National ID May Have Killed Immigration Bill 481
News.com reports that the immigration reform bill bouncing around in the Senate for the last few weeks has finally been defeated. The site speculates that, perhaps, one of the reasons it was finally defeated was a measure intended to expand the use of Real ID cards. If passed, the bill would have effectively turned the Real ID system into a National ID card. "The American Civil Liberties Union, another longtime foe of Real ID, said the Real ID requirements were a 'poison pill that derailed this bill, and any future legislation should be written knowing the American people won't swallow it.' Another section of the immigration bill would have given $1.5 billion to state officials to pay for Real ID compliance. Even if the immigration bill is goes nowhere, however, the Real ID Act is still in effect. It says, starting on May 11, 2008, Americans will need a federally-approved ID card to travel on an airplane, open a bank account, collect Social Security payments or take advantage of nearly any government service." As we've discussed before, several states have rebelled against the implementation of Real ID.
papers please (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:papers please (Score:5, Insightful)
The security guard, with limited command of english explained to this winner of the Congressional Medal of Honor why that very piece of metal was a security threat in today's world. As Joe had almost laid down his life to preserve such "freedoms" he was a good citizen, and missed his flight... Freedom. it was a nice thing once. now, its a pencil push away....
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How Cliché (Score:5, Insightful)
My wife is from China, and while they don't have papers they have to carry around with them, they are not free to just pick up an live wherever they wish. I really doubt this will come to pass even with a National ID.
People always trot out these objections based on knee jerk emotional reactions to abuses in the past. The proposed boarder along our Mexican border gets similar jeers although the reason for its need is exactly the opposite of the reason for the Berlin Wall.
I for one would concentrate on protecting our Freedom of Speech rights (for which you are entitled to your opinion in this) and challenge to you suggest a feasible alternative that safeguards our borders, cuts down on illegal immigration, and possible terrorist activity. I don't live my life in fear of terrorism, but as the husband of Chinese national who has played by the rules and lived apart from my wife for TWO YEARS, I really do chafe at proposals to give illegals a faster easier way in than for those of us playing by the rules.
Maybe without a National ID we will never have another major successful terrorist attack, but I guarantee we will have such an ID in the wake of one.
Mod Parent Up (Score:5, Insightful)
Yes, we need those people to work the farms, the low-wage pay. But we need the ones who go through the paperwork and years of waiting and struggle just as much, if not more than those who just follow where the work is.
Internal borders vs external borders. (Score:5, Insightful)
At least that I've seen, a lot of people seem to be against RealID, while also being supportive of robust enforcement of our immigration laws. They (and I include myself in this camp) want our immigration laws enforced, but want it enforced in ways that don't impose upon and potentially make criminals out of many legitimate citizens who don't want to be forced to carry around "papers" all the time, or have to show them to any official on command. People want our immigration law enforced at our borders, with possible incursions 'inland' to attempt to remedy (by which I mean, deport) people who are known to be here illegally.
But in general I think that the two aren't hand in hand. I don't really understand the objections to the border wall, since it seems like a totally unremarkable and obvious solution when you've got people walking across that shouldn't be walking across (I also think that putting the military down there is an obvious solution, too, since defending the nation's borders is a totally legitimate use for the military -- why is it OK to use our military to defend some other country's borders and not our own?). My personal suspicion there is that the opposition is pragmatic rather than philosophical -- there are a lot of agribusiness lobbies that depend on illegal immigrants and don't want anything that makes the labor supply tighter, and a robust border defense would do that. Also, Bush seems to be almost comically cozy with the Mexican President, and the Mexicans obviously don't want any U.S. border defenses, because illegal workers in the 'States are a major source of income for Mexico. (But why we should really care about that is beyond me. Last time I checked, Mexico didn't have a seat in the Senate.)
At any rate, I think it's not at all hypocritical to be against the internal borders that Real ID would create, while also supporting firm control over our external borders, both to the north and south.
Re:How Cliché (Score:5, Insightful)
As for illegal immigration, the major problem is that citizens of our poor neighbors to the south have great incentives to come up here: gov't benefits (e.g., schooling for children) and readily available jobs. The first can be solved, by giving gov't benefits only to green card holders; the latter, not so easily.
Finally, RealID is indeed a disaster for 4th amendment rights, the right to assemble, states' rights, and protection from private data warehousing. There is no reason for the US federal gov't to track the movements of citizens, or Constitutional power to assert a national identity system. Social security numbers have already been abused.
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Not true. The way to dry up the jobs for illegals is to fine and imprison the folks that hire illegals. These laws already exist on the books. All they have to do is enforce it. Enforceme
You have got to be kidding... (Score:5, Insightful)
2) Aside from point 1), this makes no sense. The immigration bill collapsed, the Real ID is going through and that somehow proves that Real ID is politically untenable?!?
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It's
Re:Politically viable? (Score:2)
Unfair (Score:4, Insightful)
But the very real people, trying to legally immigrate, are they not worth something too? Why should other people get ahead of them just because they wandered over?
If someone jumps ahead of you in line, do you say "well good for them for coming out of the shadows" or do you steam because it's not fair? No life is not fair, but then why make it even more unfair than it is already for people that are trying to follow rules.
Not to mention, if you provide amnesty for millions of people, why on earth would not millions more come illegally, expecting the same thing? You are opening the floodgates to a lot more illegal immigration. You help a group now and simply shift the same problem to the future. If you are going to do that, just do away with immigration laws or border control or any pretense you want to have the slightest idea or control over who is immigrating.
Re:Unfair (Score:4, Insightful)
The process is currently too slow for legal immigration, and impossible for people illegally here. Anything's got to be better than this.
Re:Is amnesty so bad? (Score:5, Insightful)
The problem is that illegal immigrants (or undocumented workers, however you want to label them) only last as long as they do here to serve the whim of corporations that frequently use them as underpaid employees that will not unionize, will willingly work in hazardous work environments, and will only rarely leave their job voluntarily (for better pay, better work, etc). If you bring them out of the shadows, you bring to light all the abuses they have willingly suffered over the years to avoid even worse work conditions and pay in their home countries. Employers of newly-legalized immigrants will be forced to clean up their acts and raise pay for their formerly-undocumented workforce if they wish to continue employing said immigrants. Logically speaking, one should conclude that legalized immigrants will lose their jobs, probably to a new wave of illegals that will flood in as replacements.
In other words, if you give current undocumented workers the same rights, protections, and wages as natural-born Americans or legal immigrants, corporations will have no desire to hire them. For this reason, it is not rational to conclude that anyone currently "in the shadows" will step out and claim their place in American society. To do so would be to face layoffs. Anyone foolish enough to "go legal" would probably sooner become an American welfare case than move back to their home country. It's a lose-lose situation.
If we are so determined to make sure that employers grant fair pay and provide adequate workplace safety as the law demands, and furthermore pay wages as the free market frequently demands, it would be more wise for us to simply deport or otherwise disenfranchise the 12+ million undocumented workers we have now to force employers to hire American citizens and/or documented workers. Contrary to what corporate shills would have you believe, modern Americans will do just about any job you put in front of them provided that the pay is right. Yes, ladies and gentlemen, they can even harvest lettuce, tomatoes, and other veggies in the field.
The real question is whether or not significant wage increases for menial laborers in the US would hurt the economy more than our current labor situation in which millions of undocumented workers siphon off public funds in the form of local, state, and federal aid programs due to their pathetic wages. They also wire much of their liquid capital back to their families abroad, all but guaranteeing that they can not and will not serve as an economic stimulus in our country. Raising wages of American workers, on the other hand, would be good for our economy. This point is often made by proponents of minimum wage increases.
And, if you don't believe that there is an untapped reserve of American workers ready to step up and replace our undocumented worker buddies, you might want to reconsider that point. Current teen and young adult unemployment rates (ages 16-24) are staggering. African-American teens, at least according to a recent column by Bob Herbert, suffer an employment rate of 18% nationwide.
Of course, there is the real threat that many unskilled labor positions will vanish altogether due to automation sometime in the next 20-50 years, but we would be better off positioning ourselves today by not encouraging wave upon wave of unskilled, uneducated foreign workers to enter the country when they and their ilk will likely face widespread obsolescence down the road. Additionally, the widespread deportation of undocumented laborers and its associated increase in labor costs will likely spur development of automation technology in the agricultural, manufacturing, and service industries. An automated American economy combined with new, cheap energy sources (LENR anyone?) could potentially provide goods and services at a price far lower than foreign economies with scads of cheap, uneducated workers subjected to deep poverty-level wages, poor work conditions, and lax environmental standards. Such an economic de
Re:Is amnesty so bad? (Score:4, Insightful)
At various times, Germany and Spain have tried rounding up and getting rid of 1/100th of their population and look how well that turned out for them.
Re:Is amnesty so bad? (Score:5, Insightful)
There will always be illegal immigration, as someone will always be willing to risk it, and someone will always be willing to hire at least some of them. But if hiring practices are cleaned up such that it becomes far more difficult to fill in a random SSN, and if enough people actually hiring those here illegally are not just warned or fined but instead sent to prison, as the law allows, the market for them would dry up. How many people are going to be willing to pay $10,000 and spend up to ten years in prison for each illegal immigrant hired?
I'd even consider supporting providing buses, trains, or boats to help them get back home. They sign a waiver saying that they are leaving voluntarily and will not attempt to return in any way for two years, and after that, they can stand in line like everyone else, instead of being forcibly deported and permanently banned from returning to the country. Sure, it will cost a few billion up front, but the long-term savings would be enormous, and once all of the voluntaries have left after a couple of years, new plans could be considered on how to deal with any worker shortages that may be present -- if they even exist.
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Except I opposed this bill, and I don't want to keep immigrants out. I just want them to come here legally. It's not keeping just "immigrants" out. It's "illegal" immigrants.
exactly (Score:5, Insightful)
Not worth it, it's a slap in the face to the lawful immigrants who follow thew rules, it completely destroys any notion of rational "national security" when you have millions of who knows who roaming around, it degrades an already too low wage scale for the poorer legals in the US, it corrupts the border areas, it forces local governments to assume *huge* property tax increases to deal with sudden explosive growth, which is not even close to being offset by any alleged productivity of the illegals, it brings in all sorts of heinous gang presence (that's the real terrorism in the US, hundred thousand and counting hispanic gang members, some going into the 3rd generation!),there is little assimilation,just demands that everything be in their language or it is "racist", and etc.
And people who support illegal immigration must therefore also support the reasons those folks want to come here, their home countries are run by racist billionaires and entrenched and inefficient bureaucracies. It makes a lot more sense to be in favor of those nations cleaning up their acts, then rewarding them by letting them get away with those sorts of antisocial crimes for generations.
Want to have constructive change? Make the illegals go home and sort their own mistakes out in their own nations, and if that means a "heads on pikes" stage, so be it. Some of those nations like Mexico are long overdue for some social rearranging. Mexico is not a poor nation, it's rich in natural resources, good farmland, two oceans, a willing labor force, etc, it's just run like crap by 200 wealthy families and a pseudo elected government that is really just part of organized crime and the class warfare schism perpetuated by the elite there.
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Not worth it, it's a slap in the face to the lawful immigrants who follow thew rules,
I completely agree. My wife is a legal immigrant, and it's crazy that Congress would even think of saying that we stood in those USCIS (aka INS) lines for nothing. The idea that a $5000 fine makes it OK is crazy--legal immigration for my wife ended up costing us about a grand, and we did all the paperwork ourselv
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Thats a meaningless measurement. Take a look at polls on the performance of Democrats in Congress and Republicans in Congress. Both figures are higher than the score for Congress as a whole. The score for Democrats is considerably higher than for Republicans.
The complaints that lead to the low score are not exactly ones that heral
And as stated before ... (Score:5, Insightful)
This does nothing to stop terrorists or terrorism.
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That said, I'm not trying to advocate Real ID. I'm not a fan of the concept, I'd rather see more relaxed national security measures combined with a policy keeping your d*cks out of international hornets nests.
Yet, just because the old system was vulnerable doesn't mean an overly
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http://www.fairus.org/site/PageServer?pagename=ii
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Identifying the bodies? There would have been less question of whether they were dead or not.
All this is going to do is push people to offshore internet banking, like everything else .. and that way, they won't have Uncle Sam looking at whether they're gambling online.
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Or maybe I'm thinking about vampires. I get those mixed up sometimes. Oh well, at the very least we can cover airplanes in green Kryptonite, I'm pretty sure that stuff will stop terrorists.
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NOT true (Score:5, Insightful)
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Officially, they had to vote against the bill because of Real ID.. not because americans don't want to essentially annex as much of the mexican population as can make their way across the border.
don't want to upset the hispanic population. they're the fastest growing minority!
Re:NOT true (Score:5, Insightful)
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Tough call personally, as I sure do not know any metrics on redundancies due to failed bills that had unrelated items tacked into them nor for how much overhead each new process would create. Logically it seems to be a situation where you dont want to have the encapsulating bureaucratic crap before and after the vote process for each and every possible line item, but government is rarely logical so I could eas
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My own first: What amount of time is required in terms of turnaround from the moment Congressman A says "Hey I have this idea.." to "Time to vote on my idea!".
Second: What amount of time is required in terms of wrapup after a vote to properly process the details, filing of proper papers, etc etc etc
and the whole being: Does the amount of time wasted due to rider items causing bickering/failed bil
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For example...
if congress-critter Jack is pro-A, mildly-anti-B, anti-C
if congress-critter Jill is mildly-anti-A, pro-B, pro-C
Then the bill enacting {A, B} is a valid compromise for them.
Suppose they expressed this negotiated compromise as two bills (bill #1 = A, bill #2 = B) rather than one. Then after the first bill was passed, whichever congress-critter got his way would then probably betray the
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Finally a statement that makes sense.
Mod parent up.
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Montana was one of the first. It also rejected the idea of Eminent domain as a legitimate power able to take a citizen's property for the purpose of tax revenue. [slashdot.org] Plus the state isn't in debt (they actually run a balanced budget.)
Sadly, they did fold like a bunch of zombies over speed limits when the feds threatened to pull highway funding.
Still, I'm kind of proud of them. They're doing a lot better than most states, and they show up the feds for the corporate teat-sucking
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Sadly, they did fold like a bunch of zombies over speed limits when the feds threatened to pull highway funding.
I thought that speed limits were reapplied in Montana due to a state supreme court ruling that 'reasonable and prudent' was "so vague that it violates the Due Process Clause ... of the Montana Constitution." (wiki link) [wikipedia.org].
Did I miss a day of school? (Score:4, Insightful)
I'm sorry, but this bit of the synopsis confused me:
If passed, the bill would have effectively turned the Real ID system into a National ID card.
I was under the impression that the Real ID system all by itself was intended as a de facto national ID card. What am I missing?
Re:Did I miss a day of school? (Score:5, Informative)
With this bill, everybody would be de facto required to have such an ID or be jailed and deported. With this bill, nobody could get a job, marry, or vote without a REAL ID. Again, to merely live here, you would have to get an ID of the approved list.
Unfortunately... (Score:5, Insightful)
"The American Civil Liberties Union, another longtime foe of Real ID, said the Real ID requirements were a 'poison pill that derailed this bill, and any future legislation should be written knowing the American people won't swallow it."
The emphasis is mine.
*sigh*
Regards.
ID for Gov't Services (Score:5, Insightful)
What I don't understand is why people get so up in arms about requiring people to prove that they are eligible for the services for which they are applying.
Why do so many people advocate the abuse of services that could otherwise go to deserving, eligible American citizens?
Re:ID for Gov't Services (Score:5, Interesting)
Applicants do need to prove eligibility, there is no question about it. But the ID does not prove eligibility. It simply shows, who you are (authentication), rather than what you are entitled to (authorization).
And there are many other ways of proving, you are, who you say you are — requiring the Real ID is simply a way of twisting your arm into obtaining it.
The grave "Papers, please" fear-mongering is a bit overdone — plenty of reasonably free countries require citizens to carry IDs, and even America's States often require it for things like buying alcohol. But I dislike the Federal ID as well...
Re:ID for Gov't Services (Score:5, Insightful)
Is it? When you can be placed on a "no fly" list for any reason, can't get off it, and can't even see it?
Is it? When you can be placed on a list [washingtonpost.com] that forbids anyone to sell you a car, open a bank account, hire you, and more, without any sort of judicial oversight or other legal process?
Is it? When your personal choices about what you can do to yourself, and with consenting partners, are the subject of draconian laws designed to make you comply with the personal opinions of others? When the use of a sex toy can land you jail? When the display of a banner at a parade can get you sanctioned?
I don't think so. I think privacy has become the last bastion of freedom, and there isn't a lot of it left as is. RealID is even worse than the "papers please" people think it is, because the country's treatment of free, law-abiding citizens - not to mention its treatment of those who have paid their debt to society for previous transgressions - has descended nearly to the level of the mid 20th century Soviet Union, and it is getting worse.
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Yes, of course - my point is that with RealID, they'll be able to do a lot more; they've already demonstrated their intentions are evil (ex post facto law, permanent declassing, commerce clause inversion, torture, habeas corpus violation, land theft, federal blackmailing of the states), and I see no ethical reason to willingly support any further power grabs.
What little privacy you have protects you from lists of every kind; if they don't know who you are, they can't match you with a list, can they? Bu
Re:ID for Gov't Services (Score:5, Insightful)
It is wrong because the list only has your name, like the no-fly list, the no-buy list, the no-employ list, and no doubt a host of other lists. It is wrong because the government is composed of a bunch of incompetents that don't have to be right, because they don't suffer when they are wrong by either punishment or loss of profit. It is wrong because 1 in 6 jury convictions is wrong [breitbart.com]. You don't want to get your nose in the gears, much less what you amusingly refer to as your "fat ass."
I'd love to have seen you try to tell that to the founding fathers. Uprisings clearly have their place. Your threatening rhetoric notwithstanding.
No, that was the police state. The same police state that captured and unjustly imprisoned all the innocent citizens of Japanese descent. The same police state that shot (though I prefer to be forthright and just say "murdered") the students [may4.org] at Kent State. The same police state that creates and imposes constitutionally forbidden ex post facto laws. The same police state that enforced prohibition. The same police state that tells citizens they can't display banners. The same police state that tells citizens they can't speak within X feet of privileged events and locales. The same police state that restricts what can be said on the radio, and restricts access to broadcasts to the monied and the government. The same police state that determines what is, and what isn't, a "valid" religion. The same police state that tells citizens what they can and cannot do with their own bodies and with consenting adults. The same police state that forbids assisted suicide. The same police state that did illegal eavesdropping then, and now. The same police state that has held citizens prisoner for years without access to counsel, much less a hearing. The same police state that sterilized people [gottshall.com] based on "fitness." The same police state that disseminates vile propaganda about sexuality, drugs and more. Predictions of imminent arrival are wrong, but only because they're been in power for quite a few decades now.
Look, maybe you should just grab your bag of chips and sit back down on your couch if this stuff is over your head. Unless you are really serious about threatening me, in which case, you are cordially invited to my martial arts school [flickr.com], where I will be happy to tie you into a knot even a sailor couldn't untie — without even hurting you. It's no trouble really, just a standard ju do and chin na demo I use on street toughs of all sizes to ensure I have their attention when they get mouthy. Sounds like you could use a little lesson in humility anyway.
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What I don't understand is why people get so up in arms about requiring people to prove that they are eligible for the services for which they are applying.
Well, I strongly oppose Real ID, and I certainly don't oppose "requiring people to prove that they are eligible for the services for which they are applying."
You should absolutely, without question, have to prove eligibility before you receive any form of government service. However, I fail to see how getting on a bus or train or plane, operated by a private carrier, paid for out of my own pocket, is a "government service." I'm not asking for a government service there, and I don't think I should have to h
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several reasons:
1. For profit or gain.
2. For the children (or similar emotional, irrational nonsense). Example: "Papers please arguments"
3. Groupthink. It's the groupthink-approved position.
4. Racism: They want folks who are a minority to be allowed to get away with anything they want and minorities can't be held to any standards. IDs will make that harder.
5. Some folks also think privacy is some kind of inherent right, like the right to free speech,
What's wrong with a national ID card? (Score:2, Interesting)
I may be stupid, but I just don't get it.
Even if the immigration bill is goes nowhere, however, the Real ID Act is still in effect. It says that, starting on May 11, 2008, Americans will need a federally approved ID card to travel on an airplane, open a bank account, collect Social Security payments or take advantage of nearly any government service.
What could possibly be bad about that (except administrational costs)? I don't live in USA, but I assume that you would need some sort of ID for all these things today as well (surely you can't collect social security without providing some sort of proof of who you are and that you actually are entitled to it?). What's the difference between having a federally approved ID card instead of just a state approved?
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Re:What's wrong with a national ID card? (Score:5, Insightful)
But hey, don't listen to the warnings.. just keep letting your country turn into a totalitarian regime.
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Ever hear of DUI checkpoints? Bye bye 4th Amendment!
But then, those occur without a national ID, so I'm not really sure what one has to do with the other.
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If you want to buy your own plane, get licensed as a pilot, and go through whatever legal process is necessary to fly it around, then you can claim you have the right to travel by air. Of course, if you d
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The fact that it is so hard to get a pilot's license and low cost aircraft have been denied flight approval over the years is an even bigger travesty.
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Every California person looking to get a Driver's License will get fingerprinted, and I imagine a number of other states do the same. Every American that wants a passport also gets fingerprinted and has to show documents such as his/her Birth Certificate, etc.
No -- absolutely not true. I can't say that California is unique in fingerprinting drivers-license applicants, but it's definitely not widespread. I've never been fingerprinted for anything aside from a Concealed Carry Permit for a handgun. [1] (I have a suspicion that the fingerprinting requirement in California has to do with the number of illegal/undocumented/bad-IDed workers they have there, and they see fingerprints as the only practical way to keep people from using forged papers. Good reason not to
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Also, I don't know where you got the fingerprinting requirement for a Passport, but that's likewise not true. Again, you need to prove both identity and citizenship, but I've had a Passport for years and I've never been fingerprinted.
My apologies. My wife recently had to go renew her passport and I was under the impression she had to provide a thumbprint, but she didn't (I called her to check).
However, there are at least 8 states that require fingerprints for general driver's licenses (including Georgia, Texas, Colorado, etc), and it's a requirement for commercial driver's licenses for hazardous materials (according to AAMVA.org).
Re:What's wrong with a national ID card? (Score:5, Insightful)
It's not really rational. The US has this deeply embedded association of mandatory, national ID cards with Hitler or Stalin. Obviously universally accepted identifiers are necessary, but people are willing to accept driver's licenses (state-issued, and not theoretically mandatory) and social security numbers (not theoretically IDs), just not a Mandatory National ID Card like every other country in the world has.
Every country has its distinctive quirks; this is one of them.
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There's nobody twisting your arm to get The National ID card, passport or social security card with pic will do as well.
Strange that nobody brought the UK ID scheme into this yet. On the other hand, they
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If anything, you're illustrating my point: the existence of a national ID card (in this case an RFID card) doesn't automatically lead to the Gestapo hauling you off to prison.
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Couple issues here:
1. Most states in the US are larger than some of the countries you are speaking of. Hell, a few cities are.
2. Most of these states already issue their own id.
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Creates a national Database from which to blacklist people.
We already have laws that can deal with the Immigration problem. Besides, any employer properly paying SS, taking out Withholding and Employee taxes is going to know if they have an illegal or not. So we don't have "illegal workers" sponging off the government -- everyone who works adds value, and every HONEST employer is providing TAXes.
We have a criminal employer problem
Vox Populi killed the bill (Score:5, Insightful)
Conservative, liberal, and moderate voters all thought this was a poor idea - not some minor amendment to this stinking legislation.
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The National ID did not do it... (Score:5, Insightful)
1) Requiring that illegal immigrants go back to their country of origin to apply for the Z visa
2) Requiring that illegal immigrants had no felonies on their record
3) Requiring a lengthier background check, rather than the default 24-hour 'status adjustment' if the background check wasn't finished
The discussion has been very heated, particularly here in California, where talk show hosts have been rallying their listeners for the past few months to contact our local senators and pretty much tell them that their job is on the line if they passed this bill. California is probably the one state where illegal immigration is pretty much out of control, and the public is pretty passionate about it, because we live with it and see it first-hand.
Trust me, the National ID card was barely mentioned in any of the discussions here; enforcement of the existing laws and tougher penalties for businesses that knowingly hire illegals were the main arguments.
Honestly, I wish that Senator Kennedy moved to California and lived here for a good 6 months, so he could see how out-of-control things really are. Maybe then he'd get back in touch with reality and would stop his ignorant rhetoric about "Gestapo tactics" and whatnot.
Re:The National ID did not do it... (Score:4, Interesting)
The reasons I was against the bill:
400 pages is a *lot* of loopholes. If you're going to make an enforceable immigration law, it needs to be short and sweet. Which brings up...
The non-enforcement of current immigration laws on the books. We're supposed to believe you're going to enforce the new laws, after you drag your feet on the current ones?
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I'll invoke a statute of limitations argument. As far as I'm concerned, it's pointless to whine about wrongs that happened over a hundred years ago. There is no person alive today that had anything to do with the misdeeds that you complain about. The water flowed under the bridge and has already flowed into the ocean. Please get over it. I thought history has shown that generations-old grudges does no one a
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No one said that 'white persons' have more of a claim to rights in the US. Americans have a claim here, because they were born here or became citizens. This includes white, black, hispanic, indian, whatever.
Mexicans (to use your example) have no claim to US soil, just like Germ
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And if you infer anything about my views on the subject based on that observation you are probably wrong.
It is just an observation of fact.
How is this different... (Score:4, Interesting)
It's illegal to implement a national ID (Score:2)
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Honestly, comparing the US to the Nazi Germany? How daft can you possibly be?
Can you explain how sites like DailyKOS, MoveOn, and their contributors are still up and running, despite all their constant condemnation of the government, with little to no repercussions on the owners/operators of said websites?
Can you explain how popular meetings and demonstrations like the I
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I wasn't saying that the US was like Nazi Germany (for fuck sake) I was saying that it isn't like Nazi Germany, and if you want to keep it that way, you better stop this "let's make things more efficient" bullshit.
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What this has to do with a National ID card, or even Real ID, I have no idea, but you asked the question so I felt compelled to answer.
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So you want your government to be efficient at being evil? Or do you just want them to be efficient when they're being nice and democratic?
You can't have it both ways.
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What it has to do with a Real-ID is that National IDs make the national government more efficient
I understood the efficient thing, just wasn't sure where the Third Reich reference came in.
So you want your government to be efficient at being evil? Or do you just want them to be efficient when they're being nice and democratic?
I want the government to be efficient at everything we let them do. If we let them do 'evil' things I would prefer them to spend as little resources, including time, as possible on it. Heck I even what them to be efficient in attempting to do things we won't let them do. I'd rather us not be involved in violence and killing, but if we are going to be we should do it efficiently.
I guess I don't see how efficiency
There already is a national ID. (Score:5, Insightful)
Also, as has been mentioned earlier, the ACLU trying to spin this as a rejection of RealID is stupid beyond belief (this got posted as a story how???). The right hates is because there's too much amnesty, the left hates it because there's not enough amnesty, and most of the people in the middle hate it because it took a reasonably good idea and turned it into an unprincipled pork-fest as senators were bought and sold with pet projects in their districts. In other words, politics as usual.
Re:There already is a national ID. (Score:4, Insightful)
Do you have a certified copy of your birth certificate? Most people do not. Do you know where you would get one if you needed one? And, most importantly, could you get one in a month if you had to have it?
Worse, if everyone was getting a passport instead of the incredibly small fraction of people that actually do have one, how would the overwhelmed State Department validate all those birth certificates and such? Easy answer - they wouldn't.
Why they wanted to make Driver's Licenses "validated" was to farm the work out to the states and hope for the best. Today just about anybody can get a state photo ID card that says almost anything they want it to. Legal or illegal means nothing. Don't speak English? Here is the card in Spanish, Polish, Russian and a few other languages.
Unfortunately, right now there is nothing that is a valid piece of identification in the US that most people have. A Driver's License is a joke. Nobody has a passport.
The NAZIS want to control you, (Score:2, Informative)
Revolution is coming
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Revolution is coming
Well you go on thinking that. Just like the socialists, the communists, the hippies and all the other such groups. No one cares. No one cares about all the abuse by the FBI, CIA, president and so on that has been going on for decades (see Nixon). It used to be that almost anything was allowed because of the communists lurking behind every corner, now its because of the terrorists or the pedophiles or god knows what group.
I doubt you'd want a revolution anyway, the result of it wouldn't be a more democratic
BS, the "Real ID" part was stripped out (Score:3, Informative)
The immigration bill died because Americans literally melted down the Senate's phone system because they don't want to grant amnesty now for border enforcement later since it's well known that the government has NO interest whatsoever in doing this.
The support for the legalization of criminal illegal aliens comes both from the far left (who sees a low skilled, uneducated underclass they can entice into a voting block with welfare programs) and the far right (who sees cheap labor that they can use to artificially depress wages). Polls show that 80% of the country opposes it.
Whatever it took.. (Score:2)
What? You want to see my papers?
Christ on a Cross (Score:2)
This has been a mass awakening (Score:5, Insightful)
Bah! Amnesty and H1-Bs Killed "The Grand Bargain" (Score:2)
This "Grand Bargain" was great for those seeking el-cheapo workers aka (Corporations)and great for Democrats looking to purchase a new hispanic voting block. I just don't understand how so many can place greed over proper management of our country and culture. I am not opposed to immigration but opening the floodg
Real ID and Illegal Immigration (Score:3, Interesting)
I am in favor of cracking down on illegal immigration - not here legally, leave the country and go back home and apply to immigrate here. However, Real ID is not needed and it is a de-facto National ID card, plain and simple. There is no place for it here in the USA. There is no need for linking driver databases or the Tri-National Driver License Agreement [wikipedia.org]. The Real ID should be repealed and anyone and everyone should Contact Congress [visi.com] and demand its repeal and do it while the Democrats control Congress. Rather than having laws that curtail civil liberties of US citizens, we need to first enforce the laws on the books instead of the typical attitude of looking the other way. Each time the gov't has a shortcoming of enforcing their laws, they pass more laws and we citizens get punished for it. This vicious cycle needs to end.
On the legal immigration issue, I have expressed interest in leaving the USA such as go live in New Zealand. However, I would do ths the legal way though. I went there after Christmas for vacation and when I went through immigration, my passport was stamped with a 3 month visitor permit with an expiration 3 months after the date of the stamp which is the arrival date. The stamp mentioned that if I was in NZ after 3 months (past the expiration date), I was subject to being deported from the country. If I wanted to be there longer than 3 months, I would have to go to NZ immigration and ask for an extention of the permit. At that point, they would extend it or not. If not, I have to leave before the expiration date. Simple rules. It is something we should expect of those who visit the USA or any other country. BTW, the permit did not allow me to earn an income there. That is a different permit which takes paperwork to get. I am too old (older than 30) to get a Working Holiday Permit like many young people get such as college students and recent graduates.
Real ID is coming no matter what. (Score:5, Interesting)
Mexico's social infrastructure is underwritten by profits from PEMEX, Mexico's oil company. Unfortunately, PEMEX's largest oil field, Cantarell, is in massive decline, according to PEMEX's CEO. [rigzone.com]
Based on a 1.9Mb/d consumption for Mexico, they will stop exporting oil in five years, say 2012... but, this would cut govt revenue around 7% per year, and shredding what little social infrastructure they have.
The result?
They will walk north.
You think Mexican immigration is bad now? Wait until 2015. I wouldn't be surprised if the USgov set up a 100 yard free fire zone on the southern border, or, they simply let everyone in, and drive the wages in the US down to Mexican levels.
RS
Immigration Bill? (Score:3, Funny)
Shame it didn't kill Immigration George.
Who cares about the immigrants? (Score:5, Insightful)
ARREST THE BASTARDS THAT HIRE THEM.
Some random latino looking for work isn't a threat to America. The American 'citizen' who is breaking the law and hiring him is directly betraying our laws and our people to save himself some cash. By definition, if Americans refuse to work in your job, you aren't offering enough money for it. That is how capitalism works, and it is the cheapskates hiring illegals who are driving down the living wage and options for advancement for the American poor.
I'm fine with bringing anyone who wants over here to work - legally and for the same wage that I would get at that position, so they can compete on merit, and the price of labor doesn't get driven down. I used to work in construction, and every time just rich jackass complains about how the guys he hired to build his addition don't speak English and messed up his house, but he's hiring them back because "they're so darn cheap" I just want to spit.
Of course, none of this will ever happen because half of Congress will get arrested or lose their gardeners.
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The American poor (with the exception of the homeless) have cable TV and an obesity problem. Compared to the Mexicans, they're fine. The Mexicans come here because they aspire to be poor by American standards (as opposed to Mexican standards) when they move back to Mexico.
The opinion of an illegal immigrant (Score:3, Interesting)
Who's Fault is it, really? (Score:3, Informative)
"This amnesty will give citizenship to only 1.1 to 1.3 million illegal aliens. We will secure the borders henceforth. We will never again bring forward another amnesty bill like this." Ted Kennedy, 1986, in support of the The Immigration Reform and Control Act
"Now it is time for action. 2007 is the year we must fix our broken system." Ted Kennedy, 2007
Or maybe... (Score:3, Insightful)
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That's because YOU have to obey the laws, as does an employer who hires you. Not necessarily true for the illegals and their employers (who are both already breaking at least one law just for starters).
Minimum wage. Workplace safety. Health benefits. Union activity. Mandatory overtime. I could go on for paragraphs.
Point is that an employer can't get away with paying you as little as he can pay an illegal. The government won't le