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John Gilmore's Search for the Mandatory ID Law

powerline22 writes "John Gilmore, the millionare who cofounded the EFF, has been prohibited from travelling because he refused to show an ID while boarding an airplane. He's been under this self-imposed ban since 2002. From the article: "The gate agent asked for his ID. Gilmore asked her why. It is the law, she said. Gilmore asked to see the law. Nobody could produce a copy. To date, nobody has. The regulation that mandates ID at airports is 'Sensitive Security Information.' The law, as it turns out, is unavailable for inspection. What started out as a weekend trip to Washington became a crawl through the courts in search of an answer to Gilmore's question: Why?"

266 of 1,568 comments (clear)

  1. Why, indeed! by Threni · · Score: 5, Funny

    "You've got to have rules, Jerry. Without rules there's chaos." - Kramer.

    1. Re:Why, indeed! by HotNeedleOfInquiry · · Score: 5, Insightful

      any sane person would just pull out a photo ID and be on their way.

      No, any sheep would pull out a photo ID. I, for one am glad that Gilmore has the time, money and motivation to follow through on this.

      I bet you show your receipt at the door at Fry's too...

      --
      "Eve of Destruction", it's not just for old hippies anymore...
    2. Re:Why, indeed! by berzerke · · Score: 2, Interesting

      ...I bet you show your receipt at the door at Fry's too...

      Well, on the few times I've shopped there, I don't. Just ignore the people at the door and walk past them. I've yet to have one bother me.

    3. Re:Why, indeed! by LinuxInDallas · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Rules are fine. The point I found disturbing was that there are rules that we are required to follow, and we are not allowed to know what they are!

    4. Re:Why, indeed! by suckmysav · · Score: 2, Insightful

      A sniveling ANONYMOUS COWARD wrote

      "No, the sheep are the ones admiringly looking on at such ineffectual dilattante windmill-tilting."

      Yeah, anybody who values their privacy must be a fucking hippy or something.

      Nobody sane would want to do that. Privacy is for assholes who have something to hide.

      --
      "You can't fight in here, this is the war room!"
    5. Re:Why, indeed! by crimethinker · · Score: 4, Interesting
      I bet you show your receipt at the door at Fry's too...

      I used to show my receipt at Fry's, until folks like John Gilmore woke me up, so to speak; I haven't shown the receipt since then. My reasoning goes like this: the store is open to the public, they have "loss prevention agents" all over the store, and the path from the cash registers to the exit is segregated from the rest of the merchandise. You may see my receipt only after I am arrested (falsely) for shoplifting. And then you may see my lawyer's card.

      -paul

      --
      Pistol caliber is like religion: everyone has their favourite, and theirs is the only right choice.
    6. Re:Why, indeed! by boodaman · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Won't inconvenience you? That's why you're a sheep...you can only see the next two seconds in front of your face instead of the long term ramifications.

      How valuable is that two seconds if every piece of information about you is tracked in some database? Forever?

      How valuable is that two seconds if you no longer control your own personal information, such as where you go, when you go there, who you see, what you buy, and how long you stayed?

      How valuable is that two seconds if you travel to someplace for personal reasons, but while you're there, there's a massive political protest in the same city, and the government automatically assumes that's why you went there, and logs it into some database somewhere?

      How valuable is that two seconds if you just want to check out, off the grid, for awhile, recharge, meditate, whatever, but someone files a missing persons report on you, and you get tracked because of your ID? Or your cell phone?

      How valuable is that two seconds if some event that happened in your past comes back to haunt you in the future, and keeps you from doing something you need or really want to do?

      Sheep think about the two seconds. Wolves think about the damage done to the their privacy and their freedom.

      New definition: Sheep are nature's efficient, sane food.

    7. Re:Why, indeed! by gim_alelen · · Score: 4, Informative

      Yeah, you ARE aware that, since Fry's is private property, they CAN ask to see your receipt, right? Same at Costco. I asked my father and uncle, both lawyers, to investigate this, and it is PERFECTLY legal for companies to ask you for your receipt and to inspect your bag. Their property, their rules - they are not agents of the state and you are therefore NOT protected from search and seizure. You are neither hard nor protecting your rights when you refuse to show them your receipt.

    8. Re:Why, indeed! by Siniset · · Score: 4, Informative
      However, everything on your person, including the bag and reciept are your own personal property, and you are not required to show them to anyone. Just like the store is theirs, the reciept is mine.

    9. Re:Why, indeed! by aminorex · · Score: 3, Interesting

      If there was a legitimate rule, they wouldn't be keeping it secret. The only plausible reason for the secrecy is that there is no rule, they're just fucking with you because they can. Supposing there were such a rule, it would be a patent violation of the natural right of travel. If the airline doesn't want to carry me unless I submit to a proctological examination, that's their look-out, but it's beyond annoying that they pretend it's due to a legitimate legal requirement. It's not. I stopped flying (after years of routine bicoastalism) because it's just not worth it. Take my daughter on a U.S. flight, to get wand-raped by some semi-mongoloid TSA goon? As if.

      --
      -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
    10. Re:Why, indeed! by catalina · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I bet you show your receipt at the door at Fry's too...

      At HD and Fry's here, the checker also marks the receipt. Has anyone who skips the check ever had occasion to return anything? Can you return an item without a valid, annotated receipt?

    11. Re:Why, indeed! by Disk+Pickable · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Sure, it's perfectly legal for companies to ask to see my reciept - and also perfectly legal for me to refuse. The only place I actually DO show my receipt upon request is Costco. Because it's a private club, they could presumably revoke my membership if I decided not to abide by their rules. No such issue involved at Fry's, however - and I think the one time anyone ever said anything to me there, I told them, "If you have reasonable cause to suspect me of shoplifting, then detain me until the police arrive. If not, I'm leaving." They promptly shut up and backed off, and I was on my way.

      I admire folks like John Gilmore who are willing to inconvenience themselves in the name of confronting mindless obedience and the "herd mentality" like this. The closest I usually come to such civil disobedience is subjecting myself to being hand-searched and wanded at the airport, by refusing to "voluntarily" take off my shoes at the security checkpoint.

    12. Re:Why, indeed! by curunir · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I think the idea behind keeping the law secret is that it would prevent a terrorist organization from analyzing it to figure out a weakness and exploit it. It's analogous to source code in that a law is essentially a script followed by civic employees. There's a reason why the word 'code' is used in both cases.

      I don't agree with it, and judging by the general /. estimation of 'security through obscurity', I doubt many people here do either. But I think that's the theory behind the administration's stance on this.

      --
      "Don't blame me, I voted for Kodos!"
    13. Re:Why, indeed! by TWX · · Score: 3, Interesting

      "Here's how I look at it, I WANT them to check receipts. Why? Because it keeps people honost. Theft raises merchanise cost and I don't enjoy paying extra so some dork can steal the same stuff that I'm paying for."

      Having known several people who worked at Fry's Electronics in Tempe Arizona, I can tell you that the biggest problem with inventory loss at Fry's is from employees, not from customers. It's part of why the store has such a high turnover rate. Employees aren't paid well, have little to no supervision, have a somewhat hostile work environment with poor management, and therefore are inclined to steal from the evil, faceless corporation that employs them. After awhile they leave, frequently so they don't get caught in the newest investigation. Sometimes they are somewhat caught but not enough to be worth prosecuting, so they're simply fired. Of the four Fry's employees that I knew, two quit, one was fired, and only one didn't pilfer constantly.

      --
      Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
    14. Re:Why, indeed! by Svartalf · · Score: 4, Insightful
      "I think the idea behind keeping the law secret is that it would prevent a terrorist organization from analyzing it to figure out a weakness and exploit it. It's analogous to source code in that a law is essentially a script followed by civic employees. There's a reason why the word 'code' is used in both cases.


      I'm inclined to agree with you on the reason- the problem is that it requires the rule/law to actually DO something productive towards prevention of a problem even before you can consider security through obscurity. Not to mention the fact that just because it's obscured to the public, doesn't mean that the people that ARE obscured couldn't be subborned to reveal the law and any apparent weaknesses. In the case of the "must show ID" regulation (it's NOT a law, mind...) the possession of an ID that maps to the alleged identity for the tickets and boarding passes does NOT mean in any way, shape, or form that the ID is even valid. Bam, there goes the reason for the regulation right there- it doesn't do anything useful against even the least determined attacker. It'd not have prevented or deterred 9/11. It won't prevent or deter another similar attack. So, why in the hell have it in the first place?
      --
      I am not merely a "consumer" or a "taxpayer". I am a Citizen of the State of Texas
    15. Re:Why, indeed! by logicnazi · · Score: 2, Insightful

      A standard retail store is private in most senses and they are allowed to impose pretty arbitrary rules on those who would shop in their store. For instance they can impose dress codes (no shoes, no shirt, no service) and they could even impose content based restrictions on shoppers speech (you can't enter this store with a coed naked t-shirt).

      Of course their only recourse is to throw you out of their store. Once you have bought your item and on your way out they don't have any right to search you. Since you don't have a membership this doesn't really cost you anything if you are tossed out (they can't easily stop you from coming back)

      --

      If you liked this thought maybe you would find my blog nice too:

    16. Re:Why, indeed! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I've been through this discussion before, and as far as I can tell, you simply don't have to do anything they say that they can't back up with an actual law. Of course, they could refuse your business in the future, but they won't.

      My buddy is in Target's security group, and he told me that Target HQ sent out an email about Best Buy. They tried to stop a guy to check his receipt. When he wouldn't stop, they followed him. He asked if he was under arrest, and even though they said, "No", they blocked the driveway to prevent him from leaving.

      The cop who finally arrived was able to take the customer's criminal complaint against the store for kidnapping, but not the store's for "not stopping".

    17. Re:Why, indeed! by KevinKnSC · · Score: 5, Funny
      Publish your real name, address and phone number here before claiming any special credit.

      Crap, now we have to show ID here, too?

    18. Re:Why, indeed! by Catbeller · · Score: 5, Insightful

      If you give a minute's thought, the "we-can-kick-you-out" rule will render a protestor unable to show at the local Sam's Club -- which now may be the only store in most rural/small towns of the United States. You can protest, and then shop at the 7-11 or gas station for the rest of your life. Until they decide you need to register for a card to shop in their stores. Face FORWARD: turn to the LEFT: place your fingertips in the ink pad, please....

      Point hammered: if we let businesses require anything they like to shop at their stores, we are under a tyranny. Businesses are not feudal keeps, subject only to the King. They are corporations which hold a license to exist granted by US through our representatives. A. License. To. Exist. Not a right. They have no rights. If they want to operate stores, they can follow OUR rules. This is the basic failure of American imagination in the 21st century. We don't think we are in charge of anything personally, or think we have civil rights or even a basic right to privacy. BUT we think businesses can do anything they like. Corporations are not only legal citizens with civil rights -- they are the ONLY CITIZENS WITH ANY RIGHTS.

      This insane belief has to be rooted out of the national mind and exposed to sunlight.

    19. Re:Why, indeed! by Eric+Smith · · Score: 3, Insightful
      To verify that the person coming on-board is who they claim to be.
      Checking the ID won't verify that. But even if it did, how would that provide a measurable improvement in security?
      He certainly does not, however, have an inherent right to fly.
      Since when? Do you really believe that rights are something granted to you by the U.S. government, at its pleasure? I would remind you of the Ninth Amendment:
      The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people.
      Rights reside with the people, and the government has limited powers to restrict those rights. There is *NOTHING* in the Constitution that would grant the U.S. Government the power to restrict the rights of U.S. citizens to travel between states without showing identity.
    20. Re:Why, indeed! by badfish99 · · Score: 2, Insightful
      But so what if he's not who he claims to be?

      He's been searched by security, so he's not carrying a bomb. And there are no age restrictions on flying, as there are with alcohol purchase. How does knowing his mother's favourite choice of names for babies help security any further?

    21. Re:Why, indeed! by Puhtronium714 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      It's not meaningless. when you show your id to the clerk at the ticket counter, it gets swiped through a machine that records it.

      Because Amtrak does this, too, unless you're making a road-trip, any trip you take could be recorded. And the government refuse to show the law which requires ID to be shown (but admit it exists), which lends credibility to the the theory that trips are being recorded.

      While the reason is unstated, in combination with the Patriot Act, a law that provides for the monitoring of travel can be a truly threatening thing.

    22. Re:Why, indeed! by boodaman · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Gilmore's point is simple: the Constitution of the United States allows us to travel ID-free. Anything else requires an amendment to the Constitution, properly ratified.

      That's all. My point was simply that it should be up to the USER what personal information someone has...it should be a matter of choice. What happens instead is that corporations and the government just demand things and we give it up without asking why and how. Personal control.

      A citizen should be allowed to do anything legal without being tracked, at THEIR option, not a corporation's or government's option.

      Get it? Probably not.

    23. Re:Why, indeed! by boodaman · · Score: 2, Informative

      Desiring control over my own personal information does not equal delusionary paranoia.

      Gilmore's point is simple (RTFA): Showing ID for domestic travel does NOTHING to increase security, and does EVERYTHING to erode our personal freedom and personal liberty.

      If you're so clever, explain how showing an ID to fly increases security. You might want to check out the recent article in Slate describing exactly how to circumvent the current security checks at an airport. The point? Even with the current rules, anyone can fly without proper ID.

      Showing your ID to fly on a plane gets you NOTHING but a misplaced belief (and the government's "word") that you're safe, and a loss of your right to be anonymous. And you accuse me of not having blood in my brain? Whatever. You might want to think things through yourself, though, before jumping all over me.

    24. Re:Why, indeed! by EvilJoker · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Part of the concern is threshold- how far is "too far"? I'd rather stop things before they get to that point.

      The U.S. is currently on the path towards Soviet-style asking for papers everywhere. Airlines are only the first part, and I can easily see it extending further. Best to stop it here.

    25. Re:Why, indeed! by cfpresley · · Score: 2, Informative

      You sir, are a nitwit. Almost all Corporations do not serve for the public good, but for the good of their stock holders. They have rights over private property just like you do. Sam's Club, is a Club requiring membership. This is how they subsidize their overhead. Showing your ID does not make you a sheep, it makes you less of an asshole for not backing up a line at a security checkpoint, when plenty of other people have places to go. Fight the system through organized protests, individual protests just inconvenience others.

    26. Re:Why, indeed! by mccabem · · Score: 3, Informative
      They are corporations which hold a license to exist granted by US through our representatives. A. License. To. Exist. Not a right. They have no rights.
      Unfortunately, incorrect.

      Thanks to activist judges (to put it in the most ironic modern vernacular) corporations got rights in 1886. (For reference, women didn't get the right to vote in the US until 1920.)

      Please find more information on the topic:
      click here
    27. Re:Why, indeed! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      Indeed, indeed...I was once shopping at Cumberland Farms for some smokes, paid with a debit card, and when the reciept came out, the counter-monkey asked me to sign the receipt and produce ID. I asked why, and he said it was "store policy". I replied that the corporation already had my money, and that it was MY policy not to sign or show an ID unless it was a credit purchase, grabbed my stuff and left. I swear to God, the guy looked like he was about to have an aneurism. Employees have been so indoctrinated into the "Corporate Policy = Law" mindset that they find it difficult to see beyond it. Of course, in the parent post, the policy IS law, they just won't let us see it.

  2. Read what John himself says ... by xmas2003 · · Score: 5, Informative
    John's Home Page.

    This writeup on Gilmore v. Ashcroft is kinda interesting too as is FreeToTravel.Org that includes an FAQ from John - all of this has been around for a while, but I guess the mainstream media just "re-discovered" John's story - don't think there has been any significant change in over a year (?)

    --
    Hulk SMASH Celiac Disease
    1. Re:Read what John himself says ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

      " don't think there has been any significant change in over a year "

      His case is coming up for oral argument before the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals. His attorneys have begun to tour law schools, holding moot courts to practice. They begam this here at the UO Law school.

  3. Because. by inertia187 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Good. 10 points for confounding the airport security. But, if you pulled the same thing with a highway patrol officer, I think you'd end up with handcuffs, not a copy of the law.

    Sure, eventually someone would produce the law, but was it worth it?

    I agree, this sounds suspicious, though. I wish I had the money to test such systems.

    --
    A programmer is a machine for converting coffee into code.
    1. Re:Because. by Sta7ic · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Fair enough, but if a highway patrol officer stops you, it's assumed that you've done "something wrong". This is more like asking to see your ID and proof of insurence before they let you step into your car, or pull onto the road.

    2. Re:Because. by SUB7IME · · Score: 5, Insightful

      No, the man is not concerned because nobody has taken the time to produce a copy of the law. It is my understanding that he is concerned because the law is being withheld from inspection.

      Sure, the law is in print somewhere (ostensibly), but no layperson knows precisely what it says. In essence, we are being held accountable to rules that we cannot know.

    3. Re:Because. by zackrentwood · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Sure, eventually someone would produce the law, but was it worth it?
      This case is very different. With a highway cop you know what the laws are, some states require you to show ID (e.g. Nevada) and the Supreme Court recently upheld such laws. You can investigate those laws if you like, vote for or against them in you r home state and avoid states where they have such laws if you don't like them. In the Gilmore v. Ashcroft case, the "law" in question is actualy an agency rule. Rules passed by adminstrative agencies have the force of law, but are not created by adminstrators, not by representative bodies. This case is particularly noxious because the government is claiming that the law itself is a secret. You are not permitted to see the rule that binds you, you simply have to trust the TSA people that such a rule exists and that they are enforcing it fairly. We now live in a nation where we are bound by secret laws. I'm sure some of the tin-foil hat people can tell you why that's a bad thing.
    4. Re:Because. by ScrewMaster · · Score: 3, Insightful

      No tinfoil hat required ... it's one of those things that if you have to ask why it's bad, you probably slept through history class.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    5. Re:Because. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      We now live in a nation where we are bound by secret laws. I'm sure some of the tin-foil hat people can tell you why that's a bad thing.

      We're going to have to ask you to report to your nearest police station and turn yourself in. Theres a law about referring to certain articles of clothing on certain days (though we're prohibited from being specific. Its top secret stuff, you understand. You'll just have to trust us).

    6. Re:Because. by colmore · · Score: 2, Insightful

      So at what point should we really be concerned about this? I think it's difficult to deny that the past 4 years have seen the most radical transformation of the federal government since the New Deal, if not since the end of the Civil War. I think this is of far greater concerns than any tax policy or even any inidividual war, but there has been little to no public questioning of the vast changes in the way our government operates.

      So when does this stop being something bad just in concept? When should I start thinking about getting myself and my family out of here?

      --
      In Capitalist America, bank robs you!
    7. Re:Because. by ScrewMaster · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Naturally, because to contest it carries risk. America has become one of the most risk-averse cultures on the plant, and I believe that's a good part of our problem.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    8. Re:Because. by geminidomino · · Score: 4, Insightful

      risk-averse cultures

      That's a helluva way to spell "gibbering cowards."

    9. Re:Because. by dbIII · · Score: 4, Insightful
      No, the man is not concerned because nobody has taken the time to produce a copy of the law
      Good point, the law of the land should never be allowed to be kept secret - there is no legitimate justification for that in a democracy. "But it hasn't been written yet" is not a legitimate excuse.

      What is it with the USA? The cold war is long over but we see the former USSR steadily getting more democratic and the USA steadily adopting more totalitarian tactics.

      National security should never be used as an excuse when "I just want to do whatever I want" is the real reason.

      The case of this guy is trivial. The case of not disclosing the information and saying "Because I said so" is not - many non-democratic third world countries can't even get away with and at least have flimsy pretexts based on published laws when they do things injustly. Think of what sort of injustice you can get up to when you don't have to rely on published laws and superiors are not expecting you to be responsible for your actions until the press find out.

    10. Re:Because. by damiam · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Umm, no. If you're riding in a car and a cop pulls it over, they have no right at all to demand ID, any more than if you were just walking down the street. Now, if you're driving the car, that's a different story. But this guy isn't trying to pilot a plane without ID, just ride in one.

      --
      It's hard to be religious when certain people are never incinerated by bolts of lightning.
    11. Re:Because. by Xofer+D · · Score: 2, Insightful
      ...Only then will people wake up...
      You know, I used to make the same argument. My friend Pete shut me up very quickly by pointing out to me that in order for it to get bad enough for the middle and upper classes to hurt, it has to get very, very bad for the lower class. Add this to the fact that some rich people got even more rich during the great depression, and suddenly it sounds like a very bloody path that you are suggesting, for uncertain gains.
      --
      The Signal/Noise ratio can be improved in two ways. Remaining silent is the OTHER way.
  4. Ho Chi Minh beard by fembots · · Score: 5, Funny

    Maybe the memory is still lingering?

    But seriously, is $30 million enough for such lawsuit? Didn't we just read that a session of 'Trek costs $32 million??

    1. Re:Ho Chi Minh beard by daeley · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I sense a new unit of measurement coming.

      Joining Volkswagen Bugs, Rhode Islands, and Libraries of Congress: the new monetary unit "Seasons of Trek", an amount of dollars necessary to fund one season of Star Trek.

      --
      I watched C-beams glitter in the dark near the Tannhauser gate.
  5. Apt Quote? by deutschemonte · · Score: 2, Funny

    The quote at the bottom of Slashdot says "Our way is peace."

    Sounds like all the explaination you will get from this administration.

    --
    The preceding message was based on actual events. Only the names, locations and events have been changed.
    1. Re:Apt Quote? by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Oh hell, I'll bite.

      Look at what the Administration is doing now, then compare it to the 1860s, 1960s, 1940s, 1910s, 1950s.

      You'll find that the Bush Administration is acting like the model of restrant when compared to the Americans, Germans, Japanese, Chinese, British, French or Russians during any of those decades.

      For example, 1861-1865 - 600,000 dead in US, civil liberties restrained much more openly and much more harshly than now.

  6. Private Company... by numLocked · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Airlines are private companies...can't they require whatever the hell they want? A company doesn't need a law to back showing IDs. They can't ask you for your social security #, but ID is fine as far as I know.

    1. Re:Private Company... by Sta7ic · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I won't swear to it, but airlines are bound by federal regulations. If they have it in writing either within those rules and regs, or they have you sign a contract prior to paying for the ticket, there's a justifiable, identifiable reason involved.

      I haven't been on a plane for 15+ years, what are the written rules for passangers?

    2. Re:Private Company... by DaHat · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You are correct, however I would expect that it would be fraud for an airline to claim that federal law requires passengers to show their ID's just to conform to company policy. More likely the FAA or DHS told the airlines to do so, so the blame will end up going back to them... for now.

    3. Re:Private Company... by xarius76 · · Score: 2, Informative

      Airlines are private corporations yes. However the majority of the people asking for your ID's work for the TSA, which is a government agency included under the umbrella of homeland security.

    4. Re:Private Company... by f1shlips · · Score: 2, Informative

      Sure they can ask for your SS#. The only regulations (at this moment) regarding SS numbers are aimed at regulating what the government can do with them.

      http://www.privacyrights.org/fs/fs10-ssn.htm

    5. Re:Private Company... by Martin+Blank · · Score: 2, Informative

      I just flew to Chicago a couple of weeks ago, and while the TSA person wanted to see my license, the airline attendant at the gate wanted only to see my boarding pass. Getting past the federally-run security checkpoint required ID. Getting on the plane itself did not.

      --
      You can never go home again... but I guess you can shop there.
    6. Re:Private Company... by fireman+sam · · Score: 2, Funny

      "what are the written rules for passangers?"

      Sit down.
      Shut up.
      Pay for all present and future government related expenses.

      --
      it is only after a long journey that you know the strength of the horse.
    7. Re:Private Company... by bani · · Score: 2, Insightful

      no, the airlines can't require whatever the hell they want.

      if that were true, they'd be free to discriminate however they liked.

    8. Re:Private Company... by evilviper · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Airlines are private companies...can't they require whatever the hell they want?

      They certainly could, if they told you the terms of the contract up-front.

      What they're doing here, would be like EULAs that say they are binding before you've had the opportunity to read them.

      No, a company can't do whatever the hell it wants.
      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
  7. Old Soviet rules... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I always thought the old Soviet Union required authorisation for its citizens to travel between towns and provinces/states. Of course this is not the case on a free country ;)?

    Oh, I see... Security means less privacy, according to some, uh?

    1. Re:Old Soviet rules... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I drove from NYC to Boston the other weekend. There was no authorization required. I just went and did it.

      Oh I see, I just totally trashed your idiotic comparison. Excuse me while I go take my victory lap.

    2. Re:Old Soviet rules... by DeepHurtn! · · Score: 5, Informative

      This case brings up other and more frightening comparisons to the old USSR and other totalitarian governments. The USSR, for example, had a constitution that supposedly guaranteed many of the same rights the US constitution grants; in practice, however, these rights were non-existent due to various secret "exceptions". If your government is enforcing laws that the public doesn't have access to, democracy is impossible. It is essential that the people have the right to inspect and critique the laws they are subject to.

    3. Re:Old Soviet rules... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Well no, you didn't totally trash it. So you are still free to drive...until they decide to subject driving to the same sort of secret rules. After all, the 9-11 hijackers had drivers licenses.

      As a no American, let me say the USA should be ashamed of how far they have allowed their system to slip towards a totalitarian facist state.

    4. Re:Old Soviet rules... by HangingChad · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Oh, I see... Security means less privacy, according to some, uh?

      I remember in the days after 9-11 around here they had this town hall meeting so people could talk about their fears. There was this lady, she had a couple kids, and she was blubbering about who was going to protect them? Another guy stood up and said he'd be happy to give up all his privacy if it would help and people appluaded that remark.

      Those people make me sick. What made America great wasn't some sniveling pussy bawling about who was going to protect them. Absolutely disgusting. Instead of looking to the government to protect us in a free society you look to the government to provide the tools to protect yourself.

      If we hadn't spent decades conditioning people to just cooperate with terrorists and criminals they wouldn't have had a snowballs chance in a sunny July day in downtown Dallas, Texas of taking over an airliner with just five people.

      We're no longer the country we started out to be and we don't deserve the freedom that most college students today would trade for an iPod.

      --
      That's our life, the big wheel of shit. - The Fat Man, Blue Tango Salvage
  8. No progress lately? by QuantumG · · Score: 4, Informative

    Unfortunately the legal page hasn't been updated since November 2004. So what's happenin' John? Has things stalled? Has there been any more progress? If so, can you update the legal page? We are listening, and we do care. Our attention spans are longer than the average person. Why the silence?

    --
    How we know is more important than what we know.
  9. It's getting out of hand. by bburton · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Does anybody know how much ID you need to get a driver's license? My little brother went to get his, and I guess they require like 4 separate forms of ID. How can they resonably expect a highschooler to have 4 different forms of ID? AND they wouldn't except his school ID. He ended up having to bring in his birth certificate and everything.

    How much is too much?

    --
    Slashdot = ((Technology + Politics) / Trolls) % Grammar Nazis
    1. Re:It's getting out of hand. by Fjandr · · Score: 4, Informative

      Sometimes they don't even accept their own listed ID requirements, as happened in my attempt to get an Idaho license. Check out my journal if you want the entire story on what can happen in my state.

    2. Re:It's getting out of hand. by spankey51 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You know... I'm really starting to get a good idea of just how successful terrorism is.
      All this post 9/11 paranoia is devastating our nation.

      --
      -ubuntu others as you would have others ubuntu you.
  10. So there's no law... by nachoboy · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The agent misspoke, and there's no law requiring travelers to show ID. It's still perfectly within reason for airlines/airports to request identification for passengers - if only to ensure that the ticket was sold to the same person making use of it. Don't like it? Don't fly. If you want to take a stand on something, why not those ridiculous security stations I'm forced to walk through barefoot?

    1. Re:So there's no law... by zackrentwood · · Score: 2

      If this is the case, why is Ashcroft & Co. representing that there is such a rule, but that the rule is classified information and cannot be disclosed to the public?

    2. Re:So there's no law... by Piquan · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Point one: The request for ID was never mandatory; the airlines had been fighting for it to be mandatory for some time, since they didn't want tickets to be transferrable.

      Point two: The request for ID by itself is not as serious, in many people's minds, as the fact that we are bound by regulations that we are not allowed to know.

    3. Re:So there's no law... by Jim+Starx · · Score: 3, Insightful

      There is a law, the TSA acknowledged that there was a law. Did you read the article?

      --
      The darkness... controls the music. The music... controls the soul.
    4. Re:So there's no law... by bani · · Score: 4, Insightful

      it's not about airline security policies being secret.

      it's about secret government laws.

      how is it possible to be a law-abiding citizen when the government passes laws you aren't even allowed to know about? "just use common sense" is not justification, because there are thousands of laws which are not sensible at all.

    5. Re:So there's no law... by Sancho · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Officer: Excuse me sir, you've broken the secret law. You will now be tried in a secret court.

      Me: Ok, I'll hire a lawyer.

      Officer: Don't bother, your lawyer will be appointed by the court. We can't have any old lawyers around, they might hear the secret laws.

      Me: I want to see the judge! I want to face my accusers!

      Judge: I'm afraid we can't have that. If you face your accusers, you may find out what law you've broken. We can't let out what law was broken.

      Me: At least I get my day in court.

      Judge: You will be tried outside your presence, because we can't have you hearing the sec...

      Me: Yeah yeah, how do I know this law even exists?

      Judge: Trust us.

  11. Dude! wtf? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If I was driving down the freeway one day, following all the rules, going the speed limit, and a police officer pulls me over for "a traffic violation", but is not willing to tell me what this "traffic violation is", wouldn't I have reason to question why?

    1. Re:Dude! wtf? by zoloto · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I cop did that to me while I was in New York a while back visiting family. And he wouldn't tell me. I was doing the speed limit, signaling when I changed lanes etc. etc.

      One thing to note, my car at the time was equiped with a video recorder next to the odometer. Sound and all. When the cop refused to identify why I was being pulled over and asked for I.D. and proof of insurnace (after 5 minutes).. I simply pulled away and called my lawyer, who promptly met me at the next exit.

      Video and all, I was exonerated from any charge and the police department was spared a harassment charge and any "financial damage" by me - however it made the news for a few days in my local area. And a formal apology to boot. I tell you, sticking it to "the man" is one thing... but making sure abuse doesn't happen and not tolerating any bullying sure left a warm spot in my heart. Not to mention "fan" mail I actually did recieve.

      Cops don't pull me over in NY anymore unless I do something wrong.

      -z

    2. Re:Dude! wtf? by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 2, Insightful

      One thing to note, my car at the time was equiped with a video recorder next to the odometer.

      Sounds cool. Got a link?

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
    3. Re:Dude! wtf? by kd5ujz · · Score: 2, Informative

      If he writes you a citation, it MUST have the "broken law" on it, if not, the judge will throw it out.

      An officer can pull you over for just about anything, I have been pulled over for low tire pressure( they will check it, and also check tire tread) they can be pricks if they want.

      --
      -William
      God is everything science has yet to explain.
    4. Re:Dude! wtf? by bani · · Score: 3, Insightful

      do you have a reference?

      which television stations or newspapers covered the story?

      do you have a copy of the formal apology somewhere?

      how about a copy of the video?

      or maybe the name of your lawyer?

    5. Re:Dude! wtf? by PsiPsiStar · · Score: 2, Funny

      Do all Americans have a Lawyer on call 24/7 ?

      No, but we all need one.

      --

      ___
      It's the end of my comment as I know it and I feel fine.
    6. Re:Dude! wtf? by WhatsAProGingrass · · Score: 2, Interesting

      A little off topic but...Isn't it the Airports right to have rules too? Is South Dakota, its a law that says you can drink under 21 if you are married to someone that is older than 21 at a bar. However, the bars have their own rules and most do not allow ANYONE to drink under 21. I know the point of his not showing an ID is about the law that exists but can not be shown to anyone. But still, if i owned my own business, i would hope to have any kind of ID system I wanted. No id, then no admitance.

      --
      Mark
    7. Re:Dude! wtf? by rhuntley12 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I had a cop pull me over and tell me he didn't need a reason to. Thanks to my cell phone recording I filed a complaint. I learned REAL quick that filing a complaint just gets your harassed 10x more by cops. That whole week I couldn't go home without a cop on my street or getting pulled over. Ever been pulled over for not signalling while pulling into your driveway at 4am with NO one on road except the bike cop under a tree?

  12. It's not really about terrorism. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I have a friend who is doing 26 years in federal prison for drugs. He and his associates drew the attention of federal authorities in part because of air travel habits.

    Forcing people to show ID will help the feds make cases. It's not going to stop terrorists. They can get fake IDs.

  13. New slant ... by Mostly+a+lurker · · Score: 4, Insightful
    ... on the rule that "ignorance of the law is no excuse". It would be amusing if it were not so tragic. Here are people enforcing laws against others with neither party aware of the full wording of the law.

    Here is a law, furthermore, that was not passed in accordance with the constitution. We have faceless individuals deciding on controls on everyday movement and almost no questioning of their right to do so.

    I am actually surprised Mr Gilmore has not asked for a court injunction asking either for proof that such a law exists (and its text) or for the regulation to be lifted.

  14. Ignorance of the law is no excuse! by Snarfangel · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Next thing you know, you'll want to be innocent until proven guilty and question witnesses.

    --
    This tagline is copyrighted material. Please send $10 for an affordable replacement.
  15. ObCatch-22 quote by Piquan · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "What right did they have?" said Capt.Yossarian

    "Catch-22." said the old woman

    "What?" Yossarian froze in his tracks with fear and alarm and felt his whole body begin to tingle. "What did you say?"

    "Catch-22," the old woman repeated, rocking her head up and down. "Catch-22. Catch-22 says they have a right to do anything we can't stop them from doing."

    "What the hell are you talking about?" Capt. Yossarian shouted at her in bewildered, furious protest.

    "Didn't they show it to you?" Yossarian demanded, stamping about in anger and distress. "Didn't you even make them read it?"

    They don't have to show us Catch-22," the old woman answered. "The law says they don't have to."

    "What law says they don't have to?"

    "Catch-22." The old woman said.

    Joseph Heller, Catch-22
    1. Re:ObCatch-22 quote by dcam · · Score: 4, Informative

      If you enjoy the thought of that and want to read something that contains similar concepts, try reading some Kafka. It is a lot bleaker, a lot darker. I've only read "The Castle" (which is unfinished) and "The Trial", so I can't comment on any of his other work. I'd reccommend "The Trial. Very appropriate for current US society.

      I'd say The Trial is in fact more interesting than Catch 22 in this context. Catch 22 is easier to read though.

      --
      meh
  16. Laws by Lord_Dweomer · · Score: 5, Insightful
    I don't know about you guys, but I've always felt that if you are going to be restricted by rules and laws, those rules and laws need to be available for your viewing.

    I mean, the reason people go to law school and the reason pay lawyers so much money is because the law is something that needs to be done BY THE LETTER. It sounds like the airlines want us just to abide by the spirit of the law.

    And while I personally wish society were at point where we COULD just go by the spirit of things, we are not there yet, and so in order to protect OUR rights, and OUR safety, we need to be able to view these laws and make certain we're not getting screwed over.

    --
    Buy Steampunk Clothing Online!
    1. Re:Laws by deblau · · Score: 2, Insightful
      As someone who is currently in law school, I feel I am in an appropriately authoritative position to comment.

      Ask many lawyers what their favorite moment in court would be, and they will respond "the chance to make new law." That doesn't make sense, does it? Only legislatures make law. But the laws need to be interpreted by you and me, and by everyone else. It's the lawyers and judges that interpret, and people pay good lawyers so much money because they can convince the judge that their interpretation is better than the other lawyer's. Once that's done, their interpretation becomes "the law" that everyone else has to live with.

      Two rational people often differ with respect to what any given phrase means, and laws are no exception. The key question is, what is the background against which the laws are read? What political, social, economic, and moral criteria do we use to interpret the laws? Those criteria are what really drive "the law" forward. In this administration, those criteria are fear, paranoia, and distrust. Hence, we have laws that fear and distrust citizens, and citizens that fear and distrust the law.

      Terrorism succeeds when it instills fear in our hearts. The only way to beat it then, logically, is to not fear it. As Franklin Roosevelt so eloquently said: the only thing we have to fear is fear itself. Until we remember that, and stop our unreasonable fear of fear, invisible laws will continue to be passed and enforced. It's up to you.

      --
      This post expresses my opinion, not that of my employer. And yes, IAAL.
  17. Favorite quote from TFA by einhverfr · · Score: 3, Interesting

    He was employee No. 5 at Sun Microsystems, which made Unix, the free software of the Web, the world standard.

    WTF? I guess it is too much to ask for journalists to get a clue....

    --

    LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
    1. Re:Favorite quote from TFA by LiquidCoooled · · Score: 4, Interesting

      My favorite quote from the article is the following:

      country after showing a boarding pass and one form of government-issued photo ID and arrived in rental cars that required a valid driver's license and one major credit card.

      Everything else I agree with, but if somebody does not have a license, they should not be entitled to drive.
      The license is a test of worthyness, I don't care WHO they are, just that they have proven experience handling a deadly weapon.

      --
      liqbase :: faster than paper
    2. Re:Favorite quote from TFA by pVoid · · Score: 4, Insightful
      I think the point being made is that you have to leave your driver's license information at the rental store.

      It's one thing to say "do you have a license? and can I see if it's valid?" it's another thing to say "I will now log your driver's license into our database".

    3. Re:Favorite quote from TFA by Seumas · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I think the point being made is that laws which citizens are expected to obey should be public. How can you enforce a law that doesn't (for all intents and purposes) exist? And for that matter, how far can that go? If they can enforce an Stasi-like "may I see your papers please?" law without providing any evidence that such law exists, then what else could they theoretically do? And how could your lawyer defend you against a law that the government claims exists, but doesn't make available anywhere?

    4. Re:Favorite quote from TFA by Pseudonym · · Score: 4, Insightful
      It's one thing to say "do you have a license? and can I see if it's valid?" it's another thing to say "I will now log your driver's license into our database".

      If you break the law in a rental car, like running a red light or hitting a pedestrian, the police must to be able to match up the driver (and their licence) to the perpetrator. For this reason, and for the specific case of renting a car, I don't have a problem with handing over my driver's licence details.

      OTOH, I would not want to have to show photo ID before I could use a taxi.

      John Gilmour's main point, though, is that secret law is an abomination. With this, I agree wholeheartedly.

      --
      sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f(q{sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f});
    5. Re:Favorite quote from TFA by stratjakt · · Score: 3, Informative

      No problem. They'll want to verify your ID before charging the card though, so show them some other photo ID other than a DL. Most clerks are pretty lazy about verifying that the cardholder is legit, but in my experience, not in the rental car/hotel/travel game.

      I've done this before on a business trip. The guy I was travelling with had his license suspended the day before we flew out, and he was in charge of renting the car that time out. So he paid, I drove. No big deal.

      Just so long as someone gets fucked over if I decide to take the car to Mexico and never come back - they don't care who.

      --
      I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
    6. Re:Favorite quote from TFA by MindStalker · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Not to mention the fact that you may steal the car. Should one seriously expect to anonymously be able to rent anything.

    7. Re:Favorite quote from TFA by SlamMan · · Score: 2, Informative

      Having rented cars and been under 25, I can say thats not quite accurate. Some companies don't rent to under 25, thats true, but about half do. The just charge and extra $25 a day or so.

      --
      Mod point free since 2001
    8. Re:Favorite quote from TFA by acroyear · · Score: 2, Interesting

      didn't see this post before i made my own, but i agree entirely. similarly, the credit card request is a specific form of credit check, a MUCH cheaper one than actually paying the credit agencies for the background check every time you want to do something like this (and if such a check happens to much, it can hurt your credit rating, too). its definitely better to let the credit card companies do that work and trust them to have done it right.

      --
      "But remember, most lynch mobs aren't this nice." (H.Simpson)
      -- Joe
    9. Re:Favorite quote from TFA by BlackMagi · · Score: 5, Insightful

      "Did you really think that we want those laws to be observed?"
      said Dr. Ferris.

      "We want them broken....There's no way to rule innocent men. The only
      power any government has is the power to crack down on criminals. Well,
      when there aren't enough criminals, one makes them. One declares so many
      things to be a crime that it becomes impossible for men to live without
      breaking laws. Who wants a nation of law-abiding citizens? What's there
      in that for anyone? But just pass the kind of laws that can neither be
      observed nor enforced nor objectively interpreted -- and you create a
      nation of law-breakers -- and then you cash in on guilt. Now that's
      the system, Mr. Rearden, that's the game, and once you understand it,
      you'll be much easier to deal with."

      Ayn Rand, Atlas Shrugged, Ch. III, "White Blackmail"

      --
      http://melbournephilosophy.com/
    10. Re:Favorite quote from TFA by msaulters · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I think any rational, thinking person would agree. A written code of laws was (as is taught in schools) Hammurabi's gift to mankind. So, this administration isn't *just* trying to undo several decades of environmental and civil rights progress (not to mention diplomatic work) in the name of 'freedom', they're trying to take society back thousands of years, literally, to the stone age.

      Fuckers. I only hope we're all still here to see 'em taken down when the inevitable revolution comes.

      --
      These people looked deep into my soul and assigned me a number based on the order in which I joined.
    11. Re:Favorite quote from TFA by technos · · Score: 2, Informative

      I rented a car at the airport in Chicago at 19. They didn't like it, and I paid out the ass, but they rented me one. I rented one in Canada, with a US drivers license, a little over a year later. I flirted with renting one from Detroit Metro about the same time, got down to picking out a car before I decided, "Eh, prolly less of a hassle to just call [buddy#2] to come pick my ass up, and less trouble when I have to return it in a few days.

      My little brother used a company similar to Rent-A-Wreck for a while when he was still 18. They rent older cars, more or less on a weekly/monthly basis.

      They will rent to anyone if pressed. Just press 'em.

      --
      .sig: Now legally binding!
    12. Re:Favorite quote from TFA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative
      The Bush-Cheney White House. You will never find a more wretched hive of scum and villainy.

      That may be true. However, I can't think of any administration in the past 100 years that wasn't an equally "wretched hive of scum and villainy". Anyone who thinks there is ultimately any difference at all between the GOP and the Dems has been fooled. The focus of both parties is to remove rights from ordinary citizens.

      What we need is for everyone to be aware of Jury Nullification. The job of a jury is not limited to determining the facts. The real job is to ensure justice is done. This is especially needed to combat the War on Drugs. All we need is one person on each jury who will refuse to convict for drug offences and "Prohibition II" would be over. The same tactic can be used to fight other thefts of rights from the States and the People.

    13. Re:Favorite quote from TFA by Anonymous+Custard · · Score: 2, Informative

      *cough*...speeding tickets ... *cough*cough*

    14. Re:Favorite quote from TFA by logicnazi · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Well since this law doesn't apply to actual individuals but presumably mandates airlines do something the issues you raise don't really come up. I would imagine the people who are directly subject to the law know what it says. This isn't really stasi-like since it merely mandates that the airlines do what they had the right to do anyway (refuse to serve you unless you do certain things).

      However, I agree with your general concern. Just because the public is not directly subject to a law does not mean they are not affected by it (imagine a law that secretly funded the catholic church violating the 1st ammendment).

      --

      If you liked this thought maybe you would find my blog nice too:

    15. Re:Favorite quote from TFA by lgw · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The nice thing about a democracy is the ability to have that revolution without bloodshed. Sure, sometimes it may feel as if the voter doesn't really have a choice (after all, Kerry wrote a significant portion of the USA-PATRIOT act), but that's really ignorance of the process. Real presidential politics happens in the primaries.

      The simple fact is, nothing that the government has done so far has been appalling to the majority of Americans. Had that happened, the Dem primary would have gone to the most effective protest candidate instead of the most mainstream canditate, as people wouldn't have been second-guessing their choice based on electability.

      If the revolution really is inevitable, both parties will figure that about long before I do, and change who they put forward appropriately. Nothing beats a politician for knowing which way the wind is blowing. I think your desire to see a revolution will be forever frustrated, by the very political greed you worry about.

      That's the cool thing about Democracy - we may not always elect the best candidate, but no one dares cross that line where no amount of advertising will fool people any more. Gilmore's quest to bring attention to secret law is a very helpful part of that.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    16. Re:Favorite quote from TFA by leonardluen · · Score: 2, Informative

      i don't know about the grandparents proof that kerry wrote a significant part of the patriot act, but he certainly voted for it, which is just as bad, because it means he helped shove it down our throats. he showed his support for the law by voting for it, so it really doesn't matter if he wrote any part of it.

      there was only one person that voted against it in the senate. and i am proud to say feingold is my states representative in that corrupt arena.

    17. Re:Favorite quote from TFA by PReDiToR · · Score: 4, Interesting
      Things like drug laws or other laws which have real teeth

      Drug laws are certainly laws that should be looked at in this category.

      Alcohol is legal, weed isn't.

      When was the last time you saw a bunch of stoners breaking up a bar and having a fight?
      Happens with the drinkers every weekend in my City.

      Ecstacy is another drug that should be allowed. The youth of today have never been asked if it should be illegal, it was merely declared so because the older generation heard the word "drug" and lashed out.

      If there were quasi-legal outlets for weed and ecstacy there wouldn't be such drama between rival dealers, the quality (and therefore quantifiability) of doses would rise, and safety would follow. This would also help a little (obviously not 100%) with the "gateway" idea of these substances. Dealers would be selling legitimate products and would not have to stock the harder drugs. Flood the market with legal sales and illegal ones would be harder to find.

      Many people believe that the only reason "drugs" are illegal is because the .GOV can't effectively tax them.

      If a (n ab)user requires the means to pay, they need to work to buy their dope, so the problem would not escalate, but there would still be people outside the system, as there are alcoholics/winos with alcohol.

      The majority of times police in the UK are called to drug fuelled raves is because the gathering is illegal, or the noise is causing a problem.
      These two problems would disappear if more places were open for kids to go, take a few pills, dance for 4 hours, then go have a joint to cool down and chill out.
      Mix this with a responsible safe-drive policy and you have a much better weekend out than is currently available with alcohol. No fighting, nobody being glassed, a lot less ass-groping and dancefloor molestation because ecstacy makes physical contact a desirable thing, rather than something to be shunned because the person is too drunk to be polite or comes on too strong and won't take no for an answer.

      One MAJOR effect of making weed and estacy legal would be to reduce the crime rate by hundreds of thousands every year. People break these laws every weekend and this makes them laugh off other laws too.


      *Note: I used to take a lot of drugs, but have since stopped using them. This to me is an academic argument, not a personal one.
      --

      Do not meddle in the affairs of geeks for they are subtle and quick to anger
    18. Re:Favorite quote from TFA by Grishnakh · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Maladjusted retards carry weapons in the street all over the world, every day. They're called cops (some of them) and criminals. When cops are the only ones with weapons, you have the beginnings of a police state. When criminals are the only ones with weapons (what are you going to do, pass a law that criminals can't have weapons?), you have an environment where criminals can act without fear of retribution.

    19. Re:Favorite quote from TFA by virg_mattes · · Score: 2, Interesting

      > The reason some drugs are illegal is for control. Pot became illegal as a way to control the Mexican Immigrant population in the southwest. Cocaine became illegal as a way to control immigrants from South America. Opium became illegal as a way to control the Asian immigrant population.

      Way too simple. You're forgetting the influence of the Puritan ethical system in the U.S. since the first European settlers came over. Just because drugs tended toward being used by foreigners is not so revealing as the fact that the U.S. criminalized alcohol for a while, too. There has always been a "drugs=hedonism" and "hedonism=bad" ethical framework in the U.S. and the War on Drugs reflects that. Even today, taxes on alcohol, cigarettes and gambling are referred to as "sin taxes".

      So, it is about control, but not just controlling minorities.

      Virg

  18. Who Made Unix? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    "He was employee No. 5 at Sun Microsystems, which made Unix, the free software of the Web, the world standard. "

    Who made Unix? I thought it was SCO?

  19. It reminds me. . . by Bastian · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It reminds me of when my town's high school started making kids wear their sudent ID's around their necks in response to Columbine, with the stated purpose of trying to prevent such a situation in our town by discouraging unauthorized people from entering the school.

    Only problem is, there has not been a school shooting I know if that was not perpetrated by a student who is authorized to be at that school.

    Same thing with airplanes. "Ha ha, you dumb terrorists! Now you have to prove you bought the ticket to get on the airplane!" I'm sure this inconveniences them much more than it inconveniences me when getting on an airplane. In fact, I bet it inconveniences them so much that they would scrub years or decades of planning. Sure, I get on an airplane once every couple months, and it hasn't made life too much harder for me, but somehow it's magically different for terrorists.

    1. Re:It reminds me. . . by finkployd · · Score: 2, Interesting

      It reminds me of when my town's high school started making kids wear their sudent ID's around their necks in response to Columbine, with the stated purpose of trying to prevent such a situation in our town by discouraging unauthorized people from entering the school.

      Only problem is, there has not been a school shooting I know if that was not perpetrated by a student who is authorized to be at that school.


      After Columbine there was a rash of investigative reporters trying to sneak into schools to show how easy it was get into a high school. Many security mesaures had to be taken just to prevent this. No joking.

      Finkployd

    2. Re:It reminds me. . . by numbsafari · · Score: 2

      Check out the latest crypt-o-gram. Schneir gets into this.

    3. Re:It reminds me. . . by PeteQC · · Score: 2

      That was a great idea!

      Yes, because everybody know that someone without an ID around his neck BUT with a semi-automatic weapon will absolutly be unable to enter the school by the front door and pass the "dangerous-looking" secretary.

      Secretary: You can't pass, you don't have an ID!
      Potentiel killer: Ah sorry miss, I promise I won't do it again...

      --
      Montreal - Best city to live in!
  20. "Lose" your ID by chill · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Ticket Agent: May I see your ID?

    Me: I'm sorry, I lost my wallet somewhere. All I have is some cash until I get everything replaced. You have no idea just how difficult this has been.

    Ticket agent: Okay, you'll have to go thru some extra screening, though. [Meaning a guaranteed wanding, remove shoes, etc.]

    Me: Okay.

    Been there, done that. It works.

    Of course, I actually DID lose my wallet on that trip, but the principle is the same.

    -Charles

    --
    Learning HOW to think is more important than learning WHAT to think.
    1. Re:"Lose" your ID by mrchaotica · · Score: 2

      Great, so not only did you not protest the secret law, you LITERALLY offered to drop your pants and bend over for the authority!

      I mean, jeez, figuratively is bad enough, but LITERALLY?!?!

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

  21. Re:Bullet, meet foot. Foot, this is bullet. by DAldredge · · Score: 4, Insightful

    They are claiming that the law requires they do this while at the same time refusing to point out what law does.

    One can not have a Democracy if the laws are hidden from the people.

  22. Re:I consider myself pretty liberal by robw810 · · Score: 4, Insightful
    He could even start a private airline company that doesn't require ID

    No, he can't - the federal government mandates that all airlines require identification. As I stated in another post, IF the airline were TRULY a private business imposing certain requirements on potential customers, THEN this would be acceptable. As it stands, however, the airline is a de facto corporation of the federal government.

    Since you consider yourself a liberal, I'll take this opportunity to say "thank you" - you guys are the ones that have always clamored for more government involvement in everything.

    RW

  23. Re:I consider myself pretty liberal by zackrentwood · · Score: 3, Insightful
    He could drive. He could buy a plane. He could walk. He could hitchhike, for goodness' sake. He could even start a private airline company that doesn't require ID.


    I'm pretty sure that it's illegal to drive without ID in most if not every state.

    The FAA requires that you carry positive ID along with your Airman's Certificate (their gender-charged language, not mine) whenever operating an aircraft

    Walking is an impractical method of moving around the country at this point in history, requiring people who don't want to show ID to walk would preclude them from many types of job.

    Hitchiking is illegal in every state where i've bothered to research the law.

    If he starts a private airline company then he will be subject to the rules of the FAA or TSA and have to impose the same requirements.

    He actually has a pretty good point.
  24. Re:I consider myself pretty liberal by multiplexo · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Did you bother reading the fine article? You did, Oh, are you one of those individuals who does poorly in reading comprehension tests? You must be, because if you had read the article you would have found out that Gilmore has epilepsy and lost his driver's license because of it. If you had bothered to read the article you also would have found out that the airlines claimed that it was not their policy but one they were forced to comply with by the federal government. Also the airlines are not allowed to just adopt any policy they like, as an example if an airline said "we don't like niggers and we don't let them on our planes" they'd be grounded pretty quickly by the federal government. Of course the federal government says that there is a policy but that we, the people who the federal government ostensibly serve, and who actually pay for the federal government, are not allowed to see it. If you can't see the danger in having the government create and enforce secret laws that the citizenry is expected to follow but not allowed to read then you're even dumber than your post makes you out to be. Who is to say that there isn't a secret law on the books that would allow me to come out to your house and hook some electrodes up to your nuts and show you all of the fun things that went on in Abu Ghraib? There might be a rule on the books that allows me to do this, but it's sensitive security information, so you can't see it, now shut up and stop screaming before I turn the voltage up even higher.

    There are some people who are smart enough to be bothered by the whole concept of having a bunch of government bureaucrats enforcing secret and unwritten laws on an unknowing populace and then there are stupid bastards such yourself who aren't much higher on the intellectual food chain than say a retarded steer, or perhaps a particularly bright carp.

    --
    cheap labor conservatives - they want to keep you hungry enough to be thankful for minimum wage.
  25. Unfortunately, in reality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    If I was driving down the freeway one day, following all the rules, going the speed limit, and a police officer pulls me over for "a traffic violation", but is not willing to tell me what this "traffic violation is", wouldn't I have reason to question why?

    Only if you're white

  26. You're right. But wrong. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    You are exactly right.

    But exactly wrong too!

    Perhaps there should be a law so that you have to prove who you are to board an airplane. I'm not sure about that.

    But if that is the case, then a law should be passed. If its really that important, congress should simply pass a law. They could do it in one day if it was important.

    But they haven't passed such a law. Isn't that interesting?

    Isn't it even more interesting that the government claims there is such a law, but that its too secret to tell you about? Doesn't that make you *the least bit interesting* in what the hell is going on?

    Where do you draw the line? If the police asked you for papers when you crossed from one state to the other, but couldn't tell you under what authority, would you simply brush it off? Seriously, where will you draw the line?

    In other news, congress is trying to get bigger fines on broadcasters in case they say "anal sex" on the air.

  27. Unfortunately, John WAS allowed to travel w/o ID by daveschroeder · · Score: 4, Informative

    This very page says that he would have been allowed to travel at SFO without ID if he submitted to a search. That alone devastates the "secret ID law" claim, as allowing him to fly without ID, search or not, would have been in violation of that law. More here.

  28. Re:I consider myself pretty liberal by Kiryat+Malachi · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You would be correct, except:

    TSA agents, who are *government* employees, are telling him he has to show ID because it's the law.

    Airline officials are *not* saying that this is company policy; they are saying it is US law.

    He is asking to see said law. No one will show it to him. Private laws are *not* something we should be saying "Oh, well that's okay then" towards; they lead in exactly the wrong direction.

    --

    ---
    Mod me down, you fucking twits. Go ahead. I dare you.
    (I read with sigs off.)
  29. This is the line? by evolutionaryLawyer · · Score: 2, Interesting

    So let's see, the government can have a secret court issue a secret subpoena and go to my ISP to see all of my online activity. Screw the ISP, they can come into MY HOUSE without my knowledge do whatever they want and leave, and this is (purportedly) legal?

    Our government is giving prisoners over to other governments with horrible human rights records just so they can torture them, because we have laws against it. We have a government that has suspended habeas corpus, one of the few civil rights the framers thought was so important that it was in the constitution without an amendment.

    All of this is being done to fight the "war on terror". And the thing he decides to protest is being asked to show ID? Wow...

    1. Re:This is the line? by t_allardyce · · Score: 3, Insightful

      look, if you want to be able to drive your low gas mileage car, eat tacos and watch the super bowel (without breasts) then you bloody well better co-operate. the war on terror is the single most important war that has ever been fought in the world, ever, this is because they killed 3000 innocent people and that means we have to kill absolutely every last terrorist and their families and everyone who has ever known them, and anyone who ever becomes a terrorist in the future. as you can imagine this requires quite a few 'tools' - for example, the president needs to be able to declare war on anything at any time, such a war needs to be able to continue for as long as is needed and in order to find the enemy (they don't wear uniforms you know) you need to be able to search anyone. if your not a terrorist you have absolutely nothing to hide simply because the war on terror is so important that anything else that anyone might do will be ignored unless its terrorism - if your gay for example fear not, the war on homosexuality is totally on hold for the moment! even if your ISP did forward your gay web-browsing history and emails to the FBI they wouldn't want to know! in fact banning gay marriage has dropped right off the current administrations to-do list because there are so many more important things to do - president bush has actually said that he won't even go to sleep until terrorism is stopped, let alone waste time on less important things like that. now people seem to think that the bill of rights is some set in stone thing that cant be changed - wrong, the bill of rights is just a bit of paper and if it turns out that the terrorists are using free speech and all our crazy prisoner rights against us then we have to drop them from the law! remember politicians can be trusted because we all elect them - when has a politician ever lied or done something dishonest? maybe about once a century!

      --
      This comment does not represent the views or opinions of the user.
  30. Alert! Falsehoods! by Eil · · Score: 3, Funny

    From TFA:

    "He was employee No. 5 at Sun Microsystems, which made Unix, the free software of the Web, the world standard."

    Waitaminute. They're actually saying that:
    • Sun made Unix (AT&T made Unix)
    • Unix is the "free software of the web," (I'd say Apache, Linux, or FreeBSD would make better examples, Unix(tm) is kproprietary)
    • Unix is "the world standard" (eh? Windows seems like it would be more of a world standard, even if we don't like it.)


    Three complete falsehoods in one sentence! Is this country great or what?
    1. Re:Alert! Falsehoods! by dbIII · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Not exactly falsehoods - lies to children, a simplification, or broad generalisations.
      Sun made Unix
      They made operating sytems that work in a similar enough fashion to what was developed at AT&T to be called so - so despite not having the trademark that is effectively true. Linux is also effectively unix, even gnu/hurd is too. Sun is definitely a major unix vendor.
      Unix is the "free software of the web,"
      Yes, the net was built and generally runs on versions of unix - but not necessarily the one written by AT&T.
      Unix is "the world standard"
      Yes - win95,98,ME,NT,2k all have major differences which make it difficult from programs to run on all of those platforms while there are published standards which allow things to interoperate on different versions of unix. Plus there are a lot more computers in the world than just PCs, and if Microsoft had the world standard there would not be an etc/hosts file on MS PCs, but some sort of weird registry thing on unix web servers.

      The sentence is true, Sun were one of the main players in the net and web long before Microsoft even put TCP/IP into their operating system, so they got to set the standard and not Microsoft. I started to use linux in 1995 because it was pointless getting onto the net with a Microsoft OS - it couldn't even run my 14400bps modem at full speed due to crappy serial drivers - then once you were on it was all unix hosts out there.

  31. Re:I consider myself pretty liberal by Ecks · · Score: 5, Insightful

    First, he doesn't have a driver's license. Second, he doesn't have a problem with the law that says you have to show ID to get on a plane. He just wants someone to show him a copy of it and the government claims that the details of the law cannot be divulged to the public. Liberal or conservative you shouldn't like the idea that the government can hold you accountable to rules that they won't divulge.

    -- Ecks

  32. Re:Bullet, meet foot. Foot, this is bullet. by finkployd · · Score: 4, Insightful

    So you are perfectly ok with living under laws that you are not allowed to read or know about?

    And if you think showing ID does one bit of good regarding airline security, I would love to join you in that dream world. Are you under the impression that IDs are hard to get? Do you believe that the 9/11 guys did not have valid IDs?

    Finkployd

  33. Re:Unfortunately, John WAS allowed to travel w/o I by zackrentwood · · Score: 5, Informative

    I don't think that this is dispositive. From the government's pleadings there clearly is a secret law. Many briefs went back and forth arguing that the government should/should not have to reveal the text of the administrative order.

    It seems that the text of the secret rule might allow the TSA to forego the ID requirement in exchange for more strict physical searches.

  34. Xenix by tepples · · Score: 2, Informative

    At one time, Microsoft did sell a UNIX port called Xenix. It eventually became SCO OpenServer.

  35. Re:Except that he could travel by air without ID by tepples · · Score: 2, Insightful

    He is free to travel by foot, bike, motorcycle, car, boat, or other device himself while not violating applicable pedestrian or traffic laws, or by bus or train, entirely anonymously.

    Foot and bike do not reach towns whose only access road is an interstate. Motorcycle, car, and boat require licensure, and states reserve the right to deny licensure to people diagnosed with epilepsy.

  36. RTFA by IO+ERROR · · Score: 4, Informative
    They reached a strange agreement for an argument about personal privacy: In lieu of showing ID, Gilmore would consent to an extra-close search, putting up with a pat-down in order to keep his personal identity to himself. He was wanded, patted down and sent along.

    As Gilmore headed up the boarding ramp a security guard yanked him from line. According to court papers, a security agent named Reggie Wauls informed Gilmore he would not be flying that day.

    "He said, 'I didn't let you fly because you said you had an ID and wouldn't show it,' " Gilmore said. "I asked, 'Does that mean if I'd left it at home I'd be on the plane?' He said, 'I didn't say that.' "
    --
    How am I supposed to fit a pithy, relevant quote into 120 characters?
  37. Re:I consider myself pretty liberal by dbcad7 · · Score: 3, Insightful
    And yet, these changes were made by a conservative controlled regime.

    --
    waiting for ad.doubleclick.net
  38. Re:Unfortunately, John WAS allowed to travel w/o I by agurkan · · Score: 2, Informative
    You are misquoting, that page says:

    There he was informed that if he was not willing to show ID he could fly, but only if he submitted to a far more intrusive search than what every passenger goes through at the security checkpoint. (emphasis mine)

    --
    ato
  39. Re:Bullet, meet foot. Foot, this is bullet. by ScrewMaster · · Score: 4, Funny

    Why does the government need to know where you are travelling?

    For the same reason that dogs lick their balls.

    --
    The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
  40. This has been on Slashdot before.... by tsvk · · Score: 2, Informative
  41. Homophone by buckhead_buddy · · Score: 2, Funny
    Jim Starx said:
    It would be pretty hard for this administration to say that with a straight face.

    Remember though, Peace is a homophone of Piece. Perhaps they really meant:

    • Our way is [a declaration of opinion].
    • Our way is [a firearm].
    • Our way is [tearing a part from a whole].
    I can see most of the executive branch saying this.
    1. Re:Homophone by deutschemonte · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "Piece of Ass" is too Clinton-esque and was subsequently rejected by big oil, I mean big energy, I mean big religion, I mean the Bush administration.

      Clinton-esque
      Big Oil
      Big Energy
      Big Religion
      Bush Administration

      One of these things is not like the others.

      --
      The preceding message was based on actual events. Only the names, locations and events have been changed.
  42. Re:I consider myself pretty liberal by zackrentwood · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Since you consider yourself a liberal, I'll take this opportunity to say "thank you" - you guys are the ones that have always clamored for more government involvement in everything.
    http://www.theconservativevoice.com/modules/news/a rticle.php?storyid=3045
    http://www.aclu.org/SafeandFree/SafeandFree.cfm?ID =17446&c=206

    Republican President Bush backs a big-government national ID card. The "conservative voice" condemns this action as un-American as does the ACLU. Is it just me or are these labels sort of stupid? Perhaps destroying the checks and balances of the three-branch system?

    Oh well, maybe it's just me.
  43. Re:Unfortunately, John WAS allowed to travel w/o I by Repton · · Score: 4, Informative
    From TFA:

    They reached a strange agreement for an argument about personal privacy: In lieu of showing ID, Gilmore would consent to an extra-close search, putting up with a pat-down in order to keep his personal identity to himself. He was wanded, patted down and sent along.

    As Gilmore headed up the boarding ramp a security guard yanked him from line. According to court papers, a security agent named Reggie Wauls informed Gilmore he would not be flying that day.

    "He said, 'I didn't let you fly because you said you had an ID and wouldn't show it,' " Gilmore said. "I asked, 'Does that mean if I'd left it at home I'd be on the plane?' He said, 'I didn't say that.' "

    This says that he _did_ consent to being searched ... and was then later pulled out, after passing through security.

    --
    Repton.
    They say that only an experienced wizard can do the tengu shuffle.
  44. Re:Keep reading - that isn't the whole story by daveschroeder · · Score: 2, Informative

    Wrong. The story says:

    John then went to San Francisco International Airport and attempted to fly to Washington, DC on United Airlines.There he was informed that if he was not willing to show ID he could fly, but only if he submitted to a far more intrusive search than what every passenger goes through at the security checkpoint.

    He politely declined the search and again was not allowed to fly.

  45. To make people feel better by vijayiyer · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Like most such regulations, it's there to keep the soccer moms happy through the feeling of security. Realistically, it's meaningless. A criminal will either be sure to not have a prior record or use a fake.

  46. Re:Bullet, meet foot. Foot, this is bullet. by Get+Behind+the+Mule · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Wait a minute. Person with a uniform and a role of auhtority says to a citizen, "Show me your ID." Citizen asks, "Why?" Person with authority says, "Because it's the law." Citizen asks, "What law?", and the person with authority doesn't have an answer.

    If persons with authority start telling people what to do on the grounds that the law says they can, and then it turns out that they don't know what they are talking about, indeed for all appearances might just be making it up, then there are no limits to what citizens can and will be forced to do. If that's not a grave threat to civil rights, I don't know what is. It no longer matters what the law does and does not allow, the law doesn't make any difference any more if anyone with a badge can claim, "It's the law" and then without any further explanation demand anything they want.

    It's never wrong to question authority. Authority can be expected to have an answer.

  47. Related cases are increasing. by Artifakt · · Score: 5, Informative

    (I am not a lwayer, and this is not legal advice for any person who thinks they face what may or may not be a similar situation)

    One of the basic issues driving the airport case is the question of when ignorance of the law IS an excuse. The typical educated layman's answer is never - "Ignorance of the law is no excuse.". While that's generally good advice, real case law is slightly different. It sometimes involves a concept called scientier. The U.S. Supreme Court has defined "scientier" in one set of cases as: "a mental state embracing intent to deceive, manipulate, or defraud.". In various legal situations, it's definition is broader, but is generally about the intent of the accused.
    Several scientier related cases have established that ignorance of a law can become an excuse - IF the ignorance is not the sole fault of the accused. One example of this would be a case where the state itself has put impediments in the way of learning what the law is, and another would be a case where there were substantial natural impediments.
    There have been successful challenges at the highest levels (The Supremes basically), in cases where the impediment was natural: One classic case in the area is that of a bookstore (general , rather than "adult") owner, who was found not guilty of violating obscenity law on this principle. He displayed for sale copies of a Grove Press work that had made the state's banned list. However, the copies he recieved from his normal distributer had rather innocuous cover art and a title that was not particularly indicative of the type of work. The court ruled that his defense was sound - the law did not compel a normal person to go to the rediculous length of personally reading every book in a shipment of tens of thousands of copies, or paying thousands of dollars each year for the necessary (at that time) postage and labor to constantly check a lengthy inventory against a state list not made widely available, just to comply.
    There are fewer good precidents for cases where the action of the state is involved, and fewer still that have made it to superior courts or the U.S. Supreme court. This looks to be a possible one.
    Right now, there is a claim in Texas that holds some of the state laws on sexual conduct are invalid. It's based on the fact that an agency of the state government struck out specific references to those laws in the state's high school text books. The theory is that once one arm of the state acts to make it harder for a person to become educated about the law, the whole state government loses the normal claim that ignorance is no excuse.
    This case hinges on the same claim. If it's really that hard to get to see an actual copy of the law involved, how can an individual who intends to comply with the law actually do it? A decision here will impact not just cases like the one in Texas, but may impact a lot of IRS/Tax law, as one of the claims frequently advanced there is that the law is literally too complicated to be understood.

    --
    Who is John Cabal?
  48. Re:Just because it may not be a law... by bcrowell · · Score: 2
    Nobody is getting hurt, and it's very little inconvienece to hopefully make the airlines safer.
    The inconvenience isn't the issue. It's the secrecy of the law that he objects to, and the fact that the law was not debated, passed, and published through the normal process of legislation. There's also no evidence that it's making anybody safer. Getting a fake ID is easy -- I can't imagine a terrorist having trouble obtaining one.

    I actually traveled by plane from San Francisco to New York without an ID in 1986. I had no problems whatsoever. The only hassle was with the desk clerk at the YMCA, who was initially reluctant to rent me a room without my showing ID. There was terrorism before 1986, there was terrorism between 1986 and 9/11, and there's been terrorism between 9/11 and now. The only difference is that now, we're willing to let the Bush administration use the excuse of terrorism to invade foreign countries, imprison US citizens without trial, torture people, and create secret laws.

  49. Re:Unfortunately, John WAS allowed to travel w/o I by VidEdit · · Score: 3, Interesting
    You need to RTFA at http://www.postgazette.com/pg/05058/462446.stm :

    As Gilmore headed up the boarding ramp a security guard yanked him from line. According to court papers, a security agent named Reggie Wauls informed Gilmore he would not be flying that day. "He said, 'I didn't let you fly because you said you had an ID and wouldn't show it,'" Gilmore said. "I asked, 'Does that mean if I'd left it at home I'd be on the plane?' He said, 'I didn't say that.'"

    So, actually he wasn't allowed on the plane. There is a "Secret ID" law--so secret the government at first wouldn't even awknolge if it did or did not exist. Even today, the government won't cite the secret rule that allegedly requires people to show ID, saying that it is secret and can't be revealed without harming security.

    It's official. We now live in a police state, with secret searches, secret evidence, secret arrests, secret detentions without charges, secret touture, secret laws and even secret legal arguments. It sounds too bad to be true, but each allegation I've listed is documented and verifiable.

    --
  50. Flying without ID by jezmund · · Score: 2, Interesting

    You can fly without ID, you just have to go through the "extra-careful" security search. About 3 or 4 weeks ago, I was in line for the security checkpoint when I realized I couldn't find my driver's license. Before I could search my luggage for it, the guy at the entrance told me it was OK and made some sort of mark on my ticket and waved me through. At the metal detectors, they checked my ticket, saw the mark, and pulled me aside for the full pat-down and whatnot. I was surprised, because I remember reading about Gilmore's crusade a while ago and figured you couldn't fly without ID. To be honest, I wouldn't be surprised if nobody at TSA knows for sure what the rules are. I fly quite a bit, and rules vary from airport to airport and from week to week. Sometimes screeners will insist I have to remove my sneakers and pass them through the X-Ray, and other times they don't care.

    --

    "fist in the air in the land of hypocrisy"
  51. Re:What a dick. by faedle · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Except, as has been documented before, the ID requirement does absolutely nothing to increase security. All 19 hijackers on Sept. 11 would have been able to freely board, as they would have had the necessary documents and likely would have not necessarily been on any watchlist.

  52. It's not about showing licenses... by SharpFang · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It's about laws you're not entitled to know about but you are bound with.

    This one is mostly harmless. But it's just a step away...

    Imagine such a law: Any visitor to an anti-government website is considered traitor of the country, subject to arrest and lawsuit, without right to a lawyer, with methods of interrogation like tortures allowed, bound with secret about everything they see or hear, including this law.

    Now this law comes into effect, except it's not being published anywhere. Just the same as the "ID check" - you don't get a chance to know it exists possibly until after you've violated it. The agents are free to drag you out of your house and keep you imprisoned for months, then eventually kill you and nobody can do anything about it, they can't even know what happened to you. And it's all fine in the eyes of law - and nobody can protest because nobody knows, and those who know, by knowing are bound by secret, or they violate the law and are subject of prosecution.

    That's the method of rule of totalitarian government. Laws you don't know about until it's too late. And of course laws made up on the spot, just as binding because nobody can verify they were made up on the spot...

    --
    45 5F E1 04 22 CA 29 C4 93 3F 95 05 2B 79 2A B2
  53. Re:What a dick AKA I'm a moron by amjohns · · Score: 2, Insightful
    So you think that just knowing who people are is going to make anything safer? Boy are you naive!!

    What the hell does knowing who someone is have to do with whether they're carrying a weapon or bomb onboard? Absolutely NOTHING!

    I have no problem w/ security screenings, even though they're ineffective at preventing weapons other that large bombs (which can still easily get through too). I could list 5 'innocent' things I can carry aboard a plane to kill someone with, if I were so disposed. I could probably come up with an even longer list of things easily smuggled aboard. But knowing who I am has nothing to do with any of that

  54. The real reason for ID by wk633 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    is so that you can't fly on someone else's ticket.

    If you have a ticket you can't use, you can't sell it in the paper (or on eBay). There used to be all kinds of classified ads for airplane tickets for sale. No more. It's economics, not security.

    1. Re:The real reason for ID by Minupla · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Then why would the requirement be enforeced by a secret law? Much easier to enforce as an airline reg: "All tickets are non-transferable. Prior to boarding the aircraft you will be required to present an acceptable proof of identification. The following are acceptable".... No biggie. On the other hand, if you have a secret govt law requiring that you show ID to get on the airplane, you get lots of bad press, and someone suing for constituational reasons. Sounds to me like the airlines did this the hard way if they were just trying to keep people from trading tickets.

      --
      On the whole, I find that I prefer Slashdot posts to twitter ones because I don't get limited to 140 chars before
    2. Re:The real reason for ID by koehn · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Flying on someone else's ticket is trivial. Here's how trivial it would be (I've never actually flown this way, or allowed anyone else to fly on my ticket this way):

      1. Have John Citizen buy you the plane ticket you want, on an airline that supports web-based checkin (where you can print your own boarding pass). Several airlines support this today.

      2. Have John Citizen go through the checkin process, but instead of printing his boarding pass, save it as HTML, and include the graphics that come with it (IE and Moz both support this, not sure about the rest).

      3. Take the HTML, and put your name in place of John Citizen. Print the boarding pass. I've verified that this works, but I've never ever tried to fly on an altered boarding pass.

      4. Take the boarding pass and display it at the airport with your photo ID. You're in!

      The security folks don't ever check to see if your name is on the terrorist watch list, they assume that the airline's reservation systems did that. All they do is ensure that the photo ID you present matches the boarding pass you present. Since the ticket was purchased under John Citizen's name, your name will never be known to anybody at the airline or the government! Also, the gate agent doesn't check to see if the name on the boarding pass matches the name on the reservation (although if they did, you could always carry a copy with John Citizen's name on it).

      Again, this just reinforces Gilmore's argument that the ID requirement is rediculous. Even somebody on the terrorist watch list could fly this way, assuming they weren't smart enough to get phony credentials.

  55. Actually, by WindBourne · · Score: 2, Insightful

    conservatives are the ones who have pushed through regulations on personal freedoms as well as pushing their morals. Liberals have normally fought this.

    OTH, Liberals, and the 1960-1970 republicans, pushed through such things as environmental laws. IOW, business regulations. Fortunately, some regulations have been destroyed, such as when the oil industry dereg occured due to Nixon and Carter (reagan simply accelerated their laws by 1/2 a year).

    --
    I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
  56. Correct me if I'm Wrong,but by GnarlyNome · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Dosen't a law have to be published in the Federal Register to be legal?
    http://www.gpoaccess.gov/fr/index.html
    on the other hand it may just a regulation

    --
    Diplomacy is the art of saying "Nice doggie" until you can find a rock. Will Rogers
  57. That is so by TCaM · · Score: 3, Insightful

    however, if there isn't a law and the airlines are making shit up the need to be called on it. Likewise if there really is some 'secret law' on the books it needs to be exposed as the very idea of 'secret laws' is totally against the basic ideal of having a free society.

    This is a battle worth fighting.

  58. Re:Except that he could travel by air without ID by Martin+Blank · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It's not far from it, perhaps. There's been serious talk of requiring photo ID for travel by train and long-distance bus.

    The whole security thing is overblown. There are things that need to stay secret, but things like this aren't one of them. A list of items that cannot be carried onboard might be something, but the basic conditions required to get past security and onto the plane should not be secret. There's not even been anything saying that you can get on a plane without ID if you submit to a search. None of that is public, and that's the problem here.

    --
    You can never go home again... but I guess you can shop there.
  59. Re:No proof there is such a law by Metex · · Score: 2, Informative

    I have traveled many times out of SFO without State/National ID however you still need a document attached to your ID to fly.

    The way it works is that in order to fly without your ID you need to flash them a credit card you bought the ticket with and submit to a search. You are SOL if you dont have your CC that you bought the ticket with. Also you have to notify the ticket agent that you have no ID and they usually print another ticket that flags you to be searched.

    While you dont need your ID they need a document that is attached to you period.

    --
    Never could figure out why my girl liked my bitch tits, then I found out she was a lesbian.
  60. No, there really are secret laws. by Russ+Nelson · · Score: 2, Informative

    Gilmore's whole assertion rests on the claim that there is, in fact, a secret law requiring a person to show ID to fly.

    Uhhhh, you should take your lead helmet off. The government acknowledges that there is a secret law requiring a person to show ID to fly.
    -russ

    --
    Don't piss off The Angry Economist
  61. Re:Showing IDs by Russ+Nelson · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If I'm getting on an airplane, I feel better that everyone has to show an ID.

    True! You do feel better! Unfortunately, you are no safer, but everyone has less privacy. Is the loss of their privacy worth happy feelings on your part? Perhaps you should take happy pills instead? That way, you'll still be happy, and other people will still have their privacy.
    -russ

    --
    Don't piss off The Angry Economist
  62. No by zoloto · · Score: 3, Interesting

    You are not required to carry ID with you at all when you drive. You are only required to furnish proof of a licence to drive within an applicable time period or you get a fine. They can still look you up by name and address. At least in the state of NY and most New England states, they can pull up your picture as well. Having an licence with your picture simply makes it easier for them.

    Most cops I have met are really nice guys and are pretty lenient about a lot of things. Including not having I.D. when you drive. I don't carry any ID with me when I drive/fly/whatever. It's not that I'm a raving zealot about being free, it's simply something I never have done, nor was ever inclined to do.

    It's natural to pay for things in cash, or over the internet, drive and fly without ID. It's not hard. You simply can't be clueless about it and even ask for help in situations where it'll be a hassle when someone does ask for ID (such as in airports).

    You should never expect to have someone request ID unless you've done something wrong as in illegal, against the law etc.

    I've spent a couple of days in jail since I didn't produce my ID for something I wasn't even involved in. I gave them my first name and called my lawyer. Nuff said. Since I didn't do anything wrong, they had no business knowing who I was.

    Look, I'm not a privacy anal retentive person - but when people try and snoop into your business, people who don't know you or especially a government agent or agency when I have done nothing wrong - a "suspicion" based on profiling or my personality or any thing else they deem as "unnormal" is simply wrong and goes against principles of freedom the founding fathers wanted to ensure we had.

    Not to mention I'm a white, upper middle class american. It's not like I'm an easy target to racial profiling (my apologies, but racial targeting and profiling is a sickening problem and I really can't stand it).

    People don't have a head on their shoulders these days or excercise common sense. It's truely pitiful.

  63. Re:How about by ikkonoishi · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I will now log your driver's license into our database for insurance purposes.

    You have to be able to prove to your insurance person that you actually did see a driver's liscense.

  64. The "We suggest you take off your shoes" rule by Duke · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I noticed that, at the security line, it was always "suggested" that I take off my shoes and put them through the X-ray scanner. I asked if I was "required" to take off my shoes, and was told I was not. But any time I walked through with my shoes on, I was pulled aside for hand scanning and was required to take off my shoes. On one trip, I asked an intelligent-looking security agent if I was required to take my shoes off and he told me "No." I then asked him if I would be automatically pulled aside for hand scanning if I wore my shoes and he gave me an "I could be fired for making this smile so unambiguous" smile. So, I guess the rules ablut shoes are secret, too, although it would take any normal person about 15 minutes of watching to figure it out. I have been really pissed every time since going through security, knowing my government refuses to be straight with me. What if we all wore our shoes through the line?

    1. Re:The "We suggest you take off your shoes" rule by wk633 · · Score: 2, Funny

      Next time, really f with them. Take off one shoe, and refuse to take off the other, or explain why :-)

    2. Re:The "We suggest you take off your shoes" rule by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 2, Informative

      That's generally an airport thing, and sometimes a screener thing. In Phoenix they don't do the shoe thing, or didn't last time I traveled. Neither did they in Denver. Nearly all people passed with shoes on. They'd recommend to people who had shoes that had metal to take them off, because if they didn't, it's set of the detector and they'd have to do more screening.

      In some cases it's just the agent being a dick. My dad got this, they told him to take of his shoes and he knew that was unnecessary so he said no. Sure enough, got sent over for more screening. That agent did the scan, which turned up nothing. The agent asked "Why did they send you over here?" My dad told him about the shoes, which earned an eye roll and a muttered "idiots" from the agent who then told him to have a nice day and apologised for the trouble.

      So I'm not so sure it's a secret rule form the government, more a per airport thing that the TSA people may not fully understand.

  65. Re:I consider myself pretty liberal by demachina · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Just to clarify a rampant mistake in terminology in this whole article. This is not a question of "law" it is a question of "regulation". The difference is the first is passed by Congress and the second is just written by the executive branch and its agencies, the FAA, FCC and TSA for example.

    To my knowledge Congress has never passed a "law" implementing the "Do Not Fly" list which led to this requirement airlines ID all passengers. If they had passed a law it probably wouldn't be secret and someone could show Gilmore the "law", There isn't one.

    Congress has toyed with passing a law for several versions of "CAPPS" which are the next gen successors to the current stupid "Do Not Fly" list but Congress has so far balked at at the privacy invasion of CAPPS though the executive branch keeps bringing it back over and over again.

    The "Do Not Fly" list began in the early '90's as FAA "regulation" in concert with the FBI. It was lame and wasn't for the most part enforced. After 9/11 it was given new life, dramaticly expanded and turned over to TSA, Homeland Security and FBI and is now widely and badly enforced.

    It is to my knowledge all done through secret "regulation". However all airlines that fly in or in to the U.S. have to at least go through the motions of enforcing it, ID'ing all passengers and preventing passengers from flying whose names are on the "Do Not Fly" list. When they get a match they are supposed to call TSA/FBI agents who detain and interrogate the person. The person is usually completely innocent and just an unfortunate victim of having the same name as a suspected terrorist or even an alias a suspected terrorist uses. These innocent people are routinely harrassed, embarrassed and often prevented from flying and there is no known procedure for cleaing your name. Your best option is to petition your congressman who in turn begs the FBI, TSA, Homeland security to clear you.

    If an airline employee refuses to enforce the regulation they will probably be fired so its "law" to them. If an airline refuses to enforce it they will probably be denied access to U.S. air space so its "law" to them, but it is really secret regulation created by the executive branch and its agencies, the FAA, TSA, FBI and Homeland Security.

    --
    @de_machina
  66. No, wrong airport. He was allowed to fly at SFO. by daveschroeder · · Score: 5, Informative

    You're talking about two different things. This was Southwest Airlines at Oakland International Airport. United at San Francisco International Airport would let him fly with no ID. He just chose not to.

    See: http://www.papersplease.org/gilmore/facts.html

  67. Re:No Right to Fly by Buran · · Score: 2, Insightful

    You don't get it, do you? Are you really that stupid? This isn't about flying. This is about totalitarian-regime-style secret laws.

    I'd call that something VERY worth arguing about.

    Get off my planet.

  68. Re:Retarded by wk633 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    And you've never questioned any of that?

    Why should you need to show a credit card to buy something not on the credit card? I tried to report a car running a red light and almost hitting me on my bike. The police wanted to see my drivers license. Um- I wasn't driving. As a cyclist, I'm not required to have a drivers license. So, why ask for it?

    Just because things are ubiquitious in our society doesn't make them right. Most of the time you are 'required' to flash a card, it's for the convenience of the other party.

  69. Re:Unfortunately, John WAS allowed to travel w/o I by cgenman · · Score: 4, Insightful

    How can we be bound by a law we can't read? Courts have ruled again and again that ignorance of the law is no excuse... How can we accept that we're bound by laws, which we must know, which we can't know?

    This country has turned into a Kurt Vonnegut novel.

  70. Re:Unfortunately, John WAS allowed to travel w/o I by Sancho · · Score: 2, Informative

    You missed what someone posted here:

    http://yro.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=140827&c id =11798819

    He consented to the search and was still denied access. It's unclear whether this was in the first or second attempt to fly sans ID.

  71. Hey, I've done this by mekkab · · Score: 2, Informative

    And by I, I mean my wife.

    We flew from BWI to SFO, and back and she had NO ID at all. not even a library card.

    They just searched her. And at BWI, we were so late for the plane, they didn't even search her.

    The TSA people were pretty nice about it, too.
    The difference between Us and John Gilmore? We're not millionaires who think bureaucracy should be spat upon at every step. Sure it sucks, but this is a persons job- show 'em some respect and they chill out (*'cept for the real jerks).

    Speaking of which, you should see us get past TSA security with TWEEZERMAN tweezers- they come to two sharp points; every x-ray flags 'em. And everybody goes to their boss to double check 'em.

    --
    In the future, I would want to not be isolated from my friends in the Space Station.
    1. Re:Hey, I've done this by dvdeug · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The difference between Us and John Gilmore? We're not millionaires who think bureaucracy should be spat upon at every step. Sure it sucks, but this is a persons job- show 'em some respect and they chill out (*'cept for the real jerks).

      Rights are not just for nice guys. Rights are for everyone. The government shouldn't give random people jobs to harrass people and only let the nice ones travel.

      They just searched her. And at BWI, we were so late for the plane, they didn't even search her.

      So, if you're nice, no one even bothers to look twice at you. That's amazing high-quality security. Is the whole point of this is to randomly harass not-nice people, or protect people?

    2. Re:Hey, I've done this by mekkab · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Is the whole point of this is to randomly harass not-nice people, or protect people?

      Neither. If you think, even for a moment, that the "regulations" in place come close to protecting people, then I have I bridge to sell you.

      Its my firm belief that the TSA is the product of a knee-jerk reaction to 9-11. Utilizing politician speak (say something enough times and it becomes true) and wide-scale cognitive dissonance, every one is lulled into a false sense of security; nudge nudge, wink wink.

      --
      In the future, I would want to not be isolated from my friends in the Space Station.
  72. You're so right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    "If a regulation requires passengers to present an ID, you can choose to show it or find another method of transportation."

    Seee? Its that simple. If there is a regulation that he should show it, then he should show it.

    Umm.

    That's the point though. There is no such regulation.

  73. Re:Unfortunately, John WAS allowed to travel w/o I by daveschroeder · · Score: 2, Informative

    No. That was the first attempt. And since that was the time he was denied altogether (Southwest at Oakland), it's not surprising that he is using that in his court case.

    But United at SFO *would* allow him to fly with no ID if he, again, submitted to an intensive search. This time, he declined, and was not allowed to fly.

    See http://www.papersplease.org/gilmore/facts.html for details.

  74. Did a news.google.com search for John Gilmore by Antony-Kyre · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Although this doesn't have to do with the article exactly, the article did encourage me to news.google.com search John Gilmore to find out more about him.

    I came across something that led me to http://www.reason.com/0308/fe.bd.suspected.shtml.

    What caught my attention in the above article is the below. My comment is that poor people are going to go for the supermarket loyalty cards because it's cheaper to pay 50% of the price rather than the full price for certain items. Why pay $6 per gallon of milk when you can get it for $3? One word of advice, if you can, leave your last name and house number off the form you fill out. At least that way, you remain a bit anonymous and the store gets their demographical information still, assuming that's what it's for.

    From article I found: The popularity of supermarket club cards that collate permanent records of your grocery spending just so you can get 12-packs of Diet 7-Up on the cheap.

  75. Ironically by Scrameustache · · Score: 5, Funny

    we are being held accountable to rules that we cannot know.

    If we were around women more, we'd be used to it...

    --

    You can't take the sky from me...

  76. Re:So by khrtt · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The gate agent should've just told him it was an airline policy (which it probably is). Nothing wrong with that.

    Though I should tell you, I really don't give a fuck if the guy trying to hijack the plane I'm flying on has an ID or not.

  77. Re:Unfortunately, John WAS allowed to travel w/o I by Sancho · · Score: 2, Insightful

    So let me get this straight: At the first airport, he was at first rejected, then told he would be allowed on the plane if he submitted to a search, then once he submitted to the search, he was rejected again.

    And you're surprised that he didn't ask to be searched at the second airport? And you really expect that he would have been let on the plane that time when he wasn't the first time?

  78. I don't get it... by autophile · · Score: 2, Interesting
    I must be missing the point here. Secret law? If airport security requires passengers to show their ID before boarding, then either it's a law, in which case it's not so secret, or the airlines are requiring security to check ID's, in which case it's the airlines' terms of use of their private property.

    So why does it matter so much that you be identified before boarding? Isn't it true that private property can have any restriction not explicitly prohibited by law?

    --Rob

    --
    Towards the Singularity.
    1. Re:I don't get it... by Kwil · · Score: 2, Informative

      Except it's not quite a law, but neither is it the airline's terms of use.

      He was told it was not the airline's choice, but rather the result of an "Administrative Order" by the Department of Heimat Security.

      Said order is protected by secrecy for some reason. I'd be willing to wager because if flags brown people or arab sounding names for additional checks.

      --

      That Jesus Christ guy is getting some terrible lag... it took him 3 days to respawn! -NJ CoolBreeze

  79. Re:Unfortunately, John WAS allowed to travel w/o I by VidEdit · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Judging from your post, I know you'll be happy to overlook this glaring incongruity - and seeming change of story - to fuel your belief that we live in a police state.

    You are right in thinking that I still think that Gilmore has a case. Which account is right. I don't know, and either way there is still a secret law requiring us to "show our papers" to travel within the US.

    Interestingly, I see that you can't challenge a single one of my assertions about the current state of the police powers in the United States: "We now live in a police state, with secret searches, secret evidence, secret arrests, secret detentions without charges, secret touture, secret laws and even secret legal arguments." My position stands unopposed by you with a single fact. The facts also include the fact that the President of the United States believes that the constitution is null and void for anyone he personally deems to be an "Enemy Combatant," US Citizen or no. There is literally nothing in the Constitution or the Bill of Rights that says the Bill of Rights only applies to those the President approves of. This suspension of the Bill of Rights at the sole discretion of the Administration is literally an unprecedented extension of authoritarian power to the President.

    Your straw argument that if some things should be secret then it is ok to have secret laws (like those in Communist China and Soviet Russia) rings hollow. Yes, some things should be secret, such as the details on how to make weapons of mass destruction, but the actual laws we have to follow day to day need to be public so we can know what they are and challenge them if they are unconstitutional.

    We do live in 1984. The government can do sneak and peak searches, warrantless secret searches of your medical records, credit card transactions, library records and any "public" record. They can also, without a warrant, record who you phone and when, and many other transactions. The Administration to increase pollution is called Clear Skies; their plan to deforest is called The Healthy Forests Initiative. All I can say is that I think the President is double plus un-good.

    --
  80. Re:I consider myself pretty liberal by RickHunter · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Interesting, isn't it? Conservatives always claim they don't want stuff like this... Yet the instant they get into power, they start passing it left, right, and center, and blame the "Liberals".

  81. Re:Unfortunately, John WAS allowed to travel w/o I by daveschroeder · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Oh, for fuck's sake. He's on a mission to test this, remember? His PURPOSE was to test this, and pursue it in court, and now you're going to use this bullshit argument on me? He made a premeditated decision to politely test this system, and see if he could shake loose the whole "papers, please" issue.

    Since that is the case, hell fucking yes he should have tried to get on the plane at SFO. But you choose to take the "um, aren't you surprised he didn't try after he'd been rejected once" tack. By your logic, he shouldn't have even gone to the second airport at all! They told him they'd allow him to fly if he submitted to a search. And while that may have sounded familiar to him, if his goal was to go on a crusade with this, he should have tested it again, yes? And don't give me any bullshit about embarrassment, because he was prepared for this since his goal was to challenge this system.

    And yes, I do expect he would have been let on, because *I* have flown without ID before. Twice now! After Sept 11. I lost my wallet and all I had was my plane ticket, going from ORD to MSN. And yes, I had to submit to the special search, but I still flew. So yes, I do expect he could have flown with no ID, albeit with much hassle. Of course you won't believe this, but no matter.

    Look, I'm not saying that the system is great, and I think John's cause is worthwhile. I just think that exaggerating things (i.e., that he can't fly with no ID, even though SFO was about to let him - and we'll never know either way, will we - or, that this is a universal issue of being able to travel without "identity papers", when this case applies only to air travel, and there are numerous other ways to travel - and it doesn't matter if they're slower - without ID. The point is that he shouldn't hurt this case by overdramatizing things.)

  82. Re:Except that he could travel by air without ID by rthille · · Score: 2, Informative
    But please, even in light of that, remember: he WAS allowed to fly with no ID at SFO, and chose not to.

    No. They let him thru the security check point, but then stopped him from boarding the plane. From way down the article:


    They reached a strange agreement for an argument about personal privacy: In lieu of showing ID, Gilmore would consent to an extra-close search, putting up with a pat-down in order to keep his personal identity to himself. He was wanded, patted down and sent along.

    As Gilmore headed up the boarding ramp a security guard yanked him from line. According to court papers, a security agent named Reggie Wauls informed Gilmore he would not be flying that day.

    "He said, 'I didn't let you fly because you said you had an ID and wouldn't show it,'" Gilmore said. "I asked, 'Does that mean if I'd left it at home I'd be on the plane?' He said, 'I didn't say that.'"


    Also, note that regulations which are needed to enforce laws have the full force of law and need to be just as transparent as the laws themselves if we are to live in a free society. From further down:

    "By removing any reference to persons or passengers, Congress has significantly broadened the scope of SSI authority," wrote Todd B. Tatelman, an attorney for the Congressional Research Office. Tatelman was asked by Congress last year to look at the implications of Gilmore's case.

    Tatelman's report found that the broadened language essentially put a cocoon of secrecy around 16 categories of information, such as security programs, security directives, security measures, security screening information "and a general category consisting of 'other information.'"

    It's this complete lack of transparency that makes it difficult for a US Senator to get on a plane to get to a vote! How can the typical citizen expect to get justice out of a system so opaque and byzantine that even a US Senator has a hard time flying?
    --
    Awesome furniture, accessories and cabinetry in Santa Rosa, CA: http://humanity-home.com/
  83. Re: strong hatred of Christians by petrus4 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I can definitely understand having strong, rather passionate negative feelings towards certain individuals within US politics who *claim* to be Christian. I experience such feelings myself. (I won't name names, but I don't think I really need to...the individuals in question know who they are, and so do most of the rest of us)

    However...if hatred of such "Christians" extends to hatred of Christ himself, it might interest you to know that Jesus most likely would actually share your feelings towards such people. One of the things which got him killed was a habit of several times becoming furious with the religious leaders of the day, reprimanding them and calling them hypocrites, among other things.

    It always interests me when I see people (justifiably, IMHO) expressing anger/hatred/frustration towards Bush and his followers, but at the same time mistakenly extending that to Christ, because they make the assumption that Jesus and Bush are ideologically/attitudinally similar. What people would find out if they took the time to do some research on the matter however is that Christ and Bush are actually diametric opposites...In fact I can hardly think of two individuals who have less in common with each other.

    My motivation in pointing this out is not that I'm in any way "turn or burn" fundamentalist, but that I'm someone who in a hopefully more moderate, historical perspective sees Christ as having been a worthwhile human being...Sufficiently so that at times it grieves me somewhat that he is in any way associated with the likes of Bush. I'm not saying that I'm angry with you here...Assuming that Bush and Jesus are similar is a mistake a lot of people make, primarily due to the claims Bush makes...but it is a mistake that is based on a lack of accurate information. I don't believe anyone's going to go to hell for having the wrong idea here...but having the historical record straight in virtually any instance is a good idea.

  84. govt lobbysts by cheekyboy · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Its not that hard really.

    Big friends in high places, lets unite and make it look like someone else is doing this... takes the blame away... etc... Usual Suspects, Usual Scum.

    Imagine if cars were non transfereable, used car market would be DEAD.

    Technically and legally, the airlines could easily setup a system were anyone could reauthorize their ticket to anyone else, like a normal sale, and with only $3 admin fee (talking 5minutes to a $11/hr employee should not cost $25 admin fees, again same scum making false fees)
    or done online. We know us slashdotters could easily do it, unless their ticket systems are so ancient and cruddily coded in COBOL or some lego systems.

    Why is it easier to build a 747 with millions of parts and efficient engineering, yet the airlines billing/ticket/scheduling systems are MORE OUTDATED than your local blockbuster running DOS ordering systems.

    --
    Liberty freedom are no1, not dicks in suits.
  85. Re:Why not? by SmurfButcher+Bob · · Score: 3, Insightful

    You answered your own question -

    If I have nothing to hide, then the government has no need to know. Period.

    --

    help me i've cloned myself and can't remember which one I am

  86. Re:The "Do Not Fly" List by demachina · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Your point about Israel is spot on though I have reservations about armed air marshals. At that point you are putting someone with a potent weapon on the airplane. If a terrorist group infiltrates someone in to the air marshall program they can walk on to a plane with a weapon that might be able to breach the cockpit(not sure how bullet proof they are).

    Infiltration is not real likely in Israel because the number of plans and marshalls are small and their religion/ethnicity autoscreens them. The Air Marshall program in the U.S. is much bigger, chaotic and incompetent.

    The other risk is several terrorists could overpower the air marshall and seize his weapon or the air marshall could accidentally cause decompression with his gun shooting at terrorists.

    Not a big fan of the crew having gun's either. Again you could infiltrate a terrorist on the crew as may have happened with the Egyptian air line that may have been intentionally crashed in to the sea by one of the pilots.

    --
    @de_machina
  87. Re:Unfortunately, John WAS allowed to travel w/o I by Fred_A · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Can there technically be a secret law ?

    One basic tennant of any legal system is that none may ignore the law (although I don't know how it's typically formulated in English). How are you supposed to know about a secret law ? It doesn't fit in the system.

    --

    May contain traces of nut.
    Made from the freshest electrons.
  88. Of course show receipts by redelm · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Those door checkers at Fry's, Sam's Club & others aren't checking on customers so much as checking up on their own cashiers. They represent a tangible risk for any cashier who might be tempted to undercharge a confederate. I cooperate.

    1. Re:Of course show receipts by snikeris · · Score: 5, Informative

      I worked at Sam's club last summer as a cashier. The door checkers are instructed to look through the cart and match up everything in the cart to something on the receipt.

      This serves three purposes:

      a) to make sure cashiers don't mess up like the grandparent mentioned
      b) to make sure people aren't shoplifting
      c) to provide a visible deterrant for shoplifters

      I was never explicitily told the true purpose of the door checkers, but I'd bet its a little bit of both.

      Now all theory aside, in practice the vast majority of people who would work at the doors would hardly check at all. If they did, a huge line would build up of people waiting to leave. Of course some people were real careful, but most of us simply didn't care. Whenever they put me on the door, I would pretend like I was checking everything, look up and down at the receipt a couple times, and then after 10 seconds or so let them go on. I really only checked for very expensive items.

      Even if no one actually checked if people were stealing, it still provided a deterrant for people who might be thinking about shoplifting. The average shoplifter doesn't know that most things aren't checked, so seeing someone at the door checking things might persuade them into not stealing.

      There was one funny instance where a kid that had just started was working the door, checking receipts, and I was helping this guy who had just bought a huge flat-screen TV. I helped get it from inventory, rang it up at my register, and then helped him put it in his car. On the way out the door, the new kid asked to see the man's receipt, and the man said, "Oh no, I just won this TV" and kept on walking with the TV. He had already paid for it of course, but we had a good laugh as I was helping him get it into his car.

  89. Re:Unfortunately, John WAS allowed to travel w/o I by bitingduck · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This country has turned into a Kurt Vonnegut novel.

    More like a Kafka story or novel.

  90. Which Law ? by Aussie · · Score: 2, Funny


    Q Why do I need to show my ID ?
    A Catch 22.
    Q What says I can't see the law ?
    A Catch 22.

    The US gov should be careful, Joseph Heller might sue.

  91. Re:Unfortunately, John WAS allowed to travel w/o I by wwahammy · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I agree that the patriot act and all the regulations surrounding it such as the Secret ID law are grossly unconstitutional and will lead to severe violations of our civil liberties but I think its extreme to say we live in a police state. A police state would allow all of the secret things you've mentioned in every case. That just doesn't happen yet (although there is certainly potential for it to happen). We do have a fairly robust and open justice system, despite all its flaws, in cases not involving terrorism. I'm not minimizing your concerns but making a statement like you did will allow others to ridicule our concerns as hyperbole.

  92. Possible reactions by Bongo+Bill · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Well, there are two ways a person can take this news.

    One, you could look at it as evidence that the United States is fascist or is heading there and that it is mostly corrput and devoid of legitimacy, and put on your proverbial tinfoil hat.

    Two, you could look at it as an inevitable mistake inherent in a government run by humans, and have faith that the system will eventually correct itself.

    Which seems better to you?

    The law in the United States is a dynamic thing. Laws can be passed that are unconstitutional - but that doesn't mean that they're on the books forever. Most unconstitutional laws are eventually declared as such and become unenforceable. If one makes headlines rather than slipping quietly to its death the way it ideally works, that doesn't make it any more permanent.

    The law relies on incidents like this in order to make sure that it's fair.

    --
    ...but is it art?
    1. Re:Possible reactions by be-fan · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Two, you could look at it as an inevitable mistake inherent in a government run by humans, and have faith that the system will eventually correct itself.

      The "tinfoil hat" people are the mechanism through which the system corrects itself. The only reason our system can correct itself is because the people are left free to fight against injustices. The federal government will never willingly right a wrong without someone bringing them to task for it. It is precisely through this mechanism that this happens.

      --
      A deep unwavering belief is a sure sign you're missing something...
  93. Re:I'm sorry by demachina · · Score: 2, Interesting

    "but many of Gilmore's own comments echo of Nazi Germany or Soviet states, and I simply don't think the comparison is apt"

    I think you would change your toon if a terrorist starts using Dave Schroeder as an alias, and the next time you try to fly your name matches the "Do Not Fly" list and a couple guys in suits come and take you away in front of everyone at the gate for interrogation, especially if you are flying with coworkers, friends or family. They are going to make you look like criminal or a terrorist.

    The only reason you are so cavalier about this insanity is you haven't suffered the worst it is routinely dishing out to innocent people. That is how totalitarian states start out. As long as they only inflict their madness on a small percentage of the people most people wont give a damn, as long as its not them.

    To continue with my scenario, after having been taken aside once then you know you are going to get taken aside everytime you fly, you may not be able to fly at all, you may miss flights and your job may be in jeopardy. At this point you will start desperately trying to find out why this is happening and to figure out how to make it stop. At this point everyone will tell you this is a secret "regulation" and the secretness will devestate you. Their is either no proceedure for getting your name off the list, or if there is its secret. If you want to fly you will either have to get your congressman to lobby the bureaucracy on your half, or get your name legally changed, or use a false ID name and take even greater risk, or stop flying.

    Orwellian indeed.

    A guy responded to one of my posts elsewhere, just check with Israel, they've been dealing with this problem successfully for decades.

    - They armor their cockpits
    - They put armed undercover air marshall's on all flights
    - They screen passengers for weapons and explosives

    They don't even attempt an Orwellian "Do Not Fly" list because they know its an exercise in futility. This monstrosity is entirely a product of bureaucratic incompetence and anyone willing to fight it deserves a medal.

    --
    @de_machina
  94. re: decompression by bani · · Score: 2, Informative

    mythbusters already busted this one. decompression simply doesn't happen. don't believe everything you see in the movies.

    re: overpowering air marshals -- israel flies multiple air marshals on each plane. undercover. its quite unlikely terrorists would be able to discover them all and overpower all of them at once (which is the point).

    re: cockpit doors. afaik they are completely bulletproof. (again, which is the point).

    re: egyptian air lines -- the plane ran out of fuel and crashed into the sea because the terrorists were stupid and stubbornly insisted on flying the plane to a destination it couldn't possibly reach.

  95. Constitutionality by PsiPsiStar · · Score: 2, Insightful

    And how can a Supreme Court rule it unconstitutional if noone brings the case to it.

    --

    ___
    It's the end of my comment as I know it and I feel fine.
    1. Re:Constitutionality by dadragon · · Score: 3, Interesting

      From time to time in Canada Parliament sends a proposed bill to the Supreme Court to rule if it's constitutional before they vote on it.

      --
      God save our Queen, and Heaven bless The Maple Leaf Forever!
    2. Re:Constitutionality by PsiPsiStar · · Score: 3, Funny

      Yeah, but you guys are, like, sane and shit.

      In the US, politics is all about seeing what you can get away with.

      --

      ___
      It's the end of my comment as I know it and I feel fine.
    3. Re:Constitutionality by ray-auch · · Score: 2, Informative

      The parliament is full of politicians, not lawyers. They may know what they want a law to do, but aren't the expert on what is or is not in conflict with other laws etc.

      Personally I think it is remarkably honest of a set of politicians to get advice from the experts before passing laws. Most places they just pass the laws and let the courts try and sort out the mess later.

    4. Re:Constitutionality by kurt555gs · · Score: 2, Funny

      I have a friend that used to be in state govenment. He was responsible for passing a law that many thought was un-constitutional.

      A reporter asked him if he thought the law was in fact within the guidelines of our state's constitution, to which he replied:

      "Pal, the only law I ever passed that I was certain was constitutional, was a pay raise for the Supreme Court.

      Cheers

      --
      * Carthago Delenda Est *
  96. rental car not the same thing by acroyear · · Score: 2, Insightful

    From the article: and arrived in rental cars that required a valid driver's license and one major credit card.

    I'd argue that the rental car contract is not the same thing as flying without an ID.

    A rental car company is libel when it gives a vehical away. It is required to be postively sure that the individual is fully capable and legally permitted to drive the car, or else it WILL be sued in the event of an accident, insurance be damned. Similarly, the credit card check is not to verify that the individual is what the ID says it is -- its to avoid having to do their own credit background check (minimum week or more delays and hefty increase in costs) in order to lend the car with the knowledge its going to someone likely to give it back.

    they hold the credit card company responsible for dealing with that credit check and that cost, to save themselves the money and keep competitive.

    both items are strictly business decisions that have no relation at all to the no flying without an ID law.

    --
    "But remember, most lynch mobs aren't this nice." (H.Simpson)
    -- Joe
  97. Where do you live? by Excen · · Score: 4, Interesting

    their plan to deforest is called The Healthy Forests Initiative

    I know I'm going to be modded off-topic, but I really don't care, considering how misinformed you are. You live in an urban area don't you? I grew up and still currently live in an area where over 90% of the land is either national or state forest. The current status of our national forests, at least in my state, are pathetic at best. The majority of national forest land is in desperate need of either controlled fires, which are wasteful, dangerous and tough to control, or selective logging. Not all logging is the "Slash-and-Burn-The-Rainforests" type stuff you urban hipsters would like average americans to believe. It has been proven time and time again that selective logging of trees that are dying or failing to thrive allows for greater overall tree health, greater lumber productivity, and allows for greater wildlife density when compared to areas in which proper forest management techniques are not allowed. Have you ever driven through the Squaw Valley area in Nevada and Utah? Those "Forests" are, for all practical purposes dead: they have no wildlife, all the trees are either dead or dying, and the forest isn't even aesthetically pleasing. To dismiss the public forest policy enacted by Bush and company merely because you disagree with other aspects of his policy is shortsighted and harmful to many different species of animals, not just the humans who derive a living and/or recreation from national forest land.

    To quote a very wise fat child, "Stupid Hippies piss me off."

    --
    "No beer until you finish your tequila!" -Leela's Dad
    1. Re:Where do you live? by mOdQuArK! · · Score: 2
      Disciplined and smart logging

      Except 1) timber companies don't want the small crap that results in the most fire danger - they want to cut the big profitable trees that usually survive the fires and which slow down the growth of all the little burnable bushes, and 2) the actual process of being burned causes interesting ecological effects which can improve the long-term health of the forests - effects which _aren't_ produced by "disciplined and smart logging".

      Its a win-win situation really.

      There is no win-win situation as far as the forest's health is concerned which would allow humans to "harvest" all we want out of it. All we can do is try to keep the damage low enough (through limits & techniques) so that the forest will heal itself fast enough to keep up.

    2. Re:Where do you live? by krunk7 · · Score: 2, Informative
      Actually, that is the party line and you did well conveying it. I worked for quite a while on initiatives to get out public information on The Healthy Forests Initiative.

      The few main issues are:

      1. It allows for large to be clear cut under the "Goods for Services" provision
      2. Allows salvage logging which is based upon a subjective assessment of the trees vitality. Often times scorched trees which are in no danger of dying are labeled for salvage.
      3. Targets many areas which are not historically pose a fire threat to people (though are highly prized among logges for their potential)
      4. Allows for the building of roads into virgin forests (how else to get the logs out?). Our virgin forests are one of the few untouched areas that serve as filters for our drinking water and air....if you've ever seen what a logging road looks like after a company is done, you'd know they'd hardly be suitable for this function after they were done
      5. Now here's the big one and the one that makes it not so far off topic after all: It exempts companys from environmental and public review and limits public commentary on the law . In effect taking the people out of the process of managing their public lands.

      So to bring it back around to the issue of secret laws and double speak, the Healthy Forest Initiative is yet another example of this administrations consistent attack on the publics ability to hold their government accountable.

  98. Re:So by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    All of the 9/11 hijackers had valid ID.

  99. Re:Unfortunately, John WAS allowed to travel w/o I by ChaosCube · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I agree, we do live in a police state...in the name of freedom, of course. And yes, each of those allegations you have listed, has documented reports or hard evidence to back it up. The question is, how do we solve the problem without ending up in a civil war? That's where I see this heading. If things do not change, some one will get fed up with it, and we will be in a state of war, internally.

    --
    BDR Gear
    Outdoor gear, MREs, and more!
  100. Not "the law" everywhere in the USA by laing · · Score: 3, Informative

    I traveled from San Jose airport (SJC) last week and was surprised that I was not required to produce ID. The gate agent even specifically said that they no longer require ID at SJC.

    1. Re:Not "the law" everywhere in the USA by sykt · · Score: 2, Informative

      They have changed their policy so that AFTER you go through the security checkpoint you don't have to show ID at the gate, you DO have to show ID to get through the checkpoint though.

  101. Re:Bullet, meet foot. Foot, this is bullet. by rco3 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Well, then, Anonymous Brave Guy, allow me to rebut a few specific points. Apologies if I have misconstrued or misquoted any.

    1) People who enforce laws shouldn't be required to have all of them memorized.

    Well, I'm going to agree that the average street cop doesn't need to know tax law. But I assert that someone who enforces one very small specific subset of laws, e.g. TSA law enforcement, should in fact have a VERY thorough understanding of what is and is not illegal within the purview of those laws. That IS their job. Otherwise, that person may enforce personal preference or prejudice rather than the laws, or allow illegal activity to continue and thus endanger the lives of passengers. I'll go further and suggest that there should be on duty at all times some TSA enforcement person who has a written copy of such laws available for public perusal and for agent reference. This is my opinion, of course, not fact. I'd like to go on record as vigorously disagreeing with both your opinion and the factual basis underlying it.

    2. Common sense suggests that a law requiring ID to board a commercial airliner exists and is reasonable.

    Common sense is neither.

    More specifically, I would assert that common sense suggests that if there is a law requiring you to show said ID, it can be found without having to break it first. That wasn't the case. The author might have tried to find such a law (the fine article doesn't say), perhaps in reaction to a previous TSA enforcer's actions*, or out of a desire not to have to tell every random stranger in a uniform that he was an epileptic, and couldn't.
    (*Having flown several times in the last year, I can relate from experience that TSA people can often be rude, unpleasant, and leave one with a sense that one's privacy and dignity has been invaded unnecessarily. )
    Common sense suggests that if one searches diligently to find a law prohibiting or requiring some pattern of behavior, and can't, then that law doesn't exist. That wasn't the case.

    3. Making the scene that he did was unnecessary.

    How else do you find out about secret laws, other than breaking them? Clearly we can't trust our lawmakers to be open about what's illegal. Applying common sense, as we've seen above, won't do either.

    As mentioned previously, he may have had perfectly legitimate reasons for not wanting to show his papers - excuse me, for not wanting to show or have a TSA-approved photo ID.

    Turning this around, common sense suggests that hiring a lawyer to file a court case to ask the government whether a specific law exists is unnecessary. However, this is what you said was "the correct answer." I'm thinking that perhaps common sense means something else when you say it. Maybe that's why we have laws instead of asking everyone to rely on their common sense...?

    4. The TSA enforcement people reacted appropriately to this incident, as they would to a threat against the President.

    I didn't really understand this - I'm hoping this was you being unclear in your phrasing, rather than as simple-minded as it appeared. Joking about assassinating the President is not a particularly parallel case. It's explicitly illegal, a Federal crime, and the law is readily available for citizens to read. Moreover, the foreigner who jokingly makes such a threat will quickly meet some nice Treasury Agents, probably members of the Secret Service, each of whom is perfectly capable of telling him exactly which laws he has broken. They will be polite, knowledgeable, and very serious.

    TSA agents pulling a man out of line without being able to cite the relevant law is not reasonable or appropriate. This is NOT a personal fiefdom for agents to throw around personal power; this is a sensitive position in which agents are tasked with enforcing laws to protect "transportation"**. The agent's responses, FTFA, suggested that he pulled Gilmour at least in part because he

    --

    Ce n'est pas un vrai mouvement de robot!
  102. Re:Unfortunately, John WAS allowed to travel w/o I by Piquan · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This suspension of the Bill of Rights at the sole discretion of the Administration is literally an unprecedented extension of authoritarian power to the President.

    It's not unprecedented.

  103. Re:Bullet, meet foot. Foot, this is bullet. by @madeus · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I'm not the parent poster, but to quote the post to which you refer:

    Really, just strolling into the airport and creating an unnecessary problem doesn't help anyone.

    I'm sure people have said the same thing about Rosa Parks when she refused to sit at the back of us bus
    "Oh look at her causing trouble! That doesn't help anyone and just made the poor bus drivers life more difficult.".

    It seems the disagreement here is that you seem to see this protest as 'unnecessary', where as others (myself included) think it is quite justfied.

    I think there are enough gross abuses of power by governments, most of which cost time and money to impliment but deliver no real benefit to citizens but do deliver rather convenient oppertinuties for air time to politians (IMO a primary reason why terror legislation is so in vouge in the USA and UK).

    I am relieved when I see someone prostest publically against this sort of thing, it's something most of us can't afford to do when we have to worry about holding down our jobs just to keep a roof over our head.

    If I were a multimilionare like John Gilmore I like to think I'd make a professional pain-the-ass of myself to draw attention to similar scandalous legislation (and the equally inept execution of it by trusted officals).

  104. Re:Unfortunately, John WAS allowed to travel w/o I by ahodgson · · Score: 4, Insightful

    A police state would allow all of the secret things you've mentioned in every case

    Hardly. Even the Nazis had public trials. The knowledge that bad things _can_ happen to you if you offend someone in power is enough to stifle freedom in most cases.

  105. Re:What a dick? by teamhasnoi · · Score: 2, Insightful
    The point of all of this is absolutely lost on you. Why is there a law that he's not allowed to see?

    Bringing this injustice to light is why he's doing this. You should be fucking thanking him for making this an issue, not considering it a 'waste of time'.

    I recommend you jerk your knee into your own forehead in the future. Perhaps, in between the stars and tweety-birds you'll see why people who challenge government abuses should be supported.

    You said one thing that was about 1/8th right. Civil liberties and security is a balancing act. Hiding the laws that affect either is extremist and unrealistic.

  106. Re:Unfortunately, John WAS allowed to travel w/o I by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Since those two accounts vary greatly, which one is correct? Which one is the truth?

    They are both correct, since they refer to two different incidents. Read the fine page you linked to, it's right there at the top:

    July 4, 2002, John Gilmore went to Oakland International Airport. He had a ticket in his own name with Southwest Airlines to Baltimore-Washington International Airport. ... John politely refused to show his ID and was not allowed to fly. John then went to San Francisco International Airport and attempted to fly to Washington, DC on United Airlines. There he was informed that if he was not willing to show ID he could fly, but only if he submitted to a far more intrusive search than what every passenger goes through at the security checkpoint.
    I said I had no problem believing there were secret TSA security directives for airport and airline operations. Do you think all of them should be public?

    Hell yes. You want me to abide by your rules, you have to disclose them.

    If not, when is it okay for something to be secret?

    Tactical military information, sure. (Only for a limited time, though...any classified information should automatically expire after a time limit.) That's about it. Secrecy is the enemy of democracy.

    then we have people flipping out that the TSA is trying to secure airports and air travel

    The TSA is not trying to secure air travel. The TSA is trying to give the appearance of trying to secure air travel, so people will continue to fly.

    You want to make air travel safer? Making passengers show papers does jack. Instead, re-enforce the flight cabin doors, then give every able-bodied person on the plane a big-ass knife. Let any potential terrorists get the Flight 93 treatment, just give the passengers the tools to do the job. (Guns are problematic in cramped quarters, though the whole explosive decompression thing is a myth.)

    Don't like knives? Fine, make it stunguns instead. Put 'em in the seatback pockets right next to the barf bags.

    --
    Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
    You cannot wash away blood with blood
  107. Jim Kramer's usually a smart guy by jd · · Score: 4, Insightful
    At least, when it comes to the markets. That's his forte. If you want to make money, he's probably the one to listen to.


    In this case, we're not talking markets, but the guy still has a point. Without some sort of structure, some rules, you do end up with chaos.


    HOWEVER, and this is a point that too many people miss, rules for the sake of rules add nothing to that structure. A decorative wall-hanging is all fine and well, but it adds nothing to the strength or durability of the wall it is hanging on.


    Thus, we can say that decorative rules serve no function other than to exist. Removing them does not create chaos, though if they add some aesthetic element to life, removing them may reduce the enjoyment of life. To date, I've never heard of a decorative rule that did add to the aesthetics, but I'm willing to concede that it is possible such rules exist.


    Finally, neither necessary nor aesthetic rules require invisibility. A wall is no less a wall if people can see it is there. But if it can be seen, you can tell whether something is functional or not. It certainly can't be aesthetic if it can't be seen.

    --
    It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
    1. Re:Jim Kramer's usually a smart guy by alphakappa · · Score: 3, Informative

      Grandparent is talking about Cosmo Kramer from Seinfeld, not Jim Kramer

      --
      "When the only tool you own is a hammer, every problem begins to resemble a nail." - Abraham Maslow (1908-1970)
  108. Re:Unfortunately, John WAS allowed to travel w/o I by demachina · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "We do have a fairly robust and open justice system, despite all its flaws, in cases not involving terrorism."

    Dude! That is one whopper of a qualification. The whole point is the government in the U.S. can now unilaterally decide what is terrorism, and who is a terrorist, with no proof whatsover, without judicial oversight, and lock the person up indefinitely without access to a lawyer, or to their family, without due process and on a number of occasions have shipped them to third party countries to be tortured by proxy.

    The whole crux of their strategy for wiping out our civil liberties and due process, is for them to say "we only do this to terrorists" to which the public is supposed to reply, "oh well if you only do it to terrorists thats OK". The only catch is the government never at any point has to offer any proof the person was actually a terrorist under their new rules, so they in fact can arrest anyone without charges, not just "terrorists".

    If you are going to have a civilized nation with due process and the rule of law you HAVE to apply the same rules, equally, to everyone. As soon as you give your government an exemption allowing them to deny due process to one person you have set a precedent allowing them to do it to anyone and everyone, and have opened the door to totalitarianism, and its entirely at the discretion of the powers if they decide to seize the opportunity and turn your country in to a police state.

    --
    @de_machina
  109. Re:Keep reading - that isn't the whole story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    Read Again dickwad

    "They reached a strange agreement for an argument about personal privacy: In lieu of showing ID, Gilmore would consent to an extra-close search, putting up with a pat-down in order to keep his personal identity to himself. He was wanded, patted down and sent along.

    As Gilmore headed up the boarding ramp a security guard yanked him from line. According to court papers, a security agent named Reggie Wauls informed Gilmore he would not be flying that day.

    "He said, 'I didn't let you fly because you said you had an ID and wouldn't show it,' " Gilmore said. "I asked, 'Does that mean if I'd left it at home I'd be on the plane?' He said, 'I didn't say that.' ""

    Read the last bit

  110. Re:Yes, you're right! by aminorex · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Like a spikey cat, the phrase "identity papers" has a charge for a damn good reason, and euphemizing it to "ID" is a distraction from reason.

    --
    -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
  111. Re:Just because it may not be a law... by Stephen+Samuel · · Score: 2, Interesting
    somebody is lying here

    The airlines claim that they're just following the law, and that they have no choice.

    The government brief claims that there is no such law, but that if there was there would be a good reason to keep it secret. .. In other words, they're arguing generally to have secret laws that they can enforce against us whenever they want -- No public debate, not even any public notice, just a

    I'm sorry sir, but I'm going to have to arrest you
    Why??
    Because you broke the law.
    What law?
    I'm sorry, I can't tell you. It's a secret law.
    Can you tell me why the law exists?
    No sir. If I told you that, I could get arrested too.
    So what can I do?
    You'll just have to trust me, sir and let me take you to jail.
    Oh, OK.....
    Thank you sir. Let me just put these handcuffs on -- regulation, you see
    Right... ouch! ... Now, when will I be able to defend myself in front of a judge?
    Well, if you insist, sir, but I don't think that anybody's been able to successfully defend themselves aganst this law.
    Why not? -- No, wait. let me guess! You can't tell me!
    Very good sir, you're learning.
    Well, I'm not learning what I want to know.
    I understand sir, but I think you should also know, that people who don't plead guilty tend to get stiffer sentences.
    Why?
    ... sigh ...
    Right. Can you tell me what kind of sentence I can expect? ... I didn't think so.
    I feel like I'm writing a Monty Python script.

    Getting back to my original note though: The airlines claim that there is a law and they're just enforcing it. The government claims that there is no law. If nothing else, this case is worthwhile to just figure out who's telling the truth, so that the next step can be taken in challenging this law or the lie of it's purported existence.

    --
    Free Software: Like love, it grows best when given away.
  112. Re:Amazing! Someone else notice Fry's Sheep! by Unnngh! · · Score: 2, Interesting
    I realize that your question is rhetorical, but I believe the rationale behind this is that some potential thief sees that they are stopping everyone at the door and becomes terrified that if he steals something, he will be caught.

    I'm sure people still shoplift all the time, but maybe the loss prevention over cost/bad-will ratio is high enough to warrant it. I would be curious to know...it is offensive enough that it really should be warranted.

  113. Roman Law by rjh · · Score: 2, Interesting

    In the days of the Eastern Roman Empire, the laws were required to be publically posted before they were deemed enforceable. This didn't bother Emperor Justinian, though, who hired scribes to write the laws in the smallest font possible--and then had those laws posted high up on the walls, such that they couldn't be read from the ground.

  114. Re:So by KeithIrwin · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Actually, it's an FAA regulation. It is, however, a secret FAA regulation. And this is the crux of the matter. There should not be secret laws in a democracy. And that is a far more important matter than whether or not you have to produce ID to board a plane (which itself is important).

    Keith

  115. Re:Um. by ShawnDoc · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Does it even matter what the law says? Can't the airline just say "No ID, no Fly. That's our policy and if you don't like it, don't fly with us."?

  116. Re:Theft by extra+the+woos · · Score: 3, Funny

    If it werent for pirates I wouldn't have this machete and this green macaw parrot resting on my shoulder keeping me awake at night saying "arrrRRRr!".. damn pirates.

    --
    replacing it with NEW Folger's Crystals! (lets see if they notice the difference)
  117. Re:So by logicnazi · · Score: 5, Insightful

    And so is your point since overstaying a visa is hardly compelling evidence for terrorist activity.

    It is silly to think these rules happen in a vacuum. The terrorists are quite well aware of them and if they had a rule which stopped people who had overstayed their visas the terrorists would have known this and only used agents who hadn't overstayed their visa.

    The point is there is yet to be a compelling argument that these ID restrictions really give us much security. The burden of proof should be on those who want to impose such measures not on us to show that such measures aren't useful.

    --

    If you liked this thought maybe you would find my blog nice too:

  118. Security Directive 96-05 by Fittysix · · Score: 3, Interesting

    1. IDENTIFY THE PASSENGER -

    A. ALL PASSENGERS WHO APPEAR TO BE 18 YEARS OF AGE WILL PRESENT A GOVERNMENT ISSUED PICTURE ID, OR TWO OTHER FORMS OF ID, AT LEAST ONE OF WHICH MUST BE ISSUED BY A GOVERNMENT AUTHORITY.

    B. THE AGENT MUST RECONCILE THE NAME ON THE ID AND THE NAME ON THE TICKET -- EXCEPT AS NOTED BELOW.

    C. IF THE PASSENGER CANNOT PRODUCE IDENTIFICATION, OR IT CANNOT BE RECONCILED TO MATCH THE TICKET, THE PASSENGER BECOMES A "SELECTEE." CLEAR ALL OF THEIR LUGGAGE AS NOTED IN SECTION 6, BELOW.

    6. CLEAR SELECTEE'S CHECKED AND CARRY-ON LUGGAGE, AND SUSPICIOUS ARTICLES DISCOVERED BY THE QUESTIONS ASKED;

    A. IF THE SELECTEE IS ON A FLIGHT WITHIN THE 48 CONTINENTAL US STATES, OR TO MEXICO, OR TO CANADA, ITEMS CAN BE CLEARED BY EITHER OF THE FOLLOWING METHODS:

    1. EMPTY THE LUGGAGE OR ITEM AND PHYSICALLY SEARCH ITS CONTENTS BY A QUALIFIED SCREENER, OR;

    2. BAG-MATCH -- ENSURE THE BAG IS NOT TRANSPORTED ON THE AIRCRAFT IF THE PASSENGER DOES NOT BOARD.

    B. IF THE SELECTEE IS ON AN INTERNATIONAL FLIGHT -- CHECKED LUGGAGE, CARRY-ON LUGGAGE, AND SUSPECT ITEMS CAN BE CLEARED ONLY BY THE FOLLOWING METHOD; EMPTY THE LUGGAGE OR ITEM AND PHYSICALLY SEARCH ITS CONTENTS BY QUALIFIED SCREENERS.

    --
    *.sig
  119. Re:Well yes, but why get it? by Kiryat+Malachi · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Buying cigarettes and whiskey both require ID.

    Walking into a live concert venue may or may not require ID, depending on if its all-ages or restricted.

    There are lots of reasons to have ID.

    --

    ---
    Mod me down, you fucking twits. Go ahead. I dare you.
    (I read with sigs off.)
  120. Who watches the watchmen? by alexo · · Score: 2, Insightful


    > If persons with authority start telling people what to do on the grounds
    > that the law says they can, and then it turns out that they don't know what
    > they are talking about, indeed for all appearances might just be making it
    > up, then there are no limits to what citizens can and will be forced to do.
    > If that's not a grave threat to civil rights, I don't know what is. It no
    > longer matters what the law does and does not allow, the law doesn't make any
    > difference any more if anyone with a badge can claim, "It's the law" and then
    > without any further explanation demand anything they want.


    The problem is that people in the position of authority have power, and power corrupts.

    If there was a law stating that every complaint of abuse of authority will be thoroughly investigated by an independent body and, if found to be justified, the culprits shall be sodomized with jackhammers, then I will have no problem with showing IDs or trusting the authorities, because I will know that people with power would not even dream of abusing it.

    However, as things stand now, policemen (and other people in a position of authority) can get away with crimes that a normal person would rot in jail for. Often they get "reprimanded" or are subject to "administrative measures" or, at worst, greatly reduced sentences because, after all, they are policemen...

    WTF?

    If you are given means to limit the rights and freedoms of other people (and often take their lives), you should be bloody made accountable! Any crime that also involved abuse of authority (whether as a parent, police officer, elected official, etc.) should be treated as crime against society and automatically warrant twice the maximum penalty set by law. Penalties for corruption should hurt so much as to make it not worth the risk.

    Secret laws, laws that criminalize a large portion of the population, selective enforcement, etc. invariably lead to corruption and must be eliminated.

  121. I call BS by jwigum · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Privacy is for people who want to mind their own business, and for other people to do the same.

    --

    Look behind you...

  122. Re:Unfortunately, John WAS allowed to travel w/o I by mabhatter654 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    They want a paper trail for YOU...not them... get it!

  123. Re:sigh... by symbolic · · Score: 2, Insightful


    This only works until everyone realizes what's really going on. I remember being hassled for an ID at Best Buy to make a $30 purchase with my debit card. I told her I didn't have my ID with me because I had left it in another jacket. The cashier then informed me that I couldn't make the purchase without it. So, I took my debit card out of her hand, said "that's fine." and left. The really, really stupid thing about this whole mess is that it's NOT hard to get a fake ID, and I'd be willing to bet that they wouldn't be able to tell the difference anyway. It's all a psychological game.

  124. No Need for a National ID law... it's here. by Stephen+Samuel · · Score: 4, Insightful
    They slipped it in by the back door. They mandated that all state drivers license data bases be linked together (essentially a distributed database). If they all contain the same basic information (and possibly optional data), and are readable by the same hardware, then we have a national network of cards that are functionaly identical -- the only real difference being the artwork on your national ID card.

    George Bush is dead! Long live George Bush!

    --
    Free Software: Like love, it grows best when given away.
  125. Re:So by Master+of+Transhuman · · Score: 3, Interesting


    Well, they didn't, did they?

    The hijackers were Saudis - we invaded Iraq and Afghanistan.

    Even though, I would note, they found a pristine hijacker passport sitting in the rubble of the World Trade Center.

    Wow! What a coincidence!

    Almost as likely as the Oklahoma City cop who believed the Federal Building bombing was a set-up - who then "committed suicide" (while being followed by FBI agents) by slashing his arms repeatedly, cutting his throat TWICE, then crawling 8,000 feet to shoot himself in the head with a gun - which could not be found by dozens of fellow officers searching for it - until five minutes after the FBI SAIC showed up - who promptly "found" it (although it has yet to be identified as to exactly what gun it is.)

    Wow! What a coincidence!

    --
    Richard Steven Hack - This sig is TOO GODDAMN SHORT TO DO ANYTHING USEFUL WITH! MORONS!
  126. Re:sigh... by badfish99 · · Score: 2, Funny

    I made a purchase at Frys once, using my credit card, and they asked me for photo ID.
    I discovered that the phrase "I'm English: we don't carry photo ID because Britain is a free country" works just fine.

  127. Re:quest for slashdotters: ask your rep for a copy by arbitraryaardvark · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I want to put out a call for action by slashdotters that might be able to help john in his case.
    A letter to your senator of congresscritter something like this:
    "Can you please send me a copy of the regulation or law which requires airlines to obtain from passengers a valid driver's license? Is there such a law?" (you don't need to copy my bad grammar, just a letter to that general effect.)
    If you get an answer, please send it to John via EFF or via his lawyers, or send it to me. Thanks.
    This would be useful to the case, but also puts pressure on the agency. If the law is so secret they won't tell a senator, that escalates the issue a bit. If they do tell the senator, and the senator send it to us, we can file that in court, and post it on slashdot.

  128. It is a fundamental principle of law.... by B747SP · · Score: 2, Interesting
    "It is a fundamental principle of law that everyone knows the law". That's what they drummed into me at law school, before they even got thinking about drumming anything else in. That principle exists to defeat the "but, I didn't know what I did was illegal" defence - things are so much simpler if everyone is deemed to know the law.

    It's one thing to 'define' that I 'know' the law, but it's a different ball game if they want to 'define' that I 'know' a law that I'm not allowed to see.

    (It's not really, they just make another law that says I know the law I can't see even though I can't see it, and it's all my fault, again.

    --
    I find your ideas intriguing and I wish to subscribe to your newsletter.
  129. Re:So by Zaphod_Beebleburp · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Actually, nowhere on the FAA website does it state that it is a regulation. On the other hand http://airconsumer.ost.dot.gov/publications/flyrig hts.htm
    * Bring a photo I.D. when you fly, and have your airline ticket issued using your name as it appears on that I.D. Many airlines are requesting such identification at check-in in order to reduce the re- selling of discount tickets. (Airlines don't permit tickets to be sold or given to other persons.) On international flights, make sure your name is the same on your ticket and your passport. If your name has recently changed and the name on your ticket and your I.D. are different, bring docu- mentation of the change (e.g., a marriage certificate or court order).
    I can understand some of the gripes that people have stated here, but most are just rediculous. Boarding an airline is a service provided to you by a company. There is no inherent "right" to be able to fly. You are allowed to board as long as you provide what the airline requests, whether it be an ID or an inflatable banana.
  130. Re:So by Nipok+Nek · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Boarding an airline is a service provided to you by a company. There is no inherent "right" to be able to fly. You are allowed to board as long as you provide what the airline requests, whether it be an ID or an inflatable banana.

    If that were actually the case, I doubt anyone would have a problem with it. But the reason the airlines have these policies is to (supposedly) comply with Federal Law. I say suposedly because we can't see the law. And the Government requiring it's citizens to show ID before traveling is what people are upset about.

    Nipok Nek

    --
    Why choose white shoes?
  131. The way laws come into effect by R1ch4rd · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Is this idea of 'secret law' possible in the US ?

    In my country we have an "Official Monitor", which is a paper issued by the government each week, I think. It includes all laws and other directives given by the guvernment or president and there is a law which states that any law comes into effect when it's published.

    So, in my country there cannot be a secret law of regulation as everything is published. Isn't there a similar system everywhere ?

    If there someone who knows how the things work in US, please explain.

  132. Re:So by Nipok+Nek · · Score: 5, Informative
    Like in the article, where does the government require you to show ID? Just because the airline wants to see ID doesn't mean the Govt. requires them to ask. The article points out a misinformed employee more than it does a law.

    Please RTFA before making stupid comments like this.

    FROM THE ARTICLE...

    The regulation under which the Transportation Safety Administration, an arm of the Department of Homeland Security, instructs the airlines to collect such identification is classified as "Sensitive Security Information."

    I don't think it can get much clearer than that.

    --
    Why choose white shoes?
  133. Easier way... by Nipok+Nek · · Score: 2, Interesting

    If he wants to see the regulations, he should buy a plane and declare himself an airline. Then the government would HAVE to let him see the regulations, or at least not expect him to follow them.

    Nipok Nek

    --
    Why choose white shoes?
  134. Re:So by mikelieman · · Score: 3, Insightful
    The gate agent should've just told him it was an airline policy (which it probably is). Nothing wrong with that.

    Though I should tell you, I really don't give a fuck if the guy trying to hijack the plane I'm flying on has an ID or not.


    Free Men do not follow POLICIES. They follow their own good judgement.
    ompany in question doesn't want a LICENSE from The State to conduct COMMERCE, then they may expect to ignore the RIGHTS OF FREE MEN.

    --
    Technology -- No Place For Wimps! Grateful Dead and Jerry Garcia Chatroom -- http://www.wemissjerry.org
  135. Re:So by mo^ · · Score: 2, Interesting

    So, they find out some guy overstays his visa.. what do they do? put him on a PLANE home.

    so thats good then

    --
    bah!*@%!
  136. Re:So by unitron · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Sounds a little like the "suicide" of Florida DOT investigator Ray C. Lemme. Would you happen to recall the name of that Oklahoma City officer?

    --

    I see even classic Slashdot is now pretty much unusable on dial up anymore.

  137. Re:So by danheskett · · Score: 3, Informative

    The hijackers were Saudis - we invaded Iraq and Afghanistan.

    That's only part of the story. If you look at Sept. 11 it was conceived in Afghanistan, it was planned in Germany, it was funded in Dubai, it was executed in America and they used Saudis.

    15 of the 19 hijackers were Saudi, and of those, 10 were persona non-grata in the Kingdom.

    Say whatever you want about whatever else, but you make it sound like the hijackers were working on orders from the Saudi kingdom. They were following orders from an expelled citizen. They were largely already known to be criminals in the kingdom, and had all expatriated.

  138. Re:So by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful


    Boarding an airline is a service provided to you by a company. There is no inherent "right" to be able to fly.


    Then maybe we should also be talking about how the airlines have no right to taxpayer subsidies. The airline industry willingly solicits and accepts "bail out" money and has a major portion of their security provided by the feds. You want to play free market purist, fine. Let's do it. Stop stealing my hard-earned money and handing it to the airlines. Then we can talk about whether they've got a "right" to deny me service. OK?

  139. Get it? Probably not by guet · · Score: 3, Insightful

    That's all. My point was simply that it should be up to the USER what personal information someone has...it should be a matter of choice. What happens instead is that corporations and the government just demand things and we give it up without asking why and how. Personal control.

    I'm afraid you gave up personal control when you consented (or not, see Thoreau : ) to live under a government. The argument of course is how much control you have, and yes to an extent it would be nice to control how much information the corporations/govt hold on you. However I think presenting ID at an airport is really the least of your worries if your government decides they want to track you. There are many easier ways.

    A citizen should be allowed to do anything legal without being tracked, at THEIR option, not a corporation's or government's option.

    While this sounds nice, in practice it's impossible. You can't drive without a licence and a licence plate (for tracking purposes). You can't be paid (legally) without a SS number for tracking reasons. Etc etc etc. Would you like to make those controls optional? The government is there to control you and protect others from you (and vice versa), and while I agree with you that an ID at an airport will do nothing for security, this issue is *insignificant* when compared to other erosions of freedom going on in the name of 'the war on terror'. It just happens to inconvenience Gilmore more than the others right now.

    Personal control of your information does nothing for you if the government decides to lock you up without trial, indefinitely. They can do that right now in your country (and in the UK to a lesser extent), does that worry you?

    There are far more important freedoms being eroded right now in the US than the obligation to present an ID when travelling internally. The climate of eternal war encouraged by this administration is far more worrying to me.

  140. Monarchy by hummassa · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The problem with monarchies and removing them is: they theoretically own the assets that form the basis for the State to work (their salaries/alimonies/allowances are, therefore, kind of a "rent" payment that the people pays to use that which belong to the Crown).
    When you rattle this cage too hard, you rattle the foundations to the real estate market, too: the right to own a State is very close to the (also hereditary) right to own a house. It's not simple to do without a very radical institutional breakage. :-)
    And, to make it worse, there are cases where the Crown helps the democratic process (Spain is a good example), and estabilizes the government.

    --
    It's better to be the foot on the boot than the face on the pavement. ~~ tkx Kadin2048
  141. Re:So by glesga_kiss · · Score: 5, Interesting
    The problem is that there is NO evidence that it was who the Bush administration says it is. All they have is:

    • The pristine condition passport "found" at ground zero
    • The phone calls made from the jets, which were a) not technically possible to make and b) the eye "witnesses" said they had red banadanas, when Al Qaidas colour is green. That just would not happen, it would be like the US going to war under a red hammer and sickle.
    • Flight manuals and a copy of the Koran found at the airport. Excuse me, but if you've been training for an operation for several years, you don't carry papers with you on the drive to the airport that would incriminate you if given a random stop/search by the local authorities.
    • A dozen other reasons that I can't be bothered to go into, such as the lack of video evidence of anything, despite the airports and the Pentagon being some of the most monitored places on the plannet.

    The whole thing reeks. And the response of those in charge on the day is inconstistent with every standard operating proceedure in place.

    Sounds way too much like Operation Northwinds to me, where the US intended justify an unprovoked war against Cuba, in order to "protect itself from terrorism".


    It is possible to create an incident which will demonstrate convincingly that a Cuban aircraft has attacked and shot down a chartered civil airliner enroute from the United States to Jamaica, Guatemala, Panama or Venezuela. The destination would be chosen only to cause the flight plan route to cross Cuba. The passengers could be a group of college students off on a holiday or any grouping of persons with a common interest to support chartering a non-scheduled flight. - US Joint Chiefs of Staff, 1962

  142. Re:This is what is with the US by glesga_kiss · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Two ways to end the war: (1) Kill all terrorists. (2) Convert to Islam. Unfortunately, diplomacy is not a part of either

    Of course, they see it as:

    Two ways to end the war: (1) Kill all imperialist agressors. (2) Convert to Christianity. Unfortunately, diplomacy is not a part of either

    But you are in the right of course. After all, you are American, and any bad things in your history don't get taught, and so by extending that it is IMPOSSIBLE for the USA to do any wrong. Yes Sirrie! Don't forget, we are talking about a document that states "all men are created equal", written by a bunch of guys who had SLAVES. So, in America, all white men are created equal. Then along came the religious fundamentalists, and now it's all Christian White Men are created equal.

    Tho I do agree with you on the armed milita bit in some cases. 9-11 would not have happened if everyone on the plane had an airline-issue baseball bat.

  143. Support Small, Local Companies by carcajou · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Legal but not acceptable...I have quit shopping at several companies that insist on checking every receipt. I have never stolen from them, and for the company to assume that I have, until they prove that I have not, is just not acceptable.

    What I have done to offset this is to deal with small local companies. Sometimes I pay a little more, but there is the satisfaction of supporting the small business, getting to know the owners, keeping a larger part of my hard earned money in the community, and of knowing that I am not supporting companies that continually abuse both thier employees and their customers!

  144. Re:So by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    Ah yes, damning evidence about the cell phone calls. It's astonishingly sloppy research, fella. Many planes have their own cell repeaters in the damn plane. And boy do they cost you to use.

    Al Queda does not have a green fucking banner or any other "banner" color. That's Hamas. But hey, all them ragheads are the same, right?

    Hey, keep working on that moon landing thing.

  145. just a policy based on a memo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    I logged out to post this, because I am an Anonymous Coward.

    The Federal Aviation Administration does have a policy against traveling without ID. But it is not a secret law. It is not even a federal law. It is just a policy based on a memo by someone at the FAA. The 3 branches of government do not feel the need to correct the FAA, because so few people complain. CFRs are trumped-up administrative rules. Only USCs are laws, and there are no USCs requiring passengers to have photo IDs for domestic flights.

    I know a little about governments and IDs.

    The FAA policy reminds me of Florida Fish And Wildlife posting (everywhere) that it is illegal to carry a concealed gun in state parks. But the state attorney states that Fish And Wildlife has no statutory authority over guns and anyone with a conceal carry permit may carry in state parks.

    I've had a similar problem with Walmart sporting goods managers telling me that it is against county law to sell ammo after 9 PM. It is not. It is just their store policy, but they want to use the excuse that it is a law.

    The problem is not with the Federal government. The problem is with the general public. We need to have more people like John Gilmore. At a basic level, we're imposing this dictatorship on ourselves.

    Perhaps we should start a petition to have the movie 1984 played on a TV network. Might wake up the sleeping public. Another step would be to have the Constitution and, at least, the first 10 Amendments printed on the back of our paper currency, not mystic, cryptic Masonic symbols.

    But the US is hardly becoming a dictatorship. I consider this graphic as evidence of the health of our freedoms.
    Got to love a government that trusts you to take a gun into a bank.
    http://www.packing.org/state/index.jsp/all+united+ states

    The reason that I voted for Bush/Republicans in 2004 is because Bush agrees the Second Amendment protects our individual right to own and carry guns.
    http://www.nraila.org/images/Ashcroft.pdf
    http://www.usdoj.gov/olc/secondamendment2.htm

    I fail to see how an administration that supports the right to own weapons that can overthrow a government is the bogeyman of tyranny. For those that don't think that civilians with their "puny" guns could take down a hypothetical American dictatorship, consider that there are more than 240 million guns owned by 85 million civilians in the US.

    The 2nd Amendment is the most liberal and radical law in history. http://www1.law.ucla.edu/~volokh/radical.htm

    To really understand the tone of the 1st and 2nd, one should read the preamble to the 10 amendments. (Usually not taught in government schools, so most have never heard of it) "The conventions of a number of the States, having at the time of their adopting the Constitution, expressed a desire, in order to prevent misconstruction or abuse of its powers, that further declaratory and restrictive clauses should be added: And as extending the ground of public confidence in the Government, will best ensure the beneficent ends of its institution."

    The first phrase of the 2nd is a declarative. It was the style of writing legal documents in the late 1700's to include a preamble. The preamble states a purpose, not a limitation on the language in these government charters. The phrase "well regulated" means well-trained and well-equipped, in proper working order. Ex: "a well regulated clock." "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."

    Interestingly, the Militia Act of 1792 was law until 1903 (updated by 10 USC). The Militia Act of 1792 stated "That each and every free able-bodied white ma

  146. Writing Checks at Fry's by The+Angry+Mick · · Score: 2, Insightful

    This reminds me. Ever try to write a check at Fry's?

    We just had a new store open here in the metreo Atlanta area a few months back. During one particular visit, I had enough items to justify writing a check so I wouldn't completely obliterate the contents of my wallet. When I presented the check, the Fry's clerk said that it would take about 10 minutes to get through all their "check approval" policies, which I was told was a one time deal. I'm thinking they're going to call the bank, verify my ID, credit history and that I had enough cash to cover the purchase.

    What they did, however, was take my driver's license back to a photocopier, and Xerox it and the copy of the check. Right off the bat, I'm upset, because with copies of just these two items alone, you could start a very healthy career as an identity thief (Georgia is still one of the states that uses your SSN as your driver's license number unless you specifically ask them not to). When I mention this to the clerk and a bystanding supervisor, they said it's standard practice at Fry's to keep this info on file (I'm imagining a large, unlocked filing cabinet in a minimum wage employee's office), and without it, I wouldn't be able to write checks at Fry's - ever. I took back my check, my ID, demanded the photocopies and left the store.

    My questions are, does Fry's do this at every store? And is this something I can expect to see from other merchants in the future?

    --

    I'm not tense. I'm just terribly, terribly, alert.

  147. Re:So by feloneous+cat · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Didn't Bush just get through telling the Vladimir that we live in a "transparent" country?

    --
    IANAL, but I've seen actors play them on TV
  148. Not sure if others have commented on this, but... by Morobishi · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If a law cannot be examined, interpreted, or challenged then it is not a law. That only applies to laws that affect you personally (or have the ability to).

    Also, how can people be expected to obey a law that they cannot examine? The old adage, "ignorance of the law is not a defense" comes to mind. In this case, I would have to assume that it is.

    Most folks I spoke with thought the issue was not wanting to show identification, but that is not the case. I think it's about being subject to a "secret law" and seeing Red Amerika looming in the distance.

  149. Re:So by tompaulco · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Federal Aviation Regulations 125.383
    (a) Each certificate holder is responsible for the preparation and accuracy of a load manifest in duplicate containing information concerning the loading of the airplane. The manifest must be prepared before each takeoff and must include--
    ...
    (8) Names of passengers.
    If I was responsible for the accuracy of the names of the people on board, I bet I would check ID too.
    I'm sure that a secret law is much more interesting, but it is much more likely that the gate attendant doesn't know the regulations, because mostly, they don't need to.

    --
    If you are not allowed to question your government then the government has answered your question.
  150. Try with three under three by thundergeek · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I have been contemplating posting this, but after reading some of your posts, I feel compelled.

    I traveled at Christmas from North Pole Alaska, all the way to Detroit with my wife, and three kids under three. We purchased three tickets, as two of our kids are under two, and can sit on our laps. Our daughter had her own seat.

    It started off ok, but that was just getting in the door of the airport. We arrived 3 hours early because I knew we would take a long long long long time to get through the x-ray vision machines. (Airplane movie comes to mind)

    We literally took 25 minutes to get the kids shoes off, take the kid leashes off, remove my 5 mo old's shoes, with integrated nuclear detonators, unstrap him from his mothers chest via a kid cradle, then finally convince my 1.5 year old to walk through the white uprights while nearly 50 people wait for us. (Fairbanks is a small airport, only 6 TSA agents at the screening, one with crossed eyes!)

    I used 12 of those bins at every screening process. We attempted to keep it at a minimum.

    What's my complaint you ask? Seeing how I haven't mentioned the whole ID part? Well, I don't mind showing my ID, it's the whole misleading rules/regulations that have somehow become LAW.

    You know the sign at some airports that say "Private screening rooms available upon request?" I inquired about this for the benifit of the fliers behind us who have to stand there patiently, in fear of loosing their first born, and right testicle/breast. The TSA freak said that we can only request it AFTER we go through the initial screening, and ONLY if the metal detector goes off. What a crock! If I've spent 10 minutes stripping my kids and make it through the detector, what the halibut am I going to ask for a "private" screening room for, just to do it all again?

    I told him he needs to take the sign down, cause it's like false advertising.

    I actually told my wife the next time we fly, we'll charter a plane. They don't require massive screenings, and your bags go from trunk to plane, in less than 20 feet! I've also done some research, and the price is comparative to first class tickets. Of course, that's if you buy 6 or more.

    "You are free to move about the country, if you have ..., if you comply with...., oh, by the way..."

    Later

  151. The requirement for ID is not in law by RgnadKzin · · Score: 2, Informative

    Administrative Acts of Congress require implementing regulations in order to have "general effect" or to allow them to "affect substantive rights;" see the Adminstrative Procedure Act and the Federal Register Act.

    The Federal Register Act requires that regulations must be published in their entirety in the Federal Register so that the people can be given notice of the manner in which the laws are to be administered to them. This Act also requires that the complete text of a regulation be published so that there are no "secret" regulations. The airlines will not show to you Federal Aviation Administration Security Directive 108-01-10 (issued Sept. 28, 2001), which they will say authorizes them to limit your substantive right to liberty and to be free of unreasonable search and seizure. This constitutes a secret regulation, which is not allowed by the laws of the United States or by the Constitution.

    If ignorance of the law is no excuse, then how can I be expected to comply with law that is not publicized?

    There is no mandate from CONgress that government issued identification is to be required in order to fly domestically. The regulations were transferred from 14 CFR part 107/108 to 49 CFR parts 1540 &seq on 22 Feb 2002 - 67 FR 8377.

    If you look thru Title 49 United States Code in Chapters 401 thru 501, the only hit on "identification" will be identification numbers of aircraft. If you look thru Title 49 of the Code of Federal Regulations, parts 1540 &seq, you will find no mention of the word "identification" except with relationship to aircraft -- not passengers.

    The requirement for identification is in the contract of carriage with the airline. You buy the ticket, you are bound by the contract. The contract states that they can refuse boarding to those who refuse to show "positive identification." That is why Gilmore's suit will ultimately fail.

    I do not have any state issued identification. I cannot get any without a social security number and I do not have one. only aliens applying for permanent residency are required to make application; see 42 USC 405(c)(2)(B)(i)(I). For all others (citizens) it is contigent upon receiving direct benefits payable in federal funds; see sub paragraph (II). I am in neither catagory.

    I use my Sam's club card. Have never been refused boarding.

    The "secret" security directive says that the AIRLINES, not the Air Gestapo, are to check ID. If the person does not have ID (is unable, rather than unwilling to show ID), then they are to do "positive bag matching," which means my bags do not get on the plane until I do. This suits me fine, as my bags are invariably the first ones off the plane and on the carousel.

    If you do not know what the law says, then you cannot enforce it. If they do not tell you what the law says, then you are not obliged to obey it.

    --
    Liberty is not a concept... Liberty is a way of life!!!
  152. The problem of secrecy by follower_of_christ · · Score: 2, Insightful
    "We now live in a police state, with secret searches, secret evidence, secret arrests, secret detentions without charges, secret touture, secret laws and even secret legal arguments." My position stands unopposed by you with a single fact.

    Nice trick, you want someone else to prove that something doesn't exist. It is near impossible. The burden of proving something does exist lies on you. The only suspect party that the article even mentions is SouthWest Airlines who isn't producing the copy of the law. Is it their responsibility to provide copies or obey the law? If lawsuits weren't such a problem, Hotels, Car Rental agencies and the rest wouldn't be forced to require identification. The problem lies in the moral decline of the people, not the policies of government. The article isn't clear whether Mr. Gilmore has sought an attorney to provide him with the law itself. I don't get the impression that Mr. Gilmore is working hard at it. If I were the airline I'd probably blow this political activist off as well. Its not their responsibility to provide him the law; rather, they are responsible for obeying it.

    The last statement you make, We do live in 1984.
    Here's your chance, present your evidence. You make a bunch of claims here with nothing to back them up. Your only proof that a secret law exists is that an airline can't produce a copy of the law, which only proves that the airline can't produce a copy of the law. It is not evidence that indicates any wrongdoing or secrecy from the government. The article makes no mention that any attempt has been made to any other agency to produce the law. It's as if Mr. Gilmore is arguing that someone is negligent when the only indication of negligence I see is his own. How irresponsible of him.

    The facts also include the fact that the President of the United States believes that the constitution is null and void for anyone he personally deems to be an "Enemy Combatant," US Citizen or no.
    Again, which facts? And for goodness sake, are you saying you want our constitution to protect a non-citizen? If so, who supports a police state here? What a ridiculous claim to make that the President doesn't support the constitution....

    You are arguing with a world of people and asking for their trust, yet you don't present any evidence that supports your point. I ask that you be intellectually honest with the Slashdot readership.

  153. Re:Why, indeed! Didn't work for me-They called 911 by Harodotus · · Score: 2, Informative

    Eight years or so ago, I thought the same thing, and walked past the "check receipt" clerk saying "no thank you I'm in a hurry" (I was).

    Well he grabbed my shirt and wrestled with me until I stopped just outside the door. The Manager inside yelled "Call 911!" and 6 clerks surrounded me shoulder-to-shoulder preventing my further departure (in a well rehearsed move).

    They demanded to inspect my receipt and to search me. I politely said no and it was clear their intent was to argue with me until the police arrived. I asked if I was under Citizen's arrest and they said "No, but I still cant leave the store". I pointed out that I was 5 feet outside the door and they had no good answer. They said there was an anti-shoplifting law that granted them this right to search me. I knew that pushing them aside would constitute assault on my part.

    Not wanting to deal with the police (I don't have the independent wealth or free time necessary to afford a legal defense in this situation) I eventually allowed them to see the receipt and look in my Fry's bag (they had so SURE I was shoplifting). They were incredibly shocked to find out I was not in fact shoplifting, and let me depart.

    I checked with the police the next day and they told me that Fry's can and does do this commonly and that its supported by law somehow and if I wanted to know more, I could contact a lawyer.

    I was forced to sue or let the matter drop. I wish had the funds/time to sue them, for I think, given my understanding of the law, I would have won on several grounds, including false imprisonment and assault.

    Alas with my later day job as a Whitehat security consultant, had I let myself be arrested (even if not charged or later acquitted) I would have not been hired and would have failed several different background checks. So, for me, I guess I made the right choice given the realities of the screwed up world.

    To this day, I wish I could have afforded being a privacy rights crusader, but alas twas not to be.

    As an aside, at the time I worked as national IT manager of a major Silicon valley based corporation and I justified and pushed through a "No Fry's" policy that cost them probably a couple of hundred thousand in lost sales.

    --
    Its not users who are broken, it's systems not taking account their likely behaviour and fixing it technically.
  154. Re:So by smyle · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Serious question here:

    My understanding was that the calls were made from the $5/minute (or whatever they are now) phones built into the plane, rather than private cell phones. Where's the claim they were made from private cell phones?

    --

    Sleep is just a poor substitute for caffeine, anyway. -Bob Lehmann