac
  99. The Constitution is *Flexable* by Trillian_1138 · · Score: 1

    I don't think your argument holds up. As you said, there's not an article of the Constitution granting rights to auto-owners: the technology wasn't there and the issue couldn't be addressed. Likewise, 'gun' in 1787 meant something *very* different than it does in 2002. You couldn't hope to fire off multiple shots back then nearly as quick as you can now, and the guns didn't have anything *close* to the same stopping power. And even if they did, or the Founding Fathers were somehow clarvoiant enough to see the future of weaponry, maybe they were just wrong.

    Part of the idea of the Constitution is the flexibility of it. Knowing they *didn't* know everything, the Founding Fathers left the ability to 'tweak' it. It's the ultimate Open Source government, if you will: always being tweaked, never 'finished', bug updates constantly required (and usually late), and always under review.

    The idea anyone should be able to have a gun becuase 'it's in the Constitution' is hogwash. You heard me: hogwash. Times have changed from the late 1700s and the same rules should no longer apply. Which is why the Second Ammendment needs updating. Oh, I fully realize it won't happen: too many people enjoy the 'freedom' it grants. But it's a danger. I'm not suggesting no one be allowed guns. But stronger gun restrictions would make things that much safer. I would argue arming one's self is a right, but not with guns. You can learn *hundreds* of forms of self-defence. Or carry nunchucks, if you like. Just as it isn't a 'right' to drive a fully-armed tank around, carrying a gun is not a right either.

    Carrying this over to cars: how is driving a right? If it's a right, isn't everyone equally entitled to it? Okay! Which one of you is paying for my next car? Come on! Don't all jump in at once...

    Saying something is a 'right' and, taking it a step further, that everyone should be able to do whatever they want is silly. It doesn't work when applied to guns, and works even *less* when applied to cars.

    ___The above has been deemed flaimbait, and the author eagerly awaits being drawn and quartered___

    1. Re:The Constitution is *Flexable* by mamba-mamba · · Score: 1

      You are correct that the constitution is tweakable, but if you don't have the constituency to update the 2nd ammendment then you have to live with it. Sorry.

      And while it is possible that the founding fathers were wrong about some things, I think it is extremely dangerous to start making end-runs around constitutional provisions just because a simple majority (or less) believes it is a good idea. In effect, this would mean that we don't have a real constitution, but just majority rule, and it might mean that some laws are enforced and some not.

      Keep in mind that the constitution is supposed to be the supreme law of the land in the USA. EVERY peace officer takes an oath to uphold it, as do most or all public officials. If we don't want that to be the case, then we need to change the constitution officially by the mechanisms set forth in the constitution. If you lack the political support to change the constitution, then you need to question wether you have the right to do it at all.

      MM
      --

      --
      By including this sig, the copyright holders of this work or collection unreservedly place it in the public domain.
  100. Re:Destruction of freedom not required for securit by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

    I agree with you 100%. Really. Security ZOnes In high population centers, no gun controls or anything in Montana. I hate guns. But I'm never going to Montana. But what does a guy in Manhattan need a shotgun for?

    You should move where your outlook on the world reflects your worldview. Rural ideals in the countryside. Urban views in the cities. I worked at 5 World Trade Center until September 11th and I live in TImes Square. I probably can't take a shit in my bathroom without 2 cameras recording the whole event in ultrasound and infrared. ;-P

    And you know what? Fine by me. For some guy in rural Alabama, maybe not. Keep your shotgun, honey. Just don't visit NYC with it in your pickup. And we're all happy.

    Bravo! Really! Good Post! Somebody mod this guy to 5!!! 8-)

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
  101. Re:Privacy? Thats what your private property is fo by HanzoSan · · Score: 2

    AC not i never said that

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    If you use Linux, please help development of Autopac
  102. Re:Destruction of freedom not required for securit by HanzoSan · · Score: 2

    why do we need civilians using guns anyhow? stun guns and tasers should be the only legal self defense, i mean swords are illegal but you can have a gun for self defense?!

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  103. You're an ass by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sorry about the tone. But for someone who keeps ranting that "please don't attack me personally if you reply, try to keep it above the belt and reply to the substance", you're awfully quick to proclaim anyone who disagrees with you mentally ill.

    1. Re:You're an ass by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

      Sorry about that. Your criticism is taken to heart. I will try to stand closer to what I say and not misrepresent myself. I mean, if I believe in what I say, there is no reason to hide, right? So sorry... Anonymous Coward. (!?) ;-P

      --
      intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
  104. i bet CT ... by Alien+Being · · Score: 1

    CT is a weird state.

    Although it has been repealed, CT was one of very few states with a no-radar-detector law. They also have some of the nastiest and sneakiest gestapo^h^h^h^h^h^h^h troopers to be found on u.s. highways. It's like a northern version of VA.

    1. Re:i bet CT ... by Skjellifetti · · Score: 1

      I remember driving through CT a few years ago when they were working on the Interstate Hwy. They had a Getsapo^h^h^h^h^h^h^h State Trooper posted every 1/2 mile to keep the speed of the traffic down to a resonable level in the construction zone. They must have had 9/10s of the state cops standing by their cars on the Interstate. Funny thing was, the traffic wasn't moving any faster than 35 MPH anyway due to the density of the traffic and construction itself. If CT's Troopers are Gestapo, I wouldn't worry too much 'cause they must be the most inefficient bunch of cops around.

  105. The teachers of the purpose of existence.-- by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Whether I contemplate men with benevolence or with an evil eye, I always find them concerned with a single task, all of them and every one of them in particular: to do what is good for the preservation of the human race. Not from any feeling of love for the race, but merely because nothing in them is older, stronger, more inexorable and unconquerable that this instinct--because this instinct constitutes the essence of our species, our herd. It is easy enough to divide our neighbors quickly, with the usual myopia, from a mere five paces away, into useful and harmful, good and evil men; but in any large-scale accounting, when we reflect on the whole a little longer, we become suspicious of this neat division and finally abandon it. Even the most harmful man may really be the most useful when it comes to the preservation of the species; for he nurtures either in himself or in others, through his effects, instincts without which humanity would long have become feeble or rotten. Hatred, the mischievous delight in the misfortunes of others, the lust to rob and dominate, and whatever else is called evil belongs to the most amazing economy of the preservation of the species. To be sure, this economy is not afraid of high prices, of squandering, and it is on the whole extremely foolish. Still it is proven that it has preserved our race so far.

    I no longer know whether you, my dear fellow man and neighbor, are at all capable of living in a way that would damager the species; in other words, "unreasonably" and "badly." What might have harmed the species may have become extinct many thousands of years ago and may by now be one of those things that are not possible even for God. Pursue your best or your worst desires, and above all perish! In both cases you are probably still in some way a promoter and benefactor of humanity and therefore entitled to your eulogists--but also to your detractors. But you will never find anyone who could wholly mock you as an individual, also in your best qualities, bringing home to you to the limits of truth your boundless, flylike, froglike wretchedness! To laugh at oneself as one would have to laugh in order to laugh out of the whole truth--to do that even the best so far lacked sufficient sense for the truth, and the most gifted had too little genius for that. Even laughter may yet have a future. I mean, when the proposition "the species is everything, one is always none" has become part of humanity, and this ultimate liberation and irresponsibility has become accessible to all at all times. Perhaps laughter will then have formed an alliance with wisdom, perhaps only "joyful science" will then be left.

    For the present, things are still quite different. For the present, the comedy of existence has not yet "become conscious" of itself. For the present, we still live in the age of tragedy, the age of moralities and religions. What is the meaning of the ever new appearance of these founders of moralities and religions, these instigators of fights over moral valuations, these teachers of remorse and religious wars? What is the meaning of these heroes on this stage? Thus far these have been the heroes, and everything else, even if at times it was all that could be seen and was much too near to us, has always merely served to set the stage for these heroes, whether it was machinery or coulisse or took the form of confidants and valets. (The poets, for example, were always the valets of some morality.)

    It is obvious that these tragedians, too, promote the interests of the species, even if they should believe that they promote the interest of God, or work as God's emissaries. They, too, promote the life of the species, by promoting the faith in life. "Life is worth living," everyone of them shouts; "there is something to life, there is something behind life, beneath it; beware!"

    From time to time this instinct, which is at work equally in the highest and the basest men--erupts as reason and as passion of the spirit. Then it is surrounded by a resplendent retinue of reasons and tried with all the force at its command to make us forget that at bottom it is instinct, drive, folly, lack of reasons. Life shall be loved because--! Man shall advance himself and his neighbor, because--! What names all these Shalls and Becauses receive and may yet receive in the future! In order that what happens necessarily and always, spontaneously and without any purpose, may henceforth appear to be done for some purpose and strike men as rational and an ultimate commandment, the ethical teacher comes on the stage, as the teacher of the purpose of existence; and to this end he invents a second, difference existence and unhinges by means of his new mechanics the old, ordinary existence. Indeed, he wants to make sure that we do not laugh at existence. Indeed, he wants to make sure that we do not laugh at existence, or at ourselves--or at him: for him, one is always one, something first and last and tremendous; for him there are no species, sums or zeros. His inventions and valuations may be utterly foolish and overenthusiastic; he may badly misjudge the course of nature and deny its conditions--and all ethical systems hitherto have been so foolish and anti-natural that humanity would have perished of every one of them if it had gained power over humanity--and yet, whenever "the hero" appeared on the stage, something new was attained: the gruesome counterpart of laughter, that profound emotional shock felt by many individuals at the thought: "Yes, I am worthy of living!" Life and I and you and all of us became interesting to ourselves once again for a little while.

    There is no deny that in the long run every one of these great teachers of purpose was vanquished by laughter, reason, and nature: the short tragedy always gave way again and returned to the eternal comedy of existence; and "the waves of uncountable laughter"--to cite Aeschylus--must in the end overwhelm even the greatest of these tragedians. In spite of all this laughter which makes the required corrections, human nature has nevertheless been changed by the ever new appearance of these teachers of the purpose of existence: It now has one additional need--the need for the ever new appearance of such teachers and teachings of a "purpose."

    Gradually, man has become a fantastic animal that has to fulfill one more condition of existence than any other animal: man has to believe, to know, from time to time why he exists; his race cannot flourish without a periodic trust in life--without faith in reason in life. And again and again the human race will decree from time to time: "There is something at which it is absolutely forbidden henceforth to laugh." The most cautious friend of man will add: "Not only laughter and gay wisdom but the tragic, too, with all it sublime unreason, belongs among the means and necessities of the preservation of the species."

    Consequently--. Consequently. Consequently. O, do you understand me, my brothers? Do you understand this new law of ebb and flood? There is time for us, too!

  106. Re:Destruction of freedom not required for securit by circletimessquare · · Score: 0, Troll

    I really hate gun lovers. They are like Beavis and Butthead getting excited over explosions. They think life is like the WIld West where they will walk through town as the paramount protectors of all things fair and just. Meanwhile their kid blows their head off when they find their gun under their bed. Or it gets stolen and gets used to rob the 7-11. Guns invite horror, they don't protect against them. I think they like guns because they think it makes up for their underdeveloped manhoods. Guns are the last refuge of the stupid and the cowardly. Gawd I hate gun lovers- is it obvious? ;-P

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
  107. Theres no reason for anyone to have guns by HanzoSan · · Score: 2

    Self defense is not a valid claim, hunting can be a valid claim but really why do need a machine gun to hunt with? or a 22, or a 357, etc

    The real reason guns are sold, are to give law enforcements a job.

    If there were no guns, there would be alot less crime, sure there would still be crime, but it would be mafia hitman type crime, not random kids shooting each other, or people getting robbed in the inner city at gunpoint

    Kids and inner city thugs are GIVEN guns, usually by the mafia and others who buy them in the south at gunshows, its a whole market.

    But I'm not going to argue about gun control, I dont see a point to guns and if we do sell guns it should be strict in all areas, the only people who should be able to buy guns are licensed hunters.
    But no, you can buy a gun at walmart in some places.

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    If you use Linux, please help development of Autopac
    1. Re:Theres no reason for anyone to have guns by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

      Gun lovers have the second amendment. The founding fathers were correct about so many things. But there aren't any Native Americans around any more to shoot (so what was the reason for the second amendment again?). They treaty it like the Bible. It's all they have to cling to. The Bill of Rights is not the Bible. The founding fathers also proposed the votes of 5 slaves should count as the vote of 3 whites, for crying out loud. Things change. Of course freedom of speech was a Wonderful pillar of protection they afforded us, and that is reaffirmed on a daily basis. Make a cartoon of Jerry Falwell in Hustler? It's OK, it's the first amendment. But the right of gang bangers to shoot up neighborhoods is not reaffirmed on a daily basis. This was not the voice of god speaking through Mohammed or something, the founding fathers were fallible men. They got so much right. They even got the second amendment right! But only IN THEIR TIME. Why can't people see this common sense?

      --
      intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    2. Re:Theres no reason for anyone to have guns by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      Oh please. If you're so fucking stirred up over the fact that your neighbor is armed then start a movement to repeal the 2nd Amendment. Coward.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    3. Re:Theres no reason for anyone to have guns by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

      maxpublic? is that you maxpublic? still spouting off? gawd i miss you *smooches*

      maybe i will.

      are you calling me a coward? good for you. must not have anything wittier to say, then, huh?

      xoxoxoxoxoxoxoxoxoxoxoxox
      i love you maxpublic! 8-)

      --
      intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    4. Re:Theres no reason for anyone to have guns by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The 2nd ammendment is for the right to defend against tyranny you blathering idiot.

    5. Re:Theres no reason for anyone to have guns by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

      thank you, anonmyous coward. would you explain to me why this is universally intepretted as the right of gang bangers to shoot up their block? the right of morons to rob 7-11s with saturday night specials? tyranny indeed.

      --
      intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    6. Re:Theres no reason for anyone to have guns by nathanm · · Score: 2
      But there aren't any Native Americans around any more to shoot (so what was the reason for the second amendment again?).
      To protect ourselves from a tyrannical government.

      The founding fathers also proposed the votes of 5 slaves should count as the vote of 3 whites, for crying out loud.
      First, it wasn't votes, because blacks couldn't vote in most parts of the US until the 15th Amendment to the Constitution was ratified in 1870. It was about population, since the states were represented in the US House based on their population.

      Second, the 3/5ths rule was a compromise between the slave states of the south & the free states of the north. The slaveowners wanted to count every slave in their population, so they'd be better represented in Congress and admit new states to the union as slave states. Al Gore obviously didn't understand this when he brought it up during the 2000 presidential debates.
    7. Re:Theres no reason for anyone to have guns by nathanm · · Score: 2
      Self defense is not a valid claim
      What, I should just submit to violent criminals? I don't think so. The right to self defense is a fundamental human right.

      The real reason guns are sold, are to give law enforcements a job.
      No, guns are sold because the 2nd Amendment protects our right to own them.

      If there were no guns, there would be alot less crime
      You are deluding yourself. Nowhere that guns have been outlawed has enjoyed a decrease in crime. When people have no guns to protect themselves or deter crime, criminals feel safer.
    8. Re:Theres no reason for anyone to have guns by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

      a student of US history?

      good for you.

      WHERE IS F***ING TYRANNY NOW???

      IN THE US GOVERNMENT??!!

      OR IS THE TYRANNY IN GANG BANGERS AND MORONS ROBBING 7-11S WITH SATURDAY NIGHT SPECIALS???

      it's like some weird force exists in the frontal lobe, repelling all obviousness, logic, commonsense...

      WHY DO I BOTHER!!!!!!!!

      --
      intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
  108. ARMS not GUNS by HanzoSan · · Score: 2



    This means the right to self defense, guns arent needed for self defense, guns are made to kill.

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    If you use Linux, please help development of Autopac
    1. Re:ARMS not GUNS by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

      i am weeping. you make so much sense. but we are surrounded by the gunlovers! they hold the government hostage with their NRA lobbies, etc. And they appeal to our heritage. In a sick way, people are obsessed with guns. It is psychological- it's about control. It promises people control over their lives in ways you can not imagine without a gun. But it doesn't deliver. It is sort of an addiction, in a way. A gun is a psychological device.

      Just look how many guns there are in movies. It is sexy. Humankind is obsessed with violence. In a way, that is healthy. Healthy instincts to keep you alive. But it is self-defeating ultimately, because human psychological evolution has been around a lot longer than guns, and the psychological underpinnings that make us pine for guns is self-defeating, ultimately.

      --
      intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    2. Re:ARMS not GUNS by HanzoSan · · Score: 2

      I dont consider violence an instinct, instincts assume 100 percent of all humans have it, like the ability of a baby to suck his mothers nipple, or crawl, or walk, thats instinct. Crying is instinct.

      Rage, Violence, and being a Control freak is not instinct.

      However I admit a large part of the population has this disorder, hate is also a disorder and a large portion of the population has that problem too.

      just becsause its popular doesnt make it morally right,

      The founders of the USA, they were total hypocrites, both good and evil at the same time.
      They founded USA for freedom, then took freedom from others in Africa, Native Americans, Mexicans, these people werent even considered HUMAN.

      Lets not forget the burning of witches, wasnt this land started because some slaves and criminals from Europe who didnt follow the normal religion were exiled to the USA, or decided to go in some cases.

      Gun laws are also hypocritical, gun lovers claim they need guns to defend themselves from criminals who have guns, self defense, etc etc, however 99 percent of the time, guns are used for killing, kids shooting up schools, thugs robbing people, hell guns even help terrorism.

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      If you use Linux, please help development of Autopac
    3. Re:ARMS not GUNS by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

      Look around some of the posts around here. Makes you wonder doesn't it? It reveals what some of what the gunlovers really think. They are amazingly immune to the logic and truth about guns. It is like a religion or something. Some people sit on one side of the fence about abortion, or evolution, and you can yell the truth at them for 20 years and they won't waver one inch. It has less to do with truth, and more to do with passion and belief. It's kinda scary, how deeply rooted people love their stupid guns. They must fondle them in bed or something or put them on some alter and pray to them.

      --
      intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    4. Re:ARMS not GUNS by HanzoSan · · Score: 2

      As far as abortion goes, I'm pro life
      I dont believe in treating life like material or something you own and aborting it when you dont want it. Its selfish.

      As for my opinion on evolution, evolution is not proven, but what is proven is that our cells do mutate, we havent figured out why they mutate and what causes it to mutate in useful ways, and theres really no such thing as random.

      People have a right to their beliefs, I only disagree with beliefs which cause harm to someone else,
      Abortion, Guns, etc arent exactly harmless beliefs, people die over it

      Same with capital punishment which i disagree with;

      --
      If you use Linux, please help development of Autopac
    5. Re:ARMS not GUNS by linzeal · · Score: 1
      I'm pro-life as well but I'm really really sick of you creationists cramping any chance of such a progressive ideology getting good face for the regressive rhetoric about evolution.

      Cells mutating can be cancer, it can be a lot of things but unless they are germ cells it doesn't even come matter to evolution. Please I admonish you to stop playing ignorant to the massive amount of data and theory that the scientific study of evolution has discovered. Go read darwin's travelogue on the HMS beagle (can't remember it off the top of my head) it will open your eyes. Don't start me on reading the bible either. I have done serious studies on the bible as I was raised in a jesuit missionary school.

    6. Re:ARMS not GUNS by HanzoSan · · Score: 2



      Darwin never had any scientific evidence, he was just guessing.

      The only evidence that evolution exsists, is the fact that every human is slightly diffrent.

      Some of the young people today, are mentally and physically superior than their parents but most arent.

      Evolution however right now is still a mystery because we dont know WHY things evolve, its not like genetics where we can map out why everything does what it does and what causes it, Evolution seems random but its not. What controls it is the question.

      Evolution is from cause and effect, Evolution is the effect, whatd the cause? Mutation doesnt seem likely, Humans evolve at a much faster rate than say Monkeys, Bears, Apes, and other mammals, why?

      IF you look throughout the last 10,000 years we have evolved alot scientificially, we havent evolved at all emotionally, or socially, which is why we still have wars, and do stupid shit.

      Perhaps a few people are emotionally evolved, but not the majority, people who are "Evolved" in such a way are considered pacifists by the majority.

      But in reality, this is a feature, a specific evolutionary feature which evolved to get us to stop having wars and killing each other off.

      Physically people evolved to be taller, and bigger, is it the food? What causes this? Why is a bear so big? why are some animals so small?

      To solve the problem of evolution you need more than a bunch of theories(guesses) and littles bits and peices of evidence.

      As far as me being pro life, I think of it this way, would I want to be aborted? No, I'm glad to get a chance to live, so why take that chance away from someone else? And yes a baby even if its still in the womb, is alive, and no its not part of the mother, its a seperate lifeform INSIDE of the mother.

      To be scientific, being part of something requires that it has the same DNA, babies have half the mother and fathers DNA.

      Its like you getting a lung transplant then claiming it was always your lung.

      The right to decide if something lives or dies is a right which causes harm to others, so i dont agree with it, its no diffrent than capital punishment, even if these people have no one in the world who cares if they live or die, this doesnt mean anyone should be able to decide for them.

      Thst is selfishness.

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      If you use Linux, please help development of Autopac
  109. Re:Privacy? Thats what your private property is fo by finalatk · · Score: 1

    I agree that security should be a #1 concern for our nations lawmakers and law enforcement agencies but to blindly allow them to enact laws allow systems that violate civil liberties would be foolish. With bills like the newly passed "Patriot Act" the public needs to be more alert than ever for covert actions from the government in the name of national security. Security is vital but we cannot allow law enforement to exclude itself from out countries system of checks and balances but circumventing the courts for things like wiretapping. These agencies don't stay honest with thier already extensive survalience powers out of the goodness of thier hearts it is public knowlage and judicial review that keep them in check. Surely there is nothing wrong with the public closely examining the laws and systems that effect each and every one of us. We cannot give up the rights and way of life that we are fighiting so hard to protect.

  110. A very good thing. NOT. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Biometric information is a good thing.

    It means you will pay less for insurance.

    If you are lucky enought to have the "right" genes.

    So far, we have identified nearly 600 genes that express both as succeptibility or evidence of particular diseases, and also as "biometric information".

    We haven't made a scuence of phrenology or palistry yet, but there is a lot of information you can get merely by looking in detail at the biometric information commonly collected today, that any reasonable person would probably consider private.

    It's statistically very easy to tell if a woman is a lesbian or a man is homosexual, from biometric information: if the woman's index finger is shorter than her ring finger, then there was a progesterone wash in the third trimester which effected her organic brain structure. Likewise, a man whose cheekbones describe an andle of 23 degrees or less, and for which there is significant temple bossing, but not grow bossing indicate a degree of 4-5 reductase insensitivity, and thus a higher probability of homosexuality.

    Whether your earlobes are attached or detached indicate whether you have inherited the genes for three types of coronary artery disease, which also express in the shape of the earlobe. Certain other ear features will indicate whether the gene is from the father's side, the mother's side, or both.

    The whorl on you right thumb print -- the one that California requires for its driver's licenses -- can indicate, by curviture and length relative to the thumb pad itself, whether you have a higher succeptibility to liver cancer, or not.

    The ratio of your forehead width at the top, the facial width at the cheekbones, and the length of the nose reflect on whether you have or do not have the liver enzyme necessary for oxidation of ethyl alcohol. If you don't, it's likely that you have Native American ancestry, as well.

    It will be nice when they start requring both index fingers, as well as the thumb. That way, we will be able to tell whether you have a family history of breast cancer, colorectal cancer, or an allergy to peanut products (more generally, legumes, actually, not specifically peanuts, but probably peanuts).

    All of this information being a matter of public record is useful.

    It permits insurance companies to deny you health insurance, or categorize you into high risk groups, which need to pay more for insurance.

    It permits employers to take your badge photograph, and discriminate in their hiring practices in a relatively undectectable way, so as to keep you out of their insurance risk group, and thereby keep their out of pocket costs down.

    "No one would ever use the information for anything bad, right?"

    Technically, you can get out of the driver's license "contract". You do it by citing a particular section of U.S. Code before your signature. Be warned that if you do this, though, the state will make your life a living hell to get you to comply (e.g. pulling you over every time they see you, and other harrassing behaviours).

    For some reason, David Brin ("The Transparent Society") seems to think this is a good thing. I don't.

  111. Over 50% of the people in NYC do not have licenses by Out4Blood · · Score: 1

    Most people don't drive.

    --
    - Consult the dictionary frequently to avoid mispelling
  112. Thats why the card has your DNA, Retina, etc by HanzoSan · · Score: 2

    Hows a terrorist going to get your DNA? your retina scan info, your birth mother and fathers name, finger print, social security number, bank account, employer, and credit card + medical info.

    All of this could be stored on a card via a chip. IT would be too expensive for terrorists to afford to forge cards on a mass scale. I'm talking hundreds of thousands each card, and if its good enough maybe even millions.

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    If you use Linux, please help development of Autopac
    1. Re:Thats why the card has your DNA, Retina, etc by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      Look son, no fucker is going to get my DNA and store it on a card. Ever.

      And in any event, you're incredibly naive if you don't think criminals won't find a way around your protections. They've been doing it since the dawn of time, and nothing you do is going to change that.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    2. Re:Thats why the card has your DNA, Retina, etc by HanzoSan · · Score: 2

      theres a way around everything but what computer is powerful enough to generate valid DNA that an average criminal can afford? Million dollar super computer? DNA is extremely complicated and almost impossible to forge.
      Finger prints are difficult also, and same with retina, by putting more than one peice off info on a chip, it makes it harder to crack if not impossible

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      If you use Linux, please help development of Autopac
    3. Re:Thats why the card has your DNA, Retina, etc by mpe · · Score: 2

      Hows a terrorist going to get your DNA? your retina scan info, your birth mother and fathers name, finger print, social security number, bank account, employer, and credit card + medical info.

      By gaining access to the database which holds the reference data. Then they can simply subsitute their biometric data. Or they simply create a whole new person. How secure do you think a system with over 200 million records will be in practice?

  113. Re:Privacy? Thats what your private property is fo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes you did! You said you want public tracking of everybody and everything. You do not want freedom. You want a police state. You are the termite eating into FREE AMERICAN SOCIETY. You are a SCOUNDREL and a BLACKGUARD.

  114. Invalid data on your drivers license is a bad idea by moncyb · · Score: 1

    No. I think you are confused. That won't work. It'll probably work for someone who gets arrested and the cops try to take his thumbprint.

    However for the drivers license, the first time someone compares the print on record with the person's actual fingers, a whole bunch of red flags will go up. I can just hear the accusations of "Terrorist" "Drug Dealer" "Wanted Criminal" starting to fly. You could end up going to jail for doing nothing that is really wrong! They certainly don't have the right to fingerprint (or get a facial scan of) an innocent citizen, but that won't protect you.

    If anyone should be tracked with fingerprints, DNA, or biometrics, then it should only be the criminals out on parole or with a warrant for their arrest. I can't think of any valid arguments for tracking law abiding citizens in these matters. A picture should be enough for identification.

  115. Re:Over 50% of the people in NYC do not have licen by WizardWlf · · Score: 1

    Anyone who is considered legally blind can't drive and we get around just fine. Why do you need a drivers licence anyway? If you are just going back and forth to work or the store, take a bus or train, find a car pool (help pay for gas) and your life will be much simpler. You will have many less expences in your life also, no car insurance ($2000 a year) no car payments ($20,000 over 5 to 10 years) no vehicle taxes (amount unknown). It just makes life easier to deal with. Especially in large cities, no wondering if your car will be stolen, or if that is your alarm going off at 3:00 am waking the neiborhood.

    That's just my opinion, I could be wrong!

  116. Re:Destruction of freedom not required for securit by maxpublic · · Score: 2

    If you object then change the Constitution to repeal the 2nd Amendment. The process for doing so is readily available to anyone who wants to make the attempt.

    Go on, get off your fat ass and start the process. Please. Enough yammering about the evils of guns; do something about it!

    Or are you afraid your call to repeal the 2nd Amendment would never pass muster?

    Max

    --
    My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
  117. driving? by devonbowen · · Score: 1

    My FAA license has no photo and there is really no need for one since police aren't actually stopping me in the sky asking for it. In any situation where I would be asked to provide the license, there is plenty of time for verification through other means.

    The photo on a drivers license is used by a police officer on the street to determine whether the license you provide is actually yours. Since this is done in enormous volume, it makes sense that there is a fast and efficient way to authenticate it.

    But I don't understand how facial recognition data is going to add anything to the verification process. And I'm not sure that the photo verification process even has any serious flaws as it is. The ONLY real use for this information is if it's shared among other agencies for uses unrelated to driving.

    So all this "driving is a priviledge" stuff is pretty off base. What we are talking about here really has nothing at all to do with driving.

    Devon

  118. Facial recognition???? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    According to all the reports, this technology isn't efficient enough to be worth the investment.

    Is it just another way to waste public funds?

  119. Last one out of CT, turn the lights off. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When I lived in CT, this was the statewide saying; everyone complained about taxes and laws. I guess they're trying to move to an accelerated time table. At least with everyone leaving, the rate of inbreeding should decline. Maybe winsted will one day be removed from the top ten list of most inbred towns.

  120. Re:Destruction of freedom not required for securit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I was right there when it happened and I do not want surviallance round the clock. Why would anyone want to live in a police state where every move you make is watched and can be used against you (gave money to that bum? Oh, he's a terrorist in disguise and now you will be tracked and monitored around the clock, just in case)?

    Please don't make assumptions about New Yorkers. We take care of our own. We really don't want DC passing laws to make our wonderfully dirty and dangerous city "safer".

    Why don't you just propose all big buisnessess should be decentrialized into small suburbs around the country? Then no one would be interested in attacking NYC and maybe I could get an studio apartment in Manhattan for under $1,000.

  121. What can be a weapon? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Virtually anything can be used as a weapon or a part of a weapon or a segment of the whole can be used as a weapon. By the way, a firearm is also a tool that has non-lethal uses other then target practice. You need to do more research and your not alone. Even moderation points can be used as weapons as this AC post shows, albeit most likely a non-lethal one.

    On further note, I agree with you about the incredible stupidity of "zero tolerance policies". The teachers unions seek to absolve themselves of the responsibilities of teaching and maintaining discipline. There is ample documentation available to support this as well.

    Of course I could point to documentation that would support my positions and they would be countered by other references while whomever disagrees with me attempts to prove me wrong just because I posted with something that fell outside their current perceptions. I don't fall for that when it is presented to me and don't expect anyone else to either, they can do their own research and draw their own conclusions. ( This paragraph for all the moderators who think every posted response should carry a link and a registered nick. )

  122. The real biometrics issue.. by some2 · · Score: 1

    The issue with biometric data storage is not necessarily its use for identifying people as they move about country. If they wanted to track you, they could do it well before they started developing useful facial recognition software. The problem is truely with the storage medium, and the auditing and security placed on this data. If this data were stored on chips on the ID cards, possessed only by the actual card owner, we would have few problems. Sure, there would be theft potentially, but people steal Social Security Cards still. A central database designed for access by any DMV or law enforcement personel leaves many potential holes. It has been proven many times over that it is only a matter of money that can drive an employee like that to corruption -- especially in jobs which are so seriously underpaid. In the US, there is a man creating masks for people who have been disfigured in fires. These masks are created to nearly mirror the original face. The face is designed based on a collection of pictures of the disfigured person. As facial pictures get better, these new digital images of us could potentially become someone's new face. As facial recognition software does not readily detect well-constructed masks, it would be impossible to differentiate the two based simply based on a picture. Retina and fingerprint scanners have a similar issue, although Retina scanners are significantly more complicated to defeat. As many of these scanners rely on few points of verification, it only takes a minimal amount of work to falsify an image. Even fingerprints have in many cases been falsified. Consider that there are likely a few hundred to a few thousand programmers whom have designed some of these biometric identification software from companies which have since shutdown. These people have been involved in testing many thousands of false fingers and faces. Who's to say that these programmers may not be the next generation of criminal -- one who leaves an exact representation of other people's fingerprints, in perfect digital format, to commit crimes -- ditch the connection to themselves -- and have the ability to target this attack to anyone whom they wish. This applies simply to faces too -- given a sufficient digital image, one could construct a mask that could easily fool current facial-recognition software. This is my true fear of this consolidation of information. When this was stored in 285,000,000 5"x7" cards in a huge warehouse protected by armed guards and requiring security clearance to enter, I was not concerned. Now, there is nothing complicated involved in pulling up any information they wish. gov1# Download complete. 100% of 542 megabytes. Elapsed Time: 00:40s allstates.tgz gov1#

  123. Benjamin Franklin by Sergeant+Beavis · · Score: 1

    made the following remark: "They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety" We, the United States, are slowly but surely becoming a police state. Do we truly want the actions of less than 20 men to forever forfeit our liberties? I served my country to perserve those liberties not to surrender them. The person's right to privacy is essential to maintain a true democracy. The government must not be able to know it's peoples every move lest it desire to control said people. Control is what this is all about. Events like those happening in Conneticut will only serve as the foundation upon which "Fortress America" will be built. Unfortunately, WE THE PEOPLE, will be it's prisoners.

    --
    There is nothing inherently safe about liberty. That's why so many people died protecting it.
    1. Re:Benjamin Franklin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is not having your government be able to verify your identity an "essential freedom"?

  124. Re:Invalid data on your drivers license is a bad i by Telemakhos · · Score: 1

    If anyone should be tracked with fingerprints, DNA, or biometrics, then it should only be the criminals out on parole or with a warrant for their arrest. I can't think of any valid arguments for tracking law abiding citizens in these matters.

    If you try to get a job as a schoolteacher in the great Commonwealth of Virginia, your friendly local constabulary will print you before you even see your contract. Your prints go on file with the FBI. I'm a law-abiding citizen, sure enough, but J. Edgar has my "biometrics."

  125. Re:Over 50% of the people in NYC do not have licen by tftp · · Score: 2
    Anyone who is considered legally blind can't drive and we get around just fine.

    I lived in a large city and did not need a car at all. Buses, streetcars & subway were all too convenient.

    Then I moved to suburbs (because company built its own building there and moved). No subway, of course. Buses were available on schedule (every 30 minutes or so), unless it was snowing - then no buses until the morning. If I had to work late then the transportation problem was all on my own shoulders - last bus departed at something like 9:30pm, and after that good luck walking. BTW, there were no good sidewalks, and several times I had to make my way through piles of construction materials, steel rods and other hazards. In the winter there were no sidewalks at all (too much snow), and then one has to walk on the road - did I mention that the road was icy and slippery? I am not sure how I survived that period.

    Then I bought a car, and since then I never had to worry about a bus or snow or cold. True, the car needs repairs on occasion, but that is a scheduled work usually, and is very simple (leave it with the nearby mechanic, then pick it up later).

    Why do you need a drivers licence anyway?

    How about paying for groceries with a personal cheque? There are more examples, of course.

    find a car pool

    This is a good idea - if you work from 9:00:00am to 5:00:00pm. But if your schedule is flexible, as most engineers know, you'll never catch that carpool. The life of an assembly line worker or a government's clerk is indeed simpler. Life of an ant is even simpler, but do we need to go there?

    You will have many less expences in your life also, no car insurance ($2000 a year)

    This $2000 figure is ridiculous. Even in Canada a good driver gets away with CDN$ 600-800 per year. In USA $300/yr is all it takes.

    no car payments ($20,000 over 5 to 10 years)

    I don't understand what "payments" you are talking about. I bought my last car - Mercedes 190E - for $5000, paid in full right there, and that's it. The car, BTW, works great.

    no vehicle taxes (amount unknown)

    USD $50/yr, FYI. Hardly a problem. But do you know how expensive subway and bus is? Dollars per trip, in each direction, and consider yourself lucky if you can use transfer slips. When I used public transportation (TTC) I had to buy a monthly pass, CDN $30 IIRC. This amounted to CDN $360/yr, with no guarantee that a bus will actually arrive.

    no wondering if your car will be stolen, or if that is your alarm going off at 3:00 am waking the neiborhood.

    That is a non-issue. People with cheap cars (like me) sleep well knowing that nobody will want our cars. People with expensive cars buy theft insurance and sleep well too.

    Despite of all that, I would be much happier if I don't need a car. I drive only when I must. Unfortunately, even the nearest grocery store is beyond the walking range (2 miles).

  126. Re:Invalid data on your drivers license is a bad i by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why is it that we believe that criminals should be able to "get away" with crimes unless they have been in prison? If everyone had databased DNS fingerprints, getting away with a rape or other such offence would become much more difficult. Everywhere DNA is freeing people who have been falsely imprisoned. Are you claiming that the world is a better place when people were imprisoned falsely. If the DNA matches, why do we have to have some other reason to suspect that person before we can compare DNA? It's just allows the smartest criminals to never get caught. Victims have rights to.

  127. Re:Over 50% of the people in NYC do not have licen by onepoint · · Score: 1

    >>You will have many less expences in your life also, no car insurance ($2000 a year)
    >This $2000 figure is ridiculous. Even in Canada a good driver gets away with CDN$ 600-800 per year. In USA $300/yr is all it takes.

    If you live in NJ that figure might be low. But then again we have the highest insureance rates in the nation on average

    -onepoint

    --
    if you see me, smile and say hello.
  128. Re:I don't see how this is much different than req by mamba-mamba · · Score: 1

    You need to turn up the sensitivity on your sarcasm detector...

    I would have thought that this line would have clued you in:
    Why doesn't Malda just make Slashdot a dry erase board on his front door?

    MM
    --

    --
    By including this sig, the copyright holders of this work or collection unreservedly place it in the public domain.
  129. Re:Privacy? Thats what your private property is fo by pauldy · · Score: 1
    Think of it this way, 911 wouldnt have happened if we had better security, right now we have next to none because everyone wants their privacy at the superbowl, or the movie theather, or on a highway on route 46.


    B.S. If people had done their jobs 911 wouldn't have happened. Consider at least 4 of the people who committed the acts were already on a government watch list for terrorism. Given this the problem is obviously not, as you implied, the inability of government to track or keep track of criminals. They already have the ability and the means. Also you propose a military state were government controls everything outside your front door. I for one could not live in a country like this. I think your need to take away the rights of others to satisfy your own fears would best be dealt with by some serious psychotherapy.
  130. Chill out.. by IAmSancho · · Score: 1

    Jesus, man. Chill out. Stop being so paranoid.

    --
    -------------------------

    Stupid people suck.

  131. what a buch of whiner's (and libertarians) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    does anyone believe that the govt (including the state they live in) doesn't already have information like this? You act like the loss of a minor amount of freedom will crimp your style; Give me safety above all else

  132. Re:I don't see how this is much different than req by guanxi · · Score: 1

    "On the off chance that your post isn't some kind of subtle, ironic humor that has eluded me"

    My apologies; no subtlety intended.

  133. WTF by CeZa · · Score: 0

    Honestly, I don't see why this crowd will have a problem with this. It's like, "why use CDs? cassettes are so much clearer!" My primary enjoyment out of this will be the fact that with a universal database and "powerful" applications means a forced upgrade of the systems at the DMV which is long overdue. I wouldn't mind being able to renew my license online or atleast cut down the wait. As far as the hate on the aspect of a MS Sql database or VB Application... I know Microsoft catches a lot of flaming, as maybe they should for some, but as far as the Server Products (Minus .NET Server) go, the products are pretty solid for the ease of administration, etc. Yes, they can be compromised but so can banks, planes, even your fucking heart! Nothing is perfect in this world. I'm sure if Microsoft still was developing on Windows 95 with adding occasional hardware updates it would be much more stable. Which is what is going on with 2k (until now). Microsoft has been in a rut lately, I feel that there is a chance if Longhorn has the databased filesystem then it could turn out to be pretty solid as long as there is an "expert" version (2k vs. 98). Not sure if all this was neccesarily due HERE but it was due, its debateable as to the *Nix vs. Windows situation. But for those nixers out there: install Windows 2000 (don't say you are broke, you know you don't need money), login in under a guest account (don't want a rooted box now do we? *neurotic* ), and open up your terminal instead of using the Explorer.

  134. doesn't your state have learners' permits? by Preposterous+Coward · · Score: 2

    In California, where I got my first license, the way it works is that you take a written test to prove that you know some basic rules of the road, and then get a learner's permit that allows you to drive under the supervision of a licensed driver in the passenger seat. Then you get your practice (I think there may have been a minimum number of hours or something) and you can take the road test. Problem solved.

    --

    "Biped! Good cranial development. Evidently considerable human ancestry."
  135. No Government Required by lostchicken · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Let's say I own an arena. I have cameras in all the entrances. I have a copy of some commercial facial recognition system. I have access to the internet, so I have access to "America's Most Wanted"'s web site. I have JPEGs of many, many fugitaves.

    I dump these images into a computer, turn it on, and start fishing. I make a hit, and have my police nab the guy. I get lots of publicity, and become famous.

    This only needs to happen once, and everyone will be doing it. I'm only looking for bad guys, so this can't be a bad thing, right? Where do we draw the line now? Is is alright to ban anyone seen being thrown out of my stadium before? How about somebody else's stadium? How about scouts from other teams? This could be a slippery slope, and there isn't anything we can do about it.

    I live in a high rise apartment building. I have a window facing a park...

    --
    -twb
  136. Re:I *implemented* WV's Facial Image DMV DLID syst by bjanz · · Score: 1

    When you understand the limits of the technology, you realize that it can't be used for "police state" purposes.

    I would not have been a "whore for the state": the last thing I would have wanted was to help the state do unjust things.

    Inventing the A-bomb without regard to how it could be used - that's being a whore.

    Understanding how the technology can be used, and INTENTIONALLY CRIPPLING IT to prevent misuse - that's different.

    And, before you ask, NO. It is *NOT* possible to "uncripple" this technology.

    If you want to fully understand why, I'd be happy to explain... but you have to take your blinders off, first.

    \burt

    --
    There is no such thing as bad weather - only inappropriate clothing.
  137. Stop being so damn critical! by HanzoSan · · Score: 2



    No one has to change anything. Democracy allows FUZZY logic.

    This means you can be 60% secure and 40% private, you can bee 90% private and 10% secure.

    Privacy will ALWAYS exsist due to the constitution, what we are debating here is, through democracy should the people be able to decide how much of each they want?

    Who the hell are you to decide for people

    "100 percent privacy and 0 percent security!"

    The constitution does not say this, if you know anything about anything you know there are no absolutes, you know nothing is 100 percent anything, if you want to have alot of privacy, then you sacrafice alot of secutiy

    Democracy allows us to on a state by state basis decide how much privacy and security we want,

    If you dont believe in democracy, and are an absolute follower of the constitution, I suppose you also believe in slavery, minorities cant vote, neither can women

    Please give me a break!

    Through Democracy we DECIDE how much we want to follow the constitution.

    The constitution is to protect rights not take rights away, when you quote the constitution and then say we cant decide how much we wish to follow it, you are taking the one right the US has that afganastan and places like that dont have

    The right to VOTE, Democracy, to decide the VALUE of every word on the constitution, some are more valueable than others, some are just morally wrong,

    Democracy allows us as a society, in a state by state basis to decide how we want to live. Not all of us want to live as absolutists like you who follow the constitution and bow before the confederate flag

    Theres nothing wrong with following the constitution, privacy IS important, but you have no right to tell ME, or anyone else in MY state how important privacy is, some of us may think security is more important and perhaps we dont want to die just so we can have extended privacy.

    Let us decide. Be fair. Just like we allow you to decide to live somewhere else if dont like the security in a certain state.

    --
    If you use Linux, please help development of Autopac
    1. Re:Stop being so damn critical! by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      Hanzo, you blithering idiot, I fear that your teachers in school were complete morons. Let me straighten you out on this, boy: *you don't get to decide what parts of the Constitution you'll follow and how you'll follow them*. Fact is, the only power in the land that can do that is the Supreme Court.

      Surely you've heard of them? If not, then all you need to know is that *you aren't it*.

      The only way to change the Constitution is through the amendment process. No other law supercedes the Constitution. If that bothers you then get off your butt and amend the Constitution, or move to a country where there *is* no Constitution.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    2. Re:Stop being so damn critical! by HanzoSan · · Score: 2


      Unlike you i think for myself, i dont need teachers to tell me what to think.

      I never said "CHANGE" the constitution, cant you read?

      I said on a state by state basis people can decide how much they wish to follow the constitution, this is fair for everyone, not everyone wants to worship the constitution

      The constitution is no written for you to blindly follow it, its written to let you know what laws to keep when you change

      change is neccessary for us to evolve as a society.

      I said keep privacy, the right to bare arms however, we should decide how much privacy, what weapons we wish to make legal, etc

      If we cant ever decide on anything and just follow the past, we lose out in the long run, the evolution of society ceases to exsist due to people like you who want to follow the past exactly, I'm sure you still believe in slavery and so on and so forth.

      Whatever, Yes I value the constitution, but I believe each one of us has the right to value it as much or as little as we want. I'm glad you arent president.

      --
      If you use Linux, please help development of Autopac
    3. Re:Stop being so damn critical! by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      I said keep privacy, the right to bare arms however, we should decide how much privacy, what weapons we wish to make legal, etc

      And here's the rub: you don't get to decide. The states don't get to decide. Compliance with the Constitution is not a voluntary act.

      Once again if this bothers then change the Constitution, through the amendment process, to allow for voluntary compliance. Until then the decision isn't up to you, the states, or the majority.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
  138. PDF-417 bar codes by apk · · Score: 2, Informative

    Georgia's DLs have these on the back.

    And unfortunately Georgians need to put their right index finger on a scanner to get a license.

    But as far as the bar codes go, which in Georgia are printed on the back of the licenses, don't worry. After a few months of taking it in and out of your wallet with the raised numbers of a credit card behind it rubbing on them, it gets completely unintelligible and smeared.

    Yes, they (state DMV, and thus likely Fed Gov't computers) already have the biometric info you "voluntarily provided" (digital face scan, finger print, etc), but the vehicle of the DL card itself accurately retaining this is a very short-lived affair.

    Andy

  139. That is the question of a narrow view. by Sergeant+Beavis · · Score: 1

    This isn't a smaller question of being able to verify the citizenry's identity. CT is collecting biometric data and using facial recognition technology in this process. While the CT DMV may genuinely not be in the business of violating a persons privacy, another government organization MIGHT BE one day. This tecnology, integrated with a network of digital video cameras, can be used to track your every move in public and sometimes private. The question you should be asking is, "Do I want to chance it that one day my government may track my every move?" If you think that is paranoid, then you should read up on the facial recognition that was used at the last two SuperBowls. It wouldn't be a far leap to think a government could and would do this. Great Britain already has nearly every square inch of it's territory under video lookout. It wouldn't take much for them to use facial recognition to track their entire population.

    --
    There is nothing inherently safe about liberty. That's why so many people died protecting it.
  140. First sentence is wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The American Indians are immigrants, too.

  141. MOD PARENT UP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I had a black coworker who was constantly being pulled over because he owned a Porsche.

  142. Criminals who work for the government by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "And your problem is ... ?"

    Criminals who work for the government using the information illegally, against me.

  143. Tax cuts help them do their job better? by HanzoSan · · Score: 2

    Hm maybe you should have thought about that before voting for bush and asking for task cuts.

    Tax cuts dont help them secure the country, securing the country costs money and requires more government.

    --
    If you use Linux, please help development of Autopac
  144. Re:Privacy? Thats what your private property is fo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Score -1 Cluless

  145. Re:Over 50% of the people in NYC do not have licen by jo42 · · Score: 1
    > in Canada a good driver gets away with CDN$ 600-800 per year.

    BULLSHIT!

    - A Canadian.

  146. Your shortchanged kids by liquid_schwartz · · Score: 1

    Using your meager thought process your kids will not be able to ride bikes (might get hurt), drive cars (might kill the kid blaying ball), swimming polls are out (might drown), certainly shooting/archery/anything sharp is out (long live the dull spork). By trying to make life harm free, you really reduce life experiences. Plus, accidents will still kill them :-) Let me guess, bay area liberal?

  147. Re:Over 50% of the people in NYC do not have licen by tftp · · Score: 1
    >> in Canada a good driver gets away with CDN$ 600-800 per year.

    > BULLSHIT!

    No, it is true. My friend has this insurance, and he lived in Mississauga (now in Richmond Hill). Those are all places around Toronto. I lived there too (before I moved), and I paid a little bit more (with Progressive), but still below CDN $1K. If you pay much more than that, you need to look for another insurance company - or to move to a cheaper place.

  148. Read by HanzoSan · · Score: 2

    Amendment X [Rights Reserved to States]

    Amendment IV

    The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.

    Read

    Amendment X

    The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the states, are reserved to the sta
    tes respectively, or to the people

    Lets take a look at the famous 2 rights.
    Amendment I

    Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances.

    Amendment II

    A well regulated militia, being necessary to the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms, shall not be infringed.

    Amendment III


    The right to a militia. A militia? Militias are known as terrorists, gangs, mobsters, and cults. While not all militias are evil, do you really want to be defended by these people? Or law government law enforcement?

    The fact that we have police officers at all is a violation of the constitution is it not? Or at least it is according to you.

    The right to free speech, free religion, etc, IF i say my religion is open source, and I claim 1s and 0s copied from an mp3 file are an extention or expression of my speech, what the fuck is copyright?! Copyright is against the constitution which is to protect expression and speech, along with religion. If my religion is a sharing free information based religion, why can i go to jail by sharing information?

    So yes, you say everyone always follows the constitution, news flash, they dont, they havent for years, the constitution is more like guidelines which our goverment and states choose to follow when its in their own best interest. They dont follow it when its against the interests of certain big corperations, or when its against the interests of themselves.

    Telling me the states dont decide, isnt changing the fact that they do decide.

    Gun laws are diffrent in diffrent states, according to the constitution, anyone should be able to buy a gun all the time because its their absolute RIGHT and its essential for security.

    Funny how police can carry guns which we cant even buy, police can do the job our militias, gangs, and mafia are supposed to do according to the constitution.

    The decision isnt up to me? I think of it this way, the way things are now they arent honoring the constitution, instead of fighting them, I'm going to just go along with it.

    They wont let me go buy heavy duty machine guns, wheres my local military with bomb shelters, fort, machine guns, bombs and tanks? Oh yeah, we dont have any militia in the city! Only people in the Idaho and places like that have militias, in the city we have to rely on the police, they dont even let us arm ourselves

    So what other option is there in these states? We have to give the police more weapons.

    --
    If you use Linux, please help development of Autopac
  149. CT will also store a central repo of immunization by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    CT also has implemented a central state run store of immunization records. At this time (who knows what the future portends?) a child born in CT now has the option of saying yes or no to having all their immunization shots recorded for later referral by unspecified folks. One presumes access to the info is for accredited schools, and registered pediatrician's offices, but what about some little private summer camp? I don't know.