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Originally posted by Seraphim_Serpente
Have you seen the New Fed Reserve 20, 50 & 100 Designs - Multi-Color & so on!!!
There is only so far that you can go with Chips & Encryption Techniques & Unique Identifying Numbers - They are already getting into Electronic Finger Print & Retinal Scanning!!!
It is the next level of Biometric Technology that really SCARES me however -Blood Samples. Talk about the ULTIMATE Unique Identifier -> Your DNA!!!
[edit on 6-10-2004 by Seraphim_Serpente]
Originally posted by drfunk
a lot of people are probably worried where this could go and what it is reminiscent of. This national ID card you might end up having to show at state borders and when you go on holidays in the continental US or even have you checked up at the supermarket. This is reminiscent of a communist/fascist state and that makes this scary.
IMO it is a basic right to be able to go anywhere in your country and at least have some right to privacy and not have the govt checking up on who you are all the time.
thanks,
drfunk
Originally posted by taibunsuu
Originally posted by Rain King
Explain to me how a national ID card is leading to any of this. What is everyone so scared of? It is for our protection, keeping people without IDs from entering the US.
Who protects you, the government, or yourself?
Originally posted by Rain King
It sounds like the next time you renew your license, you will be applying for this ID card simultaniously.
Save your steam for the REAL intrusions on our freedom.
This is whats is scary, because if you don't renew, you don't drive, so the government is one-up on you. I don't think this particular ID issue is worth discussion., because the real issue is the ease with which the government can impose its regulations on us. Therein lies the REAL threat to our freedom.
Texas Straight Talk
Congress has embraced the 9/11 Commission report uncritically since its release in July. Now Congress is rushing to write each 9/11 Commission recommendation into law before the November election. In the same way Congress rushed to pass the PATRIOT Act after the September 11 attacks to be seen "doing something," it looks like Congress is about to make the same mistake again of rushing to pass liberty-destroying legislation without stopping to consider the consequences. Because it is so controversial, we may see legislation mandating a national identification card with biometric identifiers hidden in bills implementing 9/11 Commission recommendations. We have seen this technique used in the past on controversial measures.
A national identification card, in whatever form it may take, will allow the federal government to inappropriately monitor the movements and transactions of every American. History shows that governments inevitably use the power to monitor the actions of people in harmful ways. Claims that the government will protect the privacy of Americans when implementing a national identification card ring hollow. We would do well to remember what happened with the Social Security number. It was introduced with solemn restrictions on how it could be used, but it has become a de facto national identifier.
Those who are willing to allow the government to establish a Soviet-style internal passport system because they think it will make us safer are terribly mistaken. Subjecting every citizen to surveillance and "screening points" will actually make us less safe, not in the least because it will divert resources away from tracking and apprehending terrorists and deploy them against innocent Americans!
The federal government has no constitutional authority to require law-abiding Americans to present any form of identification before they engage in private transactions. Instead of forcing all Americans to prove to law enforcement that they are not terrorists, we should be focusing our resources on measures that really will make us safer. For starters, we should take a look at our dangerously porous and unguarded borders. We have seen already this summer how easy it is for individuals possibly seeking to do us harm to sneak across the border into our country. In July, Pakistani citizen Farida Goolam Mahomed Ahmed, who is on the federal watch list, reportedly crossed illegally into Texas from Mexico. She was later arrested when she tried to board a plane in New York, but she should have never been able to cross our border in the first place!
We must take effective measures to protect ourselves from a terrorist attack. That does not mean rushing to embrace legislation that in the long run will do little to stop terrorism, but will do a great deal to undermine the very way of life we should be protecting. Just as we must not allow terrorists to threaten our lives, we must not allow government to threaten our liberties. We should reject the notion of a national identification card.
Originally posted by Bangin
Well, we all heard Cheney say last night that the threat of a terrorist with a nuke in the middle of a U.S. city is very real.
Originally posted by Rain King
Originally posted by taibunsuu
Originally posted by Rain King
(It is an excellent trait, suspicion. It is how we, the American people, protect our freedom, from conspiring groups who want to take it away. If we don't guard our freedom, we don't deserve it.)
What good is guarding a freedom that you nolonger have? I think that we all need to ask ourselves - I mean really think about what freedom is/means to us. One person's views may differ from another's.
Originally posted by PistolPete
I suggest we follow BeingWatchedByThem's advice and tell your Rep what you feel. You can get a hold of your Representative here: www.house.gov. Your Rep's phone number should be in the Blue Pages of your phone book.
Originally posted by BeingWatchedByThem
just don't force the states to modify their ID's to "federal standards".
Amendment X
The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the states, are reserved to the states respectively, or to the people.
SEC. __07. DRIVER'S LICENSES AND PERSONAL IDENTIFICATION CARDS.
(a) DEFINITIONS.--In this section:
(1) DRIVER'S LICENSE.--The term `driver's license' means a motor vehicle operator's license as defined in section 30301(5) of title 49, United States Code.
(2) PERSONAL IDENTIFICATION CARD.--The term `personal identification card' means an identification document (as defined in section 1028(d)(3) of title 18, United States Code) issued by a State.
(b) STANDARDS FOR ACCEPTANCE BY FEDERAL AGENCIES.--
(1) IN GENERAL.--
(A) LIMITATION ON ACCEPTANCE.--No Federal agency may accept, for any official purpose, a driver's license or personal identification card newly issued by a State more than 2 years after the promulgation of the minimum standards under paragraph (2) unless the driver's license or personal identification card conforms to such minimum standards.
(B) DATE FOR CONFORMANCE.--The Secretary of Transportation, in consultation with the Secretary of Homeland Security, shall establish a date after which no driver's license or personal identification card shall be accepted by a Federal agency for any official purpose unless such driver's license or personal identification card conforms to the minimum standards established under paragraph (2). The date shall be as early as the Secretary determines it is practicable for the States to comply with such date with reasonable efforts.
(C) STATE CERTIFICATION.--
(i) IN GENERAL.--Each State shall certify to the Secretary of Transportation that the State is in compliance with the requirements of this section.
(ii) FREQUENCY.--Certifications under clause (i) shall be made at such intervals and in such a manner as the Secretary of Transportation, with the concurrence of the Secretary of Homeland Security, may prescribe by regulation.
(iii) AUDITS.--The Secretary of Transportation may conduct periodic audits of each State's compliance with the requirements of this section.
(2) MINIMUM STANDARDS.--Not later than 18 months after the date of enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Transportation, in consultation with the Secretary of Homeland Security, shall by regulation, establish minimum standards for driver's licenses or personal identification cards issued by a State for use by Federal agencies for identification purposes that shall include--
(A) standards for documentation required as proof of identity of an applicant for a driver's license or personal identification card;
(B) standards for the verifiability of documents used to obtain a driver's license or personal identification card;
(C) standards for the processing of applications for driver's licenses and personal identification cards to prevent fraud;
(D) security standards to ensure that driver's licenses and personal identification cards are--
(i) resistant to tampering, alteration, or counterfeiting; and
(ii) capable of accommodating and ensuring the security of a digital photograph or other unique identifier; and
(E) a requirement that a State confiscate a driver's license or personal identification card if any component or security feature of the license or identification card is compromised.
SEC. __03. LIMITATION ON AUTHORITY TO DELAY NOTICE OF SEARCH WARRANTS.
(a) IN GENERAL.--Section 3103a of title 18, United States Code, is amended--
(1) in subsection (b)--
(A) in paragraph (1), by striking ``may have an adverse result (as defined in section 2705)'' and inserting ``will--
``(A) endanger the life or physical safety of an individual;
``(B) result in flight from prosecution; or
``(C) result in the destruction of, or tampering with, the evidence sought under the warrant''; and
(B) in paragraph (3), by striking ``within a reasonable period'' and all that follows and inserting ``not later than 7 days after the execution of the warrant, which period may be extended by the court for an additional period of not more than 7 days each time the court finds reasonable cause to believe, pursuant to a request by the Attorney General, the Deputy Attorney General, or an Associate Attorney General, that notice of the execution of the warrant will--
``(A) endanger the life or physical safety of an individual;
``(B) result in flight from prosecution; or
``(C) result in the destruction of, or tampering with, the evidence sought under the warrant.''; and
(2) by adding at the end the following:
``(c) REPORTS.--
``(1) IN GENERAL.--Every 6 months, the Attorney General shall submit a report to Congress summarizing, with respect to warrants under subsection (b), the requests made by the Department of Justice for delays of notice and extensions of delays of notice during the previous 6-month period.
``(2) CONTENTS.--Each report submitted under paragraph (1) shall include, for the preceding 6-month period--
``(A) the number of requests for delays of notice with respect to warrants under subsection (b), categorized as granted, denied, or pending; and
``(B) for each request for delayed notice that was granted, the number of requests for extensions of the delay of notice, categorized as granted, denied, or pending.
``(3) PUBLIC AVAILABILITY.--The Attorney General shall make the report submitted under paragraph (1) available to the public.''.
(b) SUNSET PROVISION.--
(1) IN GENERAL.--Subsections (b) and (c) of section 3103a of title 18, United States Code, shall cease to have effect on December 31, 2005.
(2) EXCEPTION.--With respect to any particular foreign intelligence investigation that began before the date on which the provisions referred to in paragraph (1) cease to have effect, or with respect to any particular offense or potential offense that began or occurred before the date on which the provisions referred to in paragraph (1) cease to have effect, such provisions shall continue in effect.
SEC. __01. AMENDMENTS TO THE SOCIAL SECURITY ACT RELATING TO IDENTIFICATION OF INDIVIDUALS.
(a) ANTIFRAUD MEASURES FOR SOCIAL SECURITY CARDS.--Section 205(c)(2)(G) of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 405(c)(2)(G)) is amended--
(1) by inserting ``(i)'' after ``(G)'';
(2) by striking ``banknote paper'' and inserting ``durable plastic or similar material''; and
(3) by adding at the end the following new clauses:
``(ii) Each Social security card issued under this subparagraph shall include an encrypted electronic identification strip which shall be unique to the individual to whom the card is issued and such biometric information as is determined by the Commissioner and the Secretary of Homeland Security to be necessary for identifying the person to whom to the card is issued. The Commissioner shall develop such electronic identification strip in consultation with the Secretary of Homeland Security, so as to enable employers to use such strip in accordance with section __03(b) of the National Intelligence Reform Act of 2004 to obtain access to the Employment Eligibility Database established by such Secretary pursuant to section __02 of such Act with respect to the individual to whom the card is issued.
``(iii) The Commissioner shall provide for the issuance (or reissuance) to each individual who--
``(I) has been assigned a Social Security account number under subparagraph (B),
``(II) has attained the minimum age applicable, in the jurisdiction in which such individual engages in employment, for legally engaging in such employment, and
``(III) files application for such card under this clause in such form and manner as shall be prescribed by the Commissioner,
a social security card which meets the preceding requirements of this subparagraph.
``(iv) The Commissioner shall maintain an ongoing effort to develop measures in relation to the social security card and the issuance thereof to preclude fraudulent use thereof.''.
(b) SHARING OF INFORMATION WITH THE SECRETARY OF HOMELAND SECURITY.--Section 205(c)(2) of such Act is amended by adding at the end the following new subparagraph:
``(I) Upon the issuance of a Social Security account number under subparagraph (B) to any individual or the issuance of a social security card under subparagraph (G) to any individual, the Commissioner of Social Security shall transmit to the Secretary of Homeland Security such information received by the Commissioner in the individual's application for such number or such card as such Secretary determines necessary and appropriate for administration of the National Intelligence Reform Act of 2004.''.
(c) PROGRAM TO ENSURE VERACITY OF APPLICATION INFORMATION.--The Commissioner of Social Security, in consultation with the Secretary of Homeland Security, shall develop a program to ensure the accuracy and veracity of the information and evidence supplied to the Commissioner under section 205(c)(2)(B)(ii) of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 405(c)(2)(B)(ii)) in connection with an application for a social security number.
(d) EFFECTIVE DATES.--The amendment made by subsection (a) shall apply with respect to social security cards issued after 2 years after the date of the enactment of this Act. The amendment made by subsection (b) shall apply with respect to the issuance of Social Security account numbers and social security cards after 2 years after the date of the enactment of this Act.
Originally posted by BeingWatchedByThem
No where in the Constitution does it give the federal government to create (basically) a national ID.
The driver's license portion of the amendment (which was passed)
No Federal agency may accept, for any official purpose, a driver's license or personal identification card newly issued by a State more than 2 years after the promulgation of the minimum standards under paragraph (2) unless the driver's license or personal identification card conforms to such minimum standards.
drfunk
This national ID card you might end up having to show at state borders and when you go on holidays in the continental US
pistolpete
An alarm bell should go off in your head when something that was utilized by Nazi Germany and Communist Russia could be implemented in the US.
Originally posted by mrmulder
Because I have already have an ID card. My drivers license. That makes a national ID useless in my opinion. Besides, it's not what this country was founded on.
[edit on 6-10-2004 by mrmulder]
[edit on 6-10-2004 by mrmulder]