US Lawmakers Eyeing National ID Card
According to Wired (and no big surprise, considering the practicalities of implementing massive changes in medical finance), US lawmakers "are proposing a national identification card, a 'fraud-proof' Social Security card required for lawful employment in the United States. The proposal comes as the Department of Homeland Security is moving toward nationalizing driver licenses."
I'm not sure why Slashdot is so afraid of this. You don't have a right to be anonymous to your employer. You don't have a right to avoid taxes. You just got the right to healthcare, but do you really want that going to illegal immigrants? We already drive around with standardized (yet customizable non-materially) license plates on our cars. You already need proof of government permission and proof somebody's going to pay if you hit something to drive a car. You aren't supposed to be able to get on a plane anonymously...
Let's not think of the things we'd be able to get away with with a fake id... and start thinking how we can make sure somebody else can't fake their ID for our mutual protection.
The awesome part about this is that it ought to cause the Tea Party types to blow a gasket. On one hand, you have the federal government making ID's that will make it tougher for undocumented aliens to get work, so finally all of those high-flight jobs mowing lawns and manning the grill at fast food restaurants will be safe for Real Americans(tm). On the other hand, you have the federal government making ID's that will allow them to do... Well, whatever wacky-ass conspiricy stuff the federal government supposedly does with ID's -- I'll have to wait for Glenn Beck to tell me exactly why it'll be such a problem, but I'm sure it will be. In reality, however, the big losers in any sort of forgery-proof national ID situation are going to tomorrow's 19 year-olds who won't be able to get into the bar with their "Hawaii driver's license" anymore. So really, this program only hurts the children.
Every year during my review, I just pray the words "slashdot.org" aren't mentioned.
To replace the fucked up SSN system with something that really works. Now if only they can get it right this time and make this a secure, government only thing.
Nullius in verba
You just got the right to healthcare, but do you really want that going to illegal immigrants?
Yes.
Deleted
Nice national ID cards for our safety and you know just to be on the safe side we need a DNA database too, to prevent people from misusing this program...and hey we need to start monitoring your internet usage to prevent people from pretending to be you and setting up appoitments or chaning your information.
Yeah its nothing to be worried about, Im sure it will be all OK.
I know the idea of a national ID is scary in some ways, but the idea of federal standards for driving certification kind of appeals to me. I mean, they couldn't be more lax than they are here in CA (pass the written, pass the behind-the-wheel, see you in 50 years). From a driving safety standpoint, I wouldn't mind jumping through extra hoops to make sure the other people on the road are better trained.
Hey all you slashdotters who though that nationalizing healthcare was a good idea: Any buyer's remorse yet? Remember, we're still on day one of Obamacare. What new surprises can we expect from our newly-empowered paternal government in the weeks, months, and years to come?
US lawmakers 'are proposing a national identification card, a 'fraud-proof' Social Security card required for lawful employment in the United States.
The teabaggers would go ballistic, these are people ready to shoot at the census takers. You can't pander to the fringe and then throw them under the bus when they become inconvenient.
You can't have government health care (like Congress gets) but you have to get a national ID. I don't see those as intellectually compatible positions.
That's our life, the big wheel of shit. - The Fat Man, Blue Tango Salvage
If you introduce an ID card (basically formalising/simplifying your social security number system) and nationalise the driver's licenses the right wingers will freak and they will dedicate all their efforts in stopping it. This will allow the health care reforms to settle in and become accepted.
It's good we're finally going to get a proper social security card that is only used for the purpose of social security, and not as a general identification number that's treated as secret yet widely shared. No more will a social security card be used for other purposes.
What's the matter, didn't get enough page views on the healthcare non-article?
In a nutshell, Government makes mistakes.
Currently, some dipshit in a municipality somewhere make a data entry error in a database, you're affected in that municipality only, or maybe at the State level. Whether it's a local tax or a felony your damage is restricted to that area. With a Federal ID, anything and everything becomes nationally known -at least among law enforcement.
There will be a Central warehouse for Government data mistakes. And we know there will be scope creep! It is inevitable! Good god, someone takes a suitcase full of cash on a plane and the TSA thought it was their business until there was a lawsuit. Basically, I see a Government version of the credit bureaus.
Credit bureaus are notoriously inaccurate and there can be multiple entries with different names with the same Social Security Number - one reason is that the SSA recycles numbers and I've seen people who have used other people's SSN but their own names to open another line of credit. How does this apply to Government? Well, now, just ask everyone who has been wrongfully put on the "no Fly" list and you tell me how this can be a good idea. Yeah, right: Uncle Sam fucks up and it'll be a nightmare for anyone whose name and identity has been tarnished. Like the Government is going to clear our names fast - there's no skin off of their overpaid fat asses. They keep their job no matter happens to you. Sue? HA!
Someone wrongfully accused or flagged will have their names smeared across the internet for as long as that data exists.
Why, it's the Government after all! If they're found innocent then the "beat the rap" but are still guilty!
That's what people think after all.
No thank you. This is a bad idea and I see many many innocent people caught up in Government incompetence. It's better now because the current Government incompetence is limited by departments, databases, and geographical area.
Come on! This is Slashdot! We've ALL seen when shit data gets into a database and how hard it is to clean it up - especially if it's been propagated!
We know better.
This proposal is just a bunch of hot air at this point. There is no bill introduced in either house of Congress that contains the provisions discussed in this article. This is just Lindsay Graham trying to ingratiate himself to the Democrats again. For those who think this would be used to keep illegal immigrants from receiving the benefits of this new health insurance bill, keep in mind, it is the Democrats who have been the most successful at getting their votes.
The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
There's no such thing as fraud proof. Humans are involved in the process and humans are corruptible.
In fact, fraud proof makes it difficult to prove someone stole your identity if they some how manage to fraudulently apply for ID in your name.
The point is EXACTLY that we do not want a massive interconnected database system that can bring in one place all the information everyone ever had on a particular person, because such a system is very easy to abuse.
- PAPERS, PLEASE
- rogue police dude annoyed for you photographing him while beating up some guy
- your ex's new police boyfriend looking to pin something on you
- govt tracking which bars you frequent and what shopping habits you have (ID is already required, next step is to install govt-approved readers "for verification")
- employers accessing above info to deny employment
- landlords using it to evict unwanted people
- make too much noise politically ? we'll find some dirt on you
- political persona non grata ? fbi will alter something in the database that you can't see but will make your life miserable
- oh, and YOU WILL NEVER HAVE ACCESS TO ANY OF THIS DATA ON YOU
Of course, I'm just paranoid and this will never happen in America, and all this is just to prevent illegal alients from taking our jobs. Just like the anal probing and virtual strip searching in airports is to prevent terrorists from taking our freedoms. I really wish the government would step in and take ownership of our "property" as well to prevent thieves from stealing from us. Then they can take care of us, from each according to their means, to each according to their needs...
And why is a national ID card so very different and frightening when you already have a "national" passport in the US?
Didn't we already try this with RealID? Something that was uniformly rejected by almost every state in the Union? What's going to make it different now?
And no, I just ate dinner so I do not want to read the article. I am afraid it will just make me sick.
"There is a way that seems right to a man, but its end is the way of death." Proverbs 16:25 (NKJV)
But wrong.
FTA: The proposal by Sen. Charles Schumer (D-New York) and Sen. Lindsay Graham (R-South Carolina)...
That's our life, the big wheel of shit. - The Fat Man, Blue Tango Salvage
I myself prefer a wet T-shirt Party.
We have needed to update the whole Drivers License / Social Security Card / Passport / (other Government issued ID) thing for a while now, its a mess.
A single ID with standardized format and requirements would be useful. One ID to rule them all.
Sure you'll still have 10 other cards in your wallet, but simplify the damn government required/issued ones to a single ID type.
So DHS is going to make us get national driver's licenses. Congress is going to make us get national ID cards. Next FDA is going to make us all have some card in order to eat and every government agency from coast to coast is going to require some new card.
So let's see who can be first to market with a portable ID-card-dex. "Let's see here's my FDA approval card that says I can eat... wait it's expired! Ahhh!"
or else!
Over the years there have been number of larger polls concerning a national ID system. Each and every time the results have been very conclusive and clear cut: The vast majority of Americans is strongly opposing the establishment of a national ID system. The reasons range from privacy to practical, philosophical, and religious concerns. Instead of weakening our constitutional rights and taking away our privacy little by little, our representatives need to respect democratic opinion and decisions and the will of its own people and stop trying to push a national ID system on us. This has happened in the UK where people are finally waking up and protesting on the streets now, only that it's too late for them. We are not in the UK, China, or North Korea here. The US is a democratic country and our government and representatives need to respect that. Period.
Didn't we already try it this past decade because of 9/11? The States said NO.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/REAL_ID_Act#State_adoption_and_non-compliance
I'll be glad when Obama is finally inaugurated!
"The average reporter we talk to is 27 years old......They literally know nothing." - Ben Rhodes
The article says nothing about this proposal being in consideration of the nation's new health care plan. What's the logic that it would be? It makes sense in connection with immigration control and jobs. But the liberals don't care much if illegal immigrants get health care - which most of them could get under their home countries' national plans anyhow (Mexico has one), so it's not what they come here for. And the tea partiers don't think the trade off between a strong national id and freedom is worth it, even to help keep the immigrants out.
News flash. Unemployment is high. A kennel in Snohomish just posted a Craigslist ad for a minimum-wage part-time dogshit-shoveler, and got > 250 resumes in response. People really, really would like every one of those jobs back from the paperless immigrants. And that's why this national id thing - which even a liberal-leaner like me is against - is likely to fly in this climate. Health care plans are hardly a factor here.
"with their freedom lost all virtue lose" - Milton
This essentially is just furthering the "presumption of illegality" -- the presumption that a person is not allowed to work in the United States.
This is a fairly intrusive, insulting to the legal worker, and unnecessarily burdensome on business set of requirements that have all come into place because Congress writes immigration laws that are broken-by-design, and fails to enforce them effectively.
If we'd fix the fundamental structure of our immigration system to deal with the underlying problems, there wouldn't be the problems that we keep getting these kinds of band-aid "fixes" (like I-9 requirements) for, which never work.
This is not freedom. Contact your senator and let them know how you feel. This is the first step to wholesale governmental intrusion in your life. Government will keep discovering new uses for the card--and any one particular use only needs a majority to pass. You may groove on the immigration use now, but what if you're in the minority opposing the next use some whacked-out legislator proposes???
That's the funniest thing I've read today.
You know what is really, really shameful?
That not only are our elected representatives too ignorant, for the most part, to understand why this is a stupid idea; they are so arrogant that they won't even seek out opinions from the people who work in the industry, and know that there is not, and never will be, any such thing as a "unhackable" ID.
It's been said before, in many forms, by many people, and I've said it on this site more than once in the past, but I'll say it again (refined it since the last time)
No matter how smart you are, no matter how well you implement a piece of technology, you will always be defeated, if not by another human out of the seven billion available, then by teams of people working together." - old form was "No matter how smart you are, there is always somebody smarter."
I can't and won't claim credit for it, but it should be a basic natural law of sentience, dammit.
SB
It's old. The more humans I meet, the more I like my cats. At least they are honest.
http://yro.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=10/03/09/1310210
It's the same reason militia groups train in the woods. They like to pretend that they could defend themselves against the United States Armed Forces. It's simply a distraction against the things that really protect freedom, like voting, community organizations, or being an active citizen in the Athenian sense.
The standing army is used for foreign coup d'etats instead of civil wars on home soil. They learned a long time ago that giving you the "choice" of entertainment, fast food joints, cars, and clothes is far more effective distraction from participatory democracy than direct government violence.
In the fantasized bleak future, the government wins because they have a national ID card. In reality, you are already owned by your debt. You either plead fealty to the system in exchange for access to material goods, and live and die by your credit report, or you suffer the consequences.
Unfortunately, being the U.S. Government, they will no doubt pull the same sort of stupidity
Nothing is fraud-proof. Nothing is bullet-proof either. However you can make something bullet-resistant. How resistant is commensurate with the amount of effort you put into it.
People love saying government is stupid and can never do anything right, but that's not true with everything. Currency is one example: there is enough political will and a real-world need to prevent counterfeiting (fraud). Government puts a good deal of effort into preventing counterfeiting, and the penalty is quite harsh and is well-enforced. While not 100% fraud-proof, they have done a pretty good job. I have not had a problem with being given counterfeit money recently, and I don't know of anyone who has.
really, you should travel more. here in europe our gobernments have had track of our IDs for decades and we have social security, that will cover me for instance, if i travel to the US (it will pay the costs of any injury i might have and your hospitals will treat it as if it were an insurance company). so what? is anyone coming home to kill me because he knows a number related to my name?
i can tell you the problem: fear.
afraid of someone who's got your ID number? so what? I show my ID every night I go out, I show it every time I pay plastic, and so on, and... nothing goes wrong. same with my social security card, and even if i dont have it, if i have a health problem i know i can go to the hospital and they will take care of me. when im capable of, they will ask for an ID, ssec card or something, but i will be alive. and don't start moaning about inmigrants, 'cause Spain is being called the "door of Europe" in the northern Africa countries, and we still have no problems dealing with illegals coming in all the time..
and if you are about to say i misspelled something, yeah probably I did, English is not my mother language.
cheers all, and do be so afraid of helping your neighbours fgs
Therefore I refuse to hear it.
(switches to MSNBC). Ahh yes. They are telling me that this National ID card is simply like a drivers' license, therefore it's a-okay. Nothing dangerous about a drivers license. (sigh). I love the calming lies of MSNBC flickering on my screen. It's just like when mom told me locking the windows would keep me safe from bad people, and they couldn't possibly get it.
Haaa-uummmmmm.
Arthur: I think that TV just sighed.
Marvin: Ghastly, isn't it? All the channels have been programmed to have a cheery and sunny disposition, even when reporting bad news.
FOX NEWS.com should be BANNED from television and internet. Have the Congress take it over and give us Truespeak.
Wasn't one of the many reasons many of us have voted for Barack Obama that we was opposed to a national ID system? What's going on here?! This is shocking: http://www.unrealid.com/wp/
The Mayor of new York city wants to ban salt from restaurant kitchens on the grounds that his residents' health will improve. As if he has the right to tell them wnat to eat.
Soft drink makers are removing 'sugary' drinks from school vending machines, mostly to head off demands that they provide something 'healthy'.
Insurance companies already charge you more for health insurance if you smoke tobacco. When will they start charging more for obesity, especially if they ask you to lose weight, and you just refuse the request. No defense that you're 'glandular' or that it 'runs in your family'.
Is it too much of a stretch to see our shiny new healthcare system bent under the weight of the inevitable costs, and start looking for ways to avoid and reduce these burdens? When does the government tell you that your rattly old knee will have to do because it is worn due to your excess weight? Or your predeliction for playing softball three nights a week? Or that nasty spill you took at Aspen last winter? Your own damned fault, you know. Shoulda known better.
Likewise, isn't it sensible to not sink a lot of money into someone who is overweight, diabetic, with high cholsterol, if they have had their third heart attack and need quadruple bypass. When does a cost-benefit analysis become acceptable?
And how would the government gather enough information to 'assess' your health risk and cost? Well, they have to start by being able to identify you. Not too hard now, with the SSN. Much easier if just walking into a government healthcare clinic pings your RFID card and you are known. KNOWN.
How long before they just want to 'understand' the data, and ask McDonalds to let them put readers in their stores? Of course they link the data from speed cameras to your license, and then to your ID. After all, chronic speeding has to be a risk factor for more than your wallet.
As a landlord, I get a lot of potential tenants that can't rent from a complex due to a criminal record. DUI is very common, but protective orders due to a divorce are also common. I feel for these people - it doesn't take much to get a record that haunts you everywhere. Just an angry spouse and a sympathetic DA who wants to put an end to domestic violence. You don't even have to be violent.
And how do I avoid renting to illegal immigrants? Well, if they are employed, I verify that their employer did the eVerify thing. If they aren't employed, well, that's tuff. Sorry, I can't yet afford to rent for free.
deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
As the technology to collect and manage information becomes ever more inexpensive, it becomes more and more of an effort to AVOID having data available to the government in such a way that it can be abused. When things get to the point where the drivers-license level data for every person in the USA can be causally tossed onto a thumb drive and taken to the next meeting, it becomes VERY hard to NOT use that data.
Well intentioned uses of such data abound, and some will be not only well intentioned but actually helpful (it is quite probable, for example, that correct use of a national DNA database WOULD allow many crimes to be solved that are not currently solved, just as fingerprint databases have been so useful.) Abuse of this data (particularly if the correctness of the data is trusted too much) by those in power is the counterpoint, and that is equally real (and equally scary). The problem is, the easier it gets to collect data the harder it is to be SURE it's thrown away if its intended to be thrown away. From some of the stores Slashdot has run about Britain, once they get ahold of your DNA they hang onto it, period. From their point of view, it might be useful in the future and its harmless sitting there in a database if its never used. If the agents of the system and those making the laws could be fully trusted, this might even be true. The problem is neither requirement holds. Law enforcement isn't perfect, and laws aren't either.
The balance of society is between empowering enforcers of the law to catch criminals and limiting the damage they can do when those enforcers go astray. My guess is given technological trends, the balance in the information game is going to have to shift from restriction of available information to stronger punishment for misuse and weaker assumptions about the automatic correctness of any personal info database. It's going to become too easy to collect too much information, and once collected it's very hard to uncollect it. Eventually, things will reach the point where a desire to NOT have your information on record will be an automatic flag, kinda like how the fuzzy areas on Google Maps are an automatic flag of "hey, there might be something interesting there." No idea were all this will lead, but I have a feeling technology will compel us to find out.
One though that might be worth thinking about - if there has to be a national database of all this stuff, have it widely distributed and copied at many locations, so that it's extremely difficult to push a universal change through any mechanism except one that makes records of the change (sort of a subversion database for law enforcement records - no anonymous changes and every change logged, as well as all historical database states being preserved. If records are ever changed erroneously, make it extremely difficult to do this without it being clear WHO did it)
"I object to doing things that computers can do." -- Olin Shivers, lispers.org
Nearly every country has a national ID. Now, America is larger than nearly all others, but there are good reasons to have a LIMITED use ID. In particular, for gov. benefits as well as jobs.
I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
Ok, how many of you read this far without picking up the sarcasm?
No surprise they're considering this given the current social and political climate, maybe. And perhaps the healthcare bill looks like an expedient motivator for it. I can't see the argument that the heathcare bill is responsible for ID cards, though. The UK has had a functional National Health Service for ages (the bill originally came into force in 1948) and hasn't needed ID cards to facilitate it. I understand that the new US healthcare proposals are substantially different but even so, surely private medical insurance has successfully been managed without ID cards for years - you still need to know who you're treating, why can't similar techniques work? I'm skeptical of the link here ...
That was passed as part of the patriot act?
If somebody comes in with insurance and ID, you treat them. If they do not have insurance or ID, then you call in ICE while you treat them. And depending on what country you are in, that is the standard, OR, they will simply refuse to treat you.
I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
There's plenty government etc conspiracy theories but the #1 concern is just how high value a target a centralised personal information resource is. It also means the inevitable situation where the ID card is always assumed to be correct and all other indicators to the contrary must be false. If you rely 100% on one thing that is not 100% secure then not only are you completely insecure, but you don't have any way of knowing that fact.
I can see it now, "oh you aren't going to vote for us in the up coming election? Oh look here, your N-ID card has expired, sorry no work for you!"
So how long do we have until the Loudmouthed Fundie Retard crap about teh Debbil assigning everyone a number comes along?
There are already mobs, with half a set of teeth split among them, who "don't take kahndly tuh havin a neegurr n duh whaht hayouse" and think Obama's "dee Antuhchrahst".
But then these are the oh-so-oppressed "master race" types who would be kept alive by the health care thing. Hoo boy for the inner conflict. Though they'd probably just claim they're putting one over on the "ZOG" or whatever by living to fight another day--against jew bankers or whatever the flavor of the week is.
"Whaht Paar", indeed... *facepalm*
In a world of the blind, the one-eyed man is king--and the two-eyed man is a heretic.
It's called a slippery slope for a reason. It could happen and perhaps it is not all that unlikely.
I got mine using a photo ID (state drivers license), birth certificate, Social Security Card, and alternate photo.
It's called a Passport.
Have you ever had your ID stolen?
Mine was. Then they put a vacation hold on my mail at the post office, with the intent of collecting credit card and other information later.
It turns out that there is no revocation mechanism for the ID cards we have today. The DMV desk might as well have a sign printed on it that says "This Side Toward Enemy", as you're not going to get a different ID number out of them so they can tell the difference between you and someone who has stolen your ID and used it in the commission of a crime. That might be as simple as check fraud at a supermarket; there's no way your local supermarket is going to have a biometric identification system to verify that the card belongs to you. But the fraud will be tagged to you with the same presumption of guilt that red light cameras have today.
Luckily I got the person caught and got my ID back before it was successfully used to take out a line of credit at a bank. And if you think a bank will have a biometric scanner, either, you are mistaken, since they don't even have a way to verify that a drivers license isn't fake, and all they would technically need for that is a mag stripe scanner (which they have), and an internet connection (which they have).
There's absolutely no benefit to this thing to you, and there won't be until and unless there's a revocation mechanism, and a local verification mechanism, which includes validation and revocation.
And that means the central database they keep claiming we're not going to have.
-- Terry
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Castle_Doctrine_in_the_United_States
Unfortunately, not the same everywhere. Be sure you know the details of your locale before shooting intruders.
...is more government power. Once the national ID is in place it will be expanded. First ID, then driver's license, then credit card, then key card, and so on, and it will not be long before the United States government has a record of everything you buy, every place you enter or leave, every place you can enter, and, eventually, everything you do or say. This is not a slippery slope argument because we are already far down that slippery slope sliding on our asses at bewildering speed to the rocks at the bottom. Picture yourself living in a world where everything you do or say or possibly, not too long hence, even think, is being continuously monitored by the almighty government. This isn't just a conspiracy theory any more. It's a policy. A $500 ticket every time your car drifts a couple of miles an hour over the speed limit, spot checks scanning your (effectively naked) body for weapons or contraband, not just at airports but lots of other places that "need security", the government monitoring your fat intake, your cholesterol level, how well your kidneys function, how much nicotine is in your blood. Don't think so? Socialized medicine is all the excuse needed to directly regulate everything you eat, everything you drink, every product you ingest, rub on, carry.
We live in a country with literally millions of pages of laws, rules, regulations, and requirements that apply to every citizen. Now picture what it will be like when the government is finally able to completely enforce every single tiny, seemingly inconsequential rule, law, regulation, or requirement that's on the books. Tell me how anyone will be able to get through a day without being cited for multiple violations of laws that you can't even know exist because no one can read that much material.
I'm sorry. That's not a free country. That's not America. That's not what our forefathers wanted to leave for their posterity. And it's no place I want to live. So where will we be able to go, those of us who still want freedom or privacy or the right to make decisions for ourselves? Why do any of you even want to live in such a country? Make no mistake. That is where Obama is going to end us up. If he's elected to a second term, you will see all of the above put into place.
And Congress did not "give us" the right to medical care. Rights are intrinsic to each and every person, they cannot be granted and when they are taken away there is tyranny. Rights are negative things, we need them so we can stop other people from doing things to us that we don't like. When you turn a right around and make it a positive thing, like the "right of medical care" then you also put into place a requirement of service from someone else to implement that right. You're "right" then enslaves that person. That's not freedom. And that's a fact.
...after all, as a federal employee, won't Obama finally have to produce an authentic, long-form birth certificate, signed by the physician who delivered him and bearing an authentic raised seal?
Exactly... it's not gonna happen
is how freedom dies, btw.
I want to delete my account but Slashdot doesn't allow it.
So it's ok in that case? What about those of us who were naysayers the first time?
Not all conservatives are Republicans. Not by a long shot.
How exactly do we do that?
We could load up the card with biometric data - retina scans, finger print scans, encoded DNA sample. But how many places that need to see your ID will check these things? Most of the time a teller will glance at you or not even look. So I wouldn't count on a lot of biometric data being effective. Are you really going to get a retina scan every time you buy a taquito at 7-11 on credit?
How do we store the data? Cards of any kind - smart chip, magnetic strip, RFID have been cloned for years and years. Are we going to encrypt the data? Are we going to pick a good encryption algorithm, or use something stupid like what Hollywood picked for DVDs? If it gets hacked or is implemented poorly, will the government react or ignore the problem like the European smart card industry did?
Fraud-proof is very strong language because our system is inherently insecure, and loading the card with excess information about the older will only reveal more personal information once that card is skimmed/copied/duplicated by someone else. I'm all for preventing ID theft, but this is a very complex problem to tackle. Starting it off with "fraud proof" is setting up for failure.
we are no longer free people anyway
why stop at id cards?
how soon before the tatoos and the RFID implants?
Big mama government needs to keep track of all her babies ... cradle to grave
---- "Logoff! That cookie shit makes me nervous!" - A. Soprano
or communism the Soviet way. Take your pick. The society decides to take away your property, freedom, or life, and since these rights come from it anyway, there is no reason why it should not be allowed to do so.
If I find a person in my home without my permission (i.e. an intruder), I'm going to warn him to leave voluntarily. If he refuses then he will eat a bullet.
Someone immigrating to find work (legally or not) isn't remotely the same thing as someone breaking into your personal house. Nice sound bite but it has nothing to do with the actual problems.
I see no reason to treat intruders from Mexico or Canada or any part of the World differently - Leave voluntarily or face the consequences.
And that is basically what happens. Problem is that there are too many immigrants coming. The police forces are overwhelmed. Want to send them all home tomorrow? Go ahead. Good luck finding them all. And when you do enjoy your higher prices for food, construction, manufactured goods and pretty much anything else you want to buy. You take 10 million people out of the economy suddenly that is going to hurt you too.
This being MY country and MY birthright, fuck them.
Your birthright? Your ancestors were immigrants too. There were people here for 10,000 years before your ancestors came here and claimed land that wasn't theirs originally. You don't have any more intrinsic right to be here than anyone else.
Why? Do you not believe we should have borders? Do you not think that American Citizens should be the benficiaries of our laws, taxes, infrastructure? If you say no to either of these questions, then you must mean that we should be able to enforce our laws, whether they be environmental, working condition, criminal, civil, or whatever related in all other countries. Also, we should collect taxes from all other countries citizens. No?
Over-the-top Response Guy! Giving "Over-the-Top Responses" since 1970.
It would've been better for them if they could have done so. They failed to do so, so they lost. If we fail to do so, we lose.
Over-the-top Response Guy! Giving "Over-the-Top Responses" since 1970.
Rights are an aspect of reality and apply to individuals.
If you lived as an isolated individual, you would have to build shelter, make tools, hunt and gather for food. No other person would be there to stop you. You would be free to preserve your life and well-being; you would be free to take the actions you saw fit to take; you would be free to keep the shelter, tools, and food that you produced. The only thing you would have to worry about would be animals, and the vagaries of nature.
When people choose to live together, they can recognize what it means to live as a human being, and apply that to a social setting. The rights to life, liberty, and property are the recognition of the life of a human individual in society with other human individuals.
People could live in close proximity, and wantonly steal or kill one another, but that's not society. That's living like animals.
Society cannot invent rights, only recognize them; government cannot grant rights, only protect them. Rights exist apart from society and government, and their existence is definite and specific.
If the social mores of a group of people reflect something other than life, liberty, and property -- so much the worse for them. What they're perpetuating has nothing to do with rights. Moreover, what they're perpetuating is something less than a human society.
quiquid id est, timeo puellas et oscula dantes.
We live in the present. The sons/daughters are not responsible for the sins of the great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great grandfathers/mothers.
Great. Then by your logic we can stop complaining about illegal immigrants because they have effectively invaded and assimilated. It's a done deal. You aren't going to kick 10 million out that are already here and working.
Some might say that ending human suffering (or abating it as much as possible) is more important than making lots of money... regardless of where theyre from.
This sentiment is known as "basic human compassion" and it -used- to be highly valued.
I work for a foreign corporation. They don't care whether or not I have a SSN (I'm an LLC as far as the US gov't is concerned). If I didn't have the magic ID card, they wouldn't give a damn. I do the work, they pay me. Staying out of US tax court is my problem, not theirs.
I'm starting to see more people in my profession (engineering) working for overseas bosses because of the onerous tax and other regulations placed on contractors in this country. I'm sure more will follow.
Have gnu, will travel.
...but Congress and the President currently are using it for toilet paper.
-Styopa
I can't believe those intrusive, brain-dead republicans, led by Karl Rove and his minions want to roll out a national ID card, just another intrusion into our privacy, things will be so different when Obama gets in office, that's for sure!
Wait, what?
Oh crap... Never mind.
Ken
Well, as long as they don't go slipping in a RFID tag in the card....
we need a DNA database too
Already happening to those dastardly criminals in our luxurious jails.
hey we need to start monitoring your internet usage
Already happening. NSA/AT&T whistleblower ring a bell? It turns out they are just one telco of many that got the same request. The others were compliant too.
There are thousands of bits of data about you being collected for sale by law-abiding private companies. There's no law that says the government can't use the services of the data provider.
Seriously, they GOT your number. The horse left the barn on this one at least a decade ago.
The only thing this card will do is make an identifications system contractor a bit richer and my wallet slightly fatter.
http://www.maxineudall.com/2010/02/should-economists-be-sued-for-malpractice.html
I stopped reading at 'fraud proof'. If it's gonna happen, it'll happen. But 'fraud proof' is a joke.
-SonicDawg
Comment removed based on user account deletion
Most federal programs run SO smooth its no wonder that they would like to take some of the burden off the states as to give us all the sense of safety a national ID would give you and to have it all at the federal level? Bonus!
Nice to see we have many on here ready to curl up in a ball and take whatever beatings the federal government hands out like they were back in high school taking beatings from a bully. Acceptance of your new evil overloads indeed.
Not knowing the average age of posters I'm willing to bet it's somewhere around 30. Well I'm almost 60 and I can tell you that health care used to be cheap. A doctor's visit was $8 and insurance cost me around $30/month but most people didn't need it because we were more fit back then.
So what happened? In one word I'll tell you. Government!
First the government mandated that employers provide insurance to their employees. The insurance companies loved this since it brought them more customers. The side effect however was that having insurance meant that instead of simply putting a band-aid on it people went to the doctor or the emergency room and the insurance company got billed. Higher demand and assurance of payment meant that doctors and hospitals could raise fees. Higher costs forced up insurance rates. Unfortunately the higher costs put more burden on people with fixed incomes and the poor. And lets not forget the unions hand in all of this.
So government created Medicare and Medicaid.
This was fucking great for the doctors, hospitals and even the insurance companies. Doctors and hospitals could charge more for their services and the insurance companies could raise their rates. More money running through the insurance companies means more cash flow, always a good thing.
Meanwhile people began to believe that medical care was a right and not something you had to pay for. The disconnecting of the cost-benefit ratio was removed from the consumer and thrust into the hands of Insurance companies and faceless bureaucrats.
Things went along like that with ever increasing costs and more demands for government to do something. So in order to get elected the knotheads in congress made more poorly thought-out laws. They kept getting elected by knothead voters. And so it goes.
So now, not only is medical care extremely expensive but the government will now force everyone to buy insurance even if they are young and strong and don't need it.
And the costs WILL go up.
Cost cutting won't work and will result in less quality and less availability. Even more of the costs will be taken up by paper(computer)work. I do consulting for a large medical clinic and about 1/3 or more of the staff have nothing to do with providing health care. Their jobs are exclusively doing the work necessary to bill the insurance companies or the government for payment. The billing costs so much that people with no insurance at all get a greatly reduced rate for care.
So everybody, despite all of the assurances from the news parrots and government lackeys, costs WILL go up and taxes WILL go up to pay for it. Either taxes will go up or the debt will go up. My guess is both will go up. Increases in taxes and debt are unsustainable and eventually lenders will stop lending and taxpayers won't be able to pay.
I hear the economy in Argentina is improving.
except it turns out your wife/roommate asked them to come into your home to do some work that no one who lived there was willing to do.
your problem isn't with the "intruder", it's with the person who asked the "intruder" into your home without telling you first.
most of the people who come to this country aren't coming here because they love sleeping 12-to-a-bed, getting exploited by their employers, and living under constant threat of deportation.
they come here because American companies come to their towns and offer them jobs and wages that they cannot get in their own country.
if you had any decency or understanding you'd be threatening to shoot the american owners and operators of the businesses that are taking advantage of these desperate people.
It breaks my pluginses, my precious!
...is a Passport Card -- basically a secure national ID issued by the Department of State ($45 new, $35 renew for non-passport holders, $20 for passport holders, lasts 10 years). Over a million Americans, including myself, carry one -- that's more than the population of the Omaha metro area. It's for car, train, bus, and boat travel within North America, but can also be used as a single identification for getting a job (along with, if I recall, the standard ICAO-compliant passport and the green card), and is recognized by the TSA (for domestic air travel), liquor store, and just about anyone else who needs ID. The RFID chip just has a database pointer, which differs from the card number if memory serves, but it comes with a tin foil hat just in case.
What this idea amounts to is transferring or cloning the passport card program into Social Security or Homeland Security.
It was all because of Bush you morons? Seriously? Its all good now just because hes gone? Where are the protests, where are the ACLU lawyers?
America is dead. Both sides killed it by being hypocritical fucking morons.
What's happened with it? Almost all of the states have fought against it, and it's been stuck in a implementation black hole.
He's a guy who works for The Daily Show.
"Believe me!" -- Donald Trump
Here's a short list of authentication problems which we rely on government-issued ID to solve:
Immigration
Tax recordkeeping
Driver's licensing
Alcohol/tobacco age verification
Workplace security
Credit cards
Banking security
Airline security
Criminal recordkeeping
Terror watchlists
Government benefits (unemployment assistance, medicare, medicaid, food stamps, etc)
If the concern is that a national ID will allow the government to monitor me, it's far, far too late for that. Government already has access to all this information. Before 9/11, all it took to get full access was a judge's okay: now even that roadblock is gone.
The "jackbooted thugs" already have full access, and gain nothing from a national ID: the only people it helps are citizens, businesses, and non-jackbooted government agencies.
I am currently carrying at least a dozen different objects whose sole purpose is to tell someone who I am, ranging from my driver's license to my supermarket customer loyalty card. The businesses and government agencies I deal with spend billions, probably trillions, each year dealing with authentication and identity problems.
The government has a unique ability to be a final trusted arbiter for authentication. A National ID card doesn't have to be a terrifying dossier containing everything everyone knows about you -- name, fingerprints, political party, criminal record, shopping habits -- all it has to do is verify your identity to anyone who asks.
"Is the person standing in front of me actually John Smith?" Yes or no.
Any info *about* me, ranging from my date of birth to how many cans of Diet Coke I buy a week, should be kept on a company or government agency's own servers. The national ID would provide identity verification of everyone to anyone, and nothing else.
As for how to implement it, let's put it this way. Every day, I and hundreds of thousands of other people use a more secure authentication system to get access to the World of Warcraft than is used to buy a handgun or drive a two-ton vehicle at lethal speeds on the highway. Two-factor authentication isn't perfect, but it's a damn sight better than our current system of forgeable cards and
Social Security is nothing more than a contract between you and the government to pay your taxes.
The day Microsoft creates a product that doesn't suck, it will be known as the Microsoft Vaccuum Cleaner!
So since murder is verboten by government fiat, not killing you is not a compassionate act? How about rape? It's at least *passsionate*, so can I bang your daughter?
only outlaws are anonymous.
It looks like very few, if any, people here have picked up on the trollish sleight-of-hand by the summary submitter. The referenced article does not tie the national ID card to the Health Care Reform bill in any way, and indeed, the ID card proposal is unrelated to it. This is clearly a bit of red-meat baiting.
The ID card proposal is co-sponsored by a Republican (notable in their complete absence of support for HCR) and a Democrat and addresses an issue that is dear to the entire right wing, Tea Party "enthusiasts" as well: suppressing illegal immigration.
Starships were meant to fly, Hands up and touch the sky - Nicky Minaj
17 and that no one may buy or sell except one who has the mark or[a] the name of the beast, or the number of his name.
18 Here is wisdom. Let him who has understanding calculate the number of the beast, for it is the number of a man: His number is 666.
Blah, blah, blah, nanny state, blah, blah, CCTV cameras , blah, blah, 'cos I can shoot anyone who disagrees with me, blah, blah, never happen in the USA... Oh!
"Either you will have taxpayer funded police officers providing protection, or you will have no protection at all."
What if I protect it myself? What if I have a neighborhood watch? What if I hire a private security company?
Travel papers? The US is beginning to look(and sound) more and more like the old U.S.S.R.
It's pretty hard to print holograms with photoshop.
There seem to be quite a few comments here that say basically "What's wrong with being positively ID'd?) That's not actually the real problem. The problem is reducing a person to a number. Regardless of what is "promised", as soon a a person can be identified with a number, everything about that person will be accumulated under that number, including how many calories you eat in a day, how many miles you drive and what kind of vehicle is used, what you write, how many times you breath, whether or not you have an STD, and how many times you bought cold medicine that just happens to contains psuedophedrine, etc. Is this really the business of Big Brother? And when you want to speak against the excesses of Big Brother, do you even begin to understand how difficult that will be without some modicum of anonymity?!?! You are dangerously naive if you think this is a good idea. I am a human, I am NOT a number, derived or randomly assigned. As I have said previously, this is quickly becoming an Imperial State where our inalienable rights are being alienated at a frightening pace.
Be More, Be Manly, The Manly Geek Ubergeek Extraordinaire Blogger: www.manlygeek.com/blog Podcaster: podcast.man
The problem is the thief doesn't believe in YOUR right to life. Once someone makes up their mind about breaking and entering an occupied house, you can be sure that he is ready to deal with the occupants also.
I've been held up with a gun on the street. That guy valued my pocket cash less than my life. Because I gave it to him together with my watch, he was ready to do it again (which he did, many other different spots for many days, according to what the police officer told me later). You tell me if people who put such a low price on someone else's life deserve to have a higher price on theirs. As an aside, concealed carry is not legal here so only criminals can surprise you with a gun that way.
I don't know what the definiton of poverty is here, far less in your country but in my opinion it should be under about £10k/$20k. Then there is the not well off which I arbiarily define as less than £25k/$50k for a childless couple and any household that gets more than twice that may not be members of nice country clubs but they are far from poor!
PS - my wife and I both work and so we fall into this last category.
I may not like paying tax, but it is better I do and some who cannot afford decent shoes - far less that nice new 3DTV or foreign holiday, should pay less.
I'll see your Constitution and raise you a Queen.
I used to be naive enough to think I should care about other people. Now I realize that is fruitless. While you're busy caring about other people, those same other people will stick a shiv in your back. Choose a side. Fight for it. That's the way it is.
Over-the-top Response Guy! Giving "Over-the-Top Responses" since 1970.
No, Marginal Tax Rates CANNOT and DO NOT exceed anything more than like 38%. You are a dishonest liar!
Over-the-top Response Guy! Giving "Over-the-Top Responses" since 1970.
Look up the name of the country in its national language, you gabacho pendejo. And it's 'you're talking' not 'your talking', you huey baboso who can't even use correctly the illegal immigrant language you implanted with violence into our peaceful Alta California.