The lost and stolen passports for forgers is going to soar along the border, now that the criminal element knows that every American is carrying one.
RFID is a bad idea if you are trying to protect information. You can buy scanners from a vet’s supply house because they are used to ID pets.
Everyone living along the border will be applying for a passport, so the processing time will degrade, no more last minute applications at major airports, as used to happen.
Another expensive, half-baked idea.
]]>Hey, even if they don’t keep the brain-rays out, at least you can use them to whack border-crossing guards.
Sorry, I know it’s not funny. The first time I left the country was in the late 70’s when the War on Drugs was in full swing. Getting out wasn’t a problem (we took the ferry from Portland, ME to Yarmouth, NS), but we had to wait in line to get back in while our car was searched from stem to stern looking for drugs. Oh, yeah — we were a hippy-looking bunch, and they did find one slightly used pot pipe in the trunk, but they let us in anyway after we waved our birth certificates around.
I can just see the irate Canadians who live in New Hampshire standing at the border after a weekend visit to their family back home. It won’t be pretty.
]]>As to the passport being required for re-entry, I tend to doubt that’s going to survive either the new Democratic Congress next year or the first few six-hour waits in line at the border. The checkpoints in Detroit to go over into Canada were bad enough when all you had to do was flash a driver’s license or a voter registration card and be waved through. If they actually have to stop and scan people’s passports in and out, they’ll have to triple the number of checkpoints and hire a ton of additional staff.
]]>Bryan, I’ve long since joined the ranks of what most people would consider “conspiracy theorists.” I’ve done so on the basis that it isn’t paranoia if they’re really out to get you.
A passport of sorts at state lines could be implemented literally overnight by stationing drivers-license checkpoints at state boundaries. It’s probably unconstitutional and illegal on several levels, but that would not bother the people in charge right now.
I unintentionally let my “real” U.S. passport expire a couple of years ago, probably because it’s been a long time since I’ve contemplated going anywhere else. The last time I was outside the U.S. was an overnight trip to Victoria, BC in 2001, before 9/11. I’m not much of a traveler. Still, contrary and uncooperative person that I am, the very fact that restrictions have been placed on my right as an American citizen to leave and return to America freely makes me want to do so just to prove a point. But at present I have nowhere else I really want to go.
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