NATIONAL ID: READ AND REPOST WIDELY

May 22, 2007 21:16

So... I'm not sure if anyone has heard about this or not, but it's important. If you go to Brandeis, you might have seen an article on campus about it. (It was one of the articles in the Unsaid Gazette that I helped tape up, mostly in Massell, but other people put them other places)

REPOST > You should too!!

please copy & paste this in your own blog and post it as a bulletin and tell
everyone you can:

ALL WE CAN SAY IS REFUSE THIS NATIONAL ID CARD WHEN IT COMES OUT NEXT YEAR.
DO NOT ACCEPT IT-EVEN IF IT IS YOUR DRIVERS LICENSE. WE NEED TO SPREAD THE
WORD ABOUT THIS AND GET TOGETHER AND FIGURE OUT NEW WAYS TO FIGHT BACK AGAINST
THIS GOVERNMENT.

NO GOVERNMENTS NATIONAL ID CARD WILL EVER GIVE YOU FREEDOM:

The United States government passed a bill called "THE REAL ID ACT" which
will require all states to issue their citizens a national id card with an RFID
(radio frequency identification) chip implanted in them. The national id
cards will replace old driver licenses and state/photo id cards. To make sure
every state agrees to this the government stated that "any state that does not
meet the standards set forth in the real ID act will lose all of it's federal
funding".

After may 11, 2008 anyone without this national ID card will be unable to
board an airplane or AMTrack train, open a bank account or enter a court house
or national park and much more for that matter.

The government does not openly describe the use of RFID chips by name-they
attempt to hide the fact that they will be keeping tabs on us all with this
chip. Here is what the law says in regards to the RFID chip:

A common machine-readable technology, with defined minimum data elements
(the details of which are not spelled out, but left to the Secretary of Homeland
Security, in consultation with the Secretary of Transportation and the
states, to regulate).

These RFID chips can be tracked anywhere at any time through you clothes,
purse and walls. RFID chips have been in use in several commercial products on
the market today (Gilette mach products & Philadephia cream cheese packaging
). There has been talk of using it in money in the future. This would mean
every time you obtain money from a bank or store it would be ran through a
scanner and the rfid chip will be updated stating the money is in your
posession. When you later spend the money at a store the rfid chip will then allow the
government to know when, where and what you spend your money on.

We must stand up to this shit and start to get together with our friends and
family and figure out who is on our side and who isn't.

FIGHT LIKE HELL,

DIY BANDITS HQ

(below is some info we found on the law-do your own reseach and you will
find even more out there)

The United States of America passed a bill entitled the Real ID Act on May
11, 2005. In The bill compels states to design their driver's licenses by 2008
to comply with federal antiterrorist standards. Federal employees would
reject licenses or identity cards that don't comply, which would force curb
Americans accessing everything from airplanes to national parks and some
courthouses to have the federally mandated cards.

The bill takes place as governments are growing more interested in
implanting technology in ID cards to make them smarter and more secure. The U.S. State
Department soon will begin issuing passports with radio frequency
identification, or RFID, chips embedded in them.

The Real ID Act, gives unfettered authority to the Department of Homeland
Security to dictate and design some aspects of state ID cards and driver's
licenses. Among the possibilities: biometric information such as retinal scans,
fingerprints, DNA data and RFID tracking technology.

After May 11, 2008, "a Federal agency may not accept, for any official
purpose, a driver's license or identification card issued by a state to any person
unless the state is meeting the requirements" specified in the Real ID Act.
States remain free to also issue non-complying licenses and ID's, so long as
these have a unique design and a clear statement that they cannot be accepted
for any Federal identification purpose. The federal Transportation Security
Administration is responsible for security check-in at airports, so bearers
of non-compliant documents would no longer be able to travel on common
carrier aircraft.

Data that must be included on the license or ID card

Each card must include, at a minimum:

* The person's full legal name.
* The person's date of birth.
* The person's sex.
* The person's driver's license or identification card number.
* A photograph of the person's face.
* The person's address of principal residence.
* The person's signature.
* Physical security features designed to prevent tampering, counterfeiting,
or duplication of the document for fraudulent purposes.
* A common machine-readable technology, with defined minimum data elements
(the details of which are not spelled out, but left to the Secretary of
Homeland Security, in consultation with the Secretary of Transportation and the
states, to regulate).

Linking of license and ID card databases

Each state must agree to share its motor vehicle database with all other
states. This database must include, at a minimum, all the data printed on the
state drivers' licenses and ID cards, plus drivers' histories (including motor
vehicle violations, suspensions, and points on licenses). Any state that does
not link its database, containing records on all drivers and ID holders, to
the database of the other states loses its federal funding.
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