N.H. Leads Revolt Against Federal ID Rules
By KATHARINE WEBSTER
The Associated Press
CONCORD, N.H. - New Hampshire has suddenly become a battleground in the fight over privacy rights versus homeland security, with state legislators voting against strict new federal standards for issuing driver's licenses.
At issue is the federal Real ID Act, which is intended to keep terrorists from getting fake IDs. It requires states by 2008 to verify documents such as birth certificates, Social Security cards and passports when people apply for driver's licenses. State databases with driver information and photos will also be linked.
Last month, the Republican-controlled New Hampshire House voted overwhelmingly to bar the state from participating in the program. A vote in the GOP-dominated Senate is expected in two weeks. Democratic Gov. John Lynch remains undecided.
The move has won backing from the American Civil Liberties Union as well as conservative privacy advocates and Christian fundamentalists.
"I think New Hampshire will set the dominoes falling in the states," said Barry Steinhardt, director of the Technology and Liberty Program of the ACLU, who testified against Real ID at a recent state Senate hearing alongside a member of the conservative Cato Institute. "Who's going to say, `The emperor has no clothes?' New Hampshire's in a good position to do that."
Legislation in other states would condemn Real ID, but New Hampshire's bill is the toughest measure making real progress anywhere, Steinhardt said.
Republican state Rep. Neal Kurk, author of the bill against Real ID, gave a stirring speech during the debate.
"I don't believe the people of New Hampshire elected us to help the federal government create a national identification card," Kurk told the House. "We care more for our liberties than to meekly hand over to the federal government the potential to ennumerate, track, identify and eventually control."
A weekend rally featuring Real ID opponents in Nazi uniforms attracted lawmakers from both parties, and worried members of Congress dispatched a staff member from the House Judiciary Committee to meet one-on-one with state senators in advance of a committee vote Wednesday.
Supporters of Real ID say blocking it will isolate New Hampshire, requiring residents to get a passport if they want to board an airplane or enter a federal building. The state also would lose a $3 million federal grant to update drivers' license computers.
Jeff Lungren, spokesman for the U.S. House Judiciary Committee, said Real ID closes loopholes that allowed a Sept. 11 terrorist with a six-month tourist visa to get driver's licenses in multiple states good for five years or longer.
He said it sprang from the Sept. 11 Commission's finding that "for terrorists, travel documents are as important as weapons."
"They use a driver's license or any other type of identity document as a breeder document and they start setting up bank accounts and credit card accounts," he said. "That's how they were able to live openly among us."
Many governors and some state motor vehicle directors oppose Real ID. Most state legislatures are waiting to see regulations for implementing it from the federal Department of Homeland Security before acting.
"It's not going to promote national security. It's not going to help us prevent illegal immigration. It's just going to help the government keep tabs on ordinary citizens," Kurk said. "Remember, the 9-11 terrorists were in this country legally and had legally obtained documents."
The cards also must be machine-readable, so they could incorporate a radio-frequency identification chip or a bar code. That irks privacy advocates like Katherine Albrecht of Nashua, co-author of "Spychips: How Major Corporations and Government Plan to Track Your Every Move with RFID."
She worries the national database will be an irresistible target for identity thieves and corrupt motor vehicle workers.
"It's just a disaster waiting to happen from a security standpoint," she said. "It would actually expand the risk of terrorism."
The Rev. Irvin Baxter, the founder of Endtime Ministries of Garland, Texas, recently had Kurk on his radio show and featured Albrecht in his magazine. He objects to Real ID on religious grounds, saying it could evolve to represent the mark of the anti-Christ.
In a telephone interview, Baxter cited a prophecy in Revelations that "every person on Earth will be given a number or a mark, and without this they will not be able to buy or sell."
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RFID chips in driver's licences? FUCK that. Here's to hoping the rest of the states follow New Hampshire's lead.
Lock-step bootlicking sheep crying foul over this "terrible potential security problem" in New Hampshire in 3 ... 2 ....
RACK New Hampshire
Moderator: Jesus H Christ
RACK New Hampshire
Van wrote:It's like rimming an unbathed fat chick from Missouri. It's highly distinctive, miserably unforgettable and completely wrong.
- Funkywhiteboy
- Wiseass
- Posts: 1667
- Joined: Sat Jan 15, 2005 3:41 pm
- Location: Palmyra, PA
Fukk New Hampshire and their little homo-friendly village.
Vito's going to be tracked down soon, possibly on next Sunday's episode. :twisted:
Vito's going to be tracked down soon, possibly on next Sunday's episode. :twisted:
“If you look at folks of color, even women, they’re more
successful in the Democratic Party than they are in the white, uh,
excuse me, in the Republican Party.” (NPR Interview Of Howard Dean
<http://www.breitbart.tv/html/153493.html> , 8/15/08)
successful in the Democratic Party than they are in the white, uh,
excuse me, in the Republican Party.” (NPR Interview Of Howard Dean
<http://www.breitbart.tv/html/153493.html> , 8/15/08)
Re: RACK New Hampshire
Oh shit. So, the government that has the nerve to bill me for their services wants to bill me even more to keep tabs on me, yet plain REFUSES to stop allowing people to walk across the US/Mexico border?Jeff Lungren, spokesman for the U.S. House Judiciary Committee, said Real ID closes loopholes that allowed a Sept. 11 terrorist with a six-month tourist visa to get driver's licenses in multiple states good for five years or longer
Has this whole country gone fucking nuts?
And I actually have to pay people to come up with this stupidity?
I got 99 problems but the 'vid ain't one
-
- Eternal Scobode
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Re: RACK New Hampshire
RACKDinsdale wrote:Oh shit. So, the government that has the nerve to bill me for their services wants to bill me even more to keep tabs on me, yet plain REFUSES to stop allowing people to walk across the US/Mexico border?Jeff Lungren, spokesman for the U.S. House Judiciary Committee, said Real ID closes loopholes that allowed a Sept. 11 terrorist with a six-month tourist visa to get driver's licenses in multiple states good for five years or longer
Has this whole country gone fucking nuts?
And I actually have to pay people to come up with this stupidity?
You're on a roll today, holmes.
Re: RACK New Hampshire
Like a pat of butter...Raydah James wrote:You're on a roll today, holmes.
A meeting thingy got cancelled, so I used the time to point out that there's certain people here who aren't very bright.
I got 99 problems but the 'vid ain't one
Re: RACK New Hampshire
Not everyone's lucky enough to live in a Holiday Inn Express like you are Dins.Dinsdale wrote:Like a pat of butter...Raydah James wrote:You're on a roll today, holmes.
A meeting thingy got cancelled, so I used the time to point out that there's certain people here who aren't very bright.