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DHS Inspector General: Real ID, What a Waste.The Inspector General of the Department of Homeland Security issued a report earlier this week entitled "DHS Unable to Figure Out What It's Doing on Real ID; Unable to Provide Guidance to States." (PDF) Alright that's not the exact title, but honestly, we think that's what they would have said if they weren't constrained to speak in federal bureaucratese. You can tell because what they did say was pretty scathing. Here are a few tidbits (with a little editorial clarification from us):
We'll say clearly what the Inspector General can't: Real ID is an enormous boondoggle. It was tacked on to a must-pass appropriations bill and snuck into law using procedural trickery. Not only does it create a National ID system and invade our privacy, it's a complete waste of money. Twenty-one states have already rejected Real ID, and Virginia is poised to become the 22nd. It's time for Congress to repeal Real ID before we waste any more money or do any more harm.
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3 Responses to "DHS Inspector General: Real ID, What a Waste." |
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Mar 26th, 2009 at 4:09pm
Here is a thought. If they don't have a passport and a visa we ship them out. Enforce the law. LIVE FREE OR DIE
Mar 29th, 2009 at 6:16am
Jeff,
You, sir, are an idiot. Do you have a passport and a visa?
95 percent of American citizens have neither of these documents. There are actual American citizens in this country that do not have driver licenses, or state issued ID's of any kind.
There are also actual American citizens that do not have access to 'valid birth certificates' due to the buildings where those documents were held being burned down or otherwise destroyed in natural disasters.
It used to be that this country's government (that would be US) trusted its citizens to tell the truth when asked if they were citizens. If you said yes, that was it.
In any case, how does a piece of paper - no matter what it is - really prove who you are?
BTW, my father's birth certificate had "Boy" in the space where his first name should have been. So how is he supposed to prove that he (of the three given names) is actually the "Boy" listed on that birth certificate?
That's why the trust comes in. If our country doesn't have some basic level of trust in its citizens, then America as the idea has ceased to exist.
Mar 31st, 2009 at 6:59pm
I am an American citizen and, therefore, cannot be trusted. For that reason, do not ask me or my children to serve this country in the military or to serve on a jury.