Unexplainable grey
post Category: manifestation
post postAugust 20, 2008

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Re: Major rectum the id has a RFID tracking device that will allow the government to use GPS technology to pinpoint anyones location at any time. Of course they can do the same thing with your cell phones and listen in.

I am,check this out.FBI prepares vast biometrics database
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/22366208/

Horaayy..there are 6 comment(s) for me so far ;)

#1

I am,check this out.FBI prepares vast biometrics database
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/22366208/
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Chrissy214 wrote on January 11, 2008 - 5:17 pm
#2

^ That site above is what I call "porkbarrel spending."
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ahyatt21 wrote on January 11, 2008 - 5:18 pm
#3

Americans long ago gave up their privacy, and few seem to care. Real ID is one step short of tatooing govt issued numbers on our arms, like the Nazis did to Jews.
My mother was the youngest of six children in a family that was in Indiana since the year before it became a state (1817). Not one of them in all that time ever had a birth certificate. Yet my mother worked for the State Dept overseas before leaving to become a college teacher–but according to an Indiana law being challenged in the Supreme Court, she would not be permitted to vote for lack of proper documentation.
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tham153 wrote on January 11, 2008 - 5:21 pm
#4

Real ID Act Will Increase Exposure to ID Theft
by Beth Givens, Director of Privacy Rights Clearinghouse

If you think identity theft is bad now, wait until something called the Real ID Act goes into effect. This law federalizes and standardizes state driver's licenses for all 50 states, and it will result in something that has been resisted in this country for a long time — a de facto national identity card.

What burdens would it impose on individuals?
Real ID would mean higher fees, inconveniences, and bureaucratic nightmares for individuals.

Higher fees. Because the Act’s mandates would cost states billions of dollars that Congress is not paying for, fees on individuals applying for driver’s licenses would inevitably rise, perhaps steeply. State taxes might also go up.
Worse service. Because of the new document requirements for individuals, the labor-intensive complexities involved in verifying those documents, and the need for DMVs to reprocess the bulk of the population that already has driver’s licenses, individuals would be likely to confront slower service, longer lines, and the need for repeat visits to the DMV.
Bureaucratic problems. The complicated yet often ambiguous maze of requirements created by the Act would throw many unlucky individuals into a bureaucratic quagmire as they try to overcome inflexible verification requirements, bureaucratic errors or mismatches, lost documents, unique circumstances, or other problems. Some individuals, inevitably, would find themselves unable to obtain these new identity papers.
These kinds of problems would be significant for anyone. In addition, for many low-income workers for whom taking off time from work is difficult or expensive, the need for repeated trips to the DMV (and to other agencies such as registrar’s offices in search of birth certificates) would be an even greater burden.

Ron Paul 2008
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Scorpian S wrote on January 11, 2008 - 5:40 pm
#5

Real ID wil be phased in by a certain age group… the same age group that is most often used by terrorists. It will also make it much more difficult for illegal immigrants to copy or buy a drivers license.

This is in early stages. I think we should give it a chance. What we have now is not working. Illegals buy SS cards all the time. Stolen identity happens many times each day. I have no problem proving that I am an American. I have a big problem with someone else proving to be me. It has happened to me. Someone in Nigeria got my phone records and just " became me" and drained my credit cards. You have no idea what a massive headache I went through…,and still go through years later Trying to buy a car has been a nightmare. My record has never been cleared and it has cost thousands.
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carly wrote on January 11, 2008 - 6:32 pm
#6

Real ID has absolutely NO requirements for RFID.

If you state or territory has decided to incorporate RFID, they may, but this is NOT a requirement of the federal Real ID legislation.

In addition, if your state or territory has decided to incorporate RFID, the federal governemtn would not have access to this capacity, just the state/territory.

I'd suggest that you'd benefit from actually reading the legislation.
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RTO Trainer wrote on January 11, 2008 - 6:33 pm
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