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National ID card; Immigration and Freedom

Posted by dbhalling 8 years, 8 months ago to Politics
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The solution to the Immigration problem is to get rid of Welfare including Social Security (overtime), not to impose more anti-freedom idea such as National ID cards and other travel restrictions.
SOURCE URL: http://www.cato.org/publications/congressional-testimony/national-identification-system


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  • Posted by Temlakos 8 years, 7 months ago
    But: in order to get rid of welfare, we have to make sure those who come here to get welfare, do not outvote us. That's why we need some form of identification in order to vote. So that the Party of Loot can no longer vote repeatedly in the names of the dead and the moved-out.
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    • Posted by JeanPaulZodeaux 8 years, 7 months ago
      If there were no income taxation in perpetuity then it wouldn't matter if the whole damn nation voted for socialism unanimously. The nation simply could not afford it. What makes all these "welfare" schemes work or what makes them legal is the same thing that makes it legal for a state agency who has no lawful authority to denigrate nor derogate the rights of the people declare that driving is a privilege and not a right. In many states, that assertion is flat out unconstitutional and yet legal. How? By the voluntary signatures of the people - who hold the inherent political power. We are stuck with all these "welfare" schemes, not because of voters, but because of ill advised acquiescence to income taxes born of a tax code that declines to explain how it is most people are initially made liable to the tax to begin with. Voter ID cards won't even come close to fixing that problem.
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      • Posted by VetteGuy 8 years, 7 months ago
        We can't afford all the welfare schemes now. It hasn't stopped them (they are accelerating). It just gets added to the debt. I fear that people will continue to vote themselves "bread and circuses" until the nation actually collapses and essentially ceases to exist.
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  • Posted by Zenphamy 8 years, 7 months ago
    I'm not sure that I get all the new HooHah over this. I remember in the 80's we had to require two forms of ID, DL and SS, with a copy of each kept in the personnel file and an I-9 form filled out and sent to the feds on every employee. We already have a National ID card in place, the new One ID DL with five required steps to get the gold star for TSA regulated travel, even though several states passed laws supposedly denying One ID. Their state bureaucracies went ahead on their own to implement the system. I would prefer anonymity for any and all, but that ship's already sailed.

    The answer is as DB and several others have said to simply deny welfare of any type to illegals, I'd prefer no welfare to anyone, but definitely illegals.

    Freedom of travel for any individual is a natural right of a human being and a significant measure of a free man with liberty to self direct.
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    • Posted by term2 8 years, 7 months ago
      We have a number of so called illegals working with me. They are harder workers than americans, which is why they got hired. They somehow all get welfare, which is OUR fault as a country. They should get work permits, BUT no welfare or benefits of citizenship.
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      • Posted by VetteGuy 8 years, 7 months ago
        I agree with you as far as it goes. But I would also add that if we cut back on a lot of the welfare for US citizens, a lot of them would find themselves willing to work! This is the main problem I have with the "jobs Americans won't do" argument. Americans "won't do" the jobs because they can effectively make more off government handouts. If the choice was "work or starve", the equation would be different.
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        • Posted by term2 8 years, 7 months ago
          absolutely. like why work if you can stay on unemployment for a year, or get the same amount of money for not working (welfare) as if you went out to work.
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  • Posted by freedomforall 8 years, 7 months ago
    The author says immigrants come here for the freedom. He is naive or clueless. The freedom is an illusion, and although the propaganda of freedom does bring some immigrants, the flood is for the free-bies not the freedom. No more welfare payments of any kind (after gradually weaning those over 50 off retirement pensions that they already paid for.) Eliminate the national number completely and stop forcing businesses to be unwilling agents of the state. The product of a man's work must belong to the producer. All programs must be supported by true voluntary payments for the services rendered.
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    • Posted by Mamaemma 8 years, 7 months ago
      Lord, freedom, reading your comment is a breath of fresh air!
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      • Posted by khalling 8 years, 7 months ago
        what about this woman? http://content.jwplatform.com/preview...
        I am not as jaded.
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        • Posted by freedomforall 8 years, 7 months ago
          Good choice, kh. imo, open borders are bad policy, and a rational immigration policy should reflect the underlying principles of the country. The woman in the video appears to understand how America became a success, and she also became a success through hard work. Immigration policy should give people who have something to offer the free market an opportunity to succeed but the contract should include the penalty for failure - deportation to the country of origin. Open immigration is like telling criminals sent to jail they can be let free if they produce value but never bothering to evaluate if they produce value vs continue to be criminals. Even worse, immigration policy must not provide unearned support to immigrants at the expense of existing producers. Immigrants must also be expected to make an effort to assimilate into the existing culture and learn the language. This should also be a part of the immigration 'contract' with the immigrant. Learn basic English immediately as a part of the agreement or the immigrant faces deportation (including any offspring who do not become American citizens until the parents have fulfilled their immigration contract.)
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          • Posted by khalling 8 years, 7 months ago
            Currently, we have long waits, arbitrary criteria including lottery systems and handpicking certain cultures to "invite" in. So we have a black market of illegals. In a Reason article I read, it is likely that Rand was staying in the US illegally before she married Frank O'Connor in 1929. It may have been the impetus to marry. When I think of anyone I come into contact with at the DMV-bureaucrat-I think of immigration bureaucrats and I wonder why you all are so good with them deciding who's a winner and a loser?
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            • Posted by freedomforall 8 years, 7 months ago
              The existing system is a cluster-$%^(.
              It doesn't define the requirements and the enforcement is non-existent, except likely for political reasons. The fact that the existing system is rotten does not negate the need for a rational system. Allowing the bureaucracy to interpret laws far outside the rational intent, and letting the executive branch decide not to enforce them at all are evidence of a system designed to fail.
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    • Posted by term2 8 years, 7 months ago
      They come here for the $$ they can get from our minimum wages and the freebie welfare benefits for them and their families. Free medical care, food stamps, and a host of other freebie things. Forget the freedom thing as a reason for their arriving here.
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  • Posted by $ AJAshinoff 8 years, 8 months ago
    I do not need a national ID card in my own land. It would be like carrying a key to unlock internal doors in my own home.

    Those visiting this country on visa need the ID card. Further, that issued ID to immigrants should also act as their debit card, drivers license and green card. It should lose or change color and cease to function when it expires.

    Proving citizenship BEFORE issuing welfare benefits would help. Believe it or not it was forbidden (under Nappy) to ask citizenship when applying for welfare in Arizona. I'm not sure if thats still the case, I hope not.
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    • Posted by khalling 8 years, 8 months ago
      citizenship is different than immigration. Two separate concepts. No one looks at my Visa outside the country, unless I try for citizenship. How does the Visa help? Criminals don't comply. It's like saying we need more gun control because of the criminals. Wait-what? how does that make sense? well, whatever, you are going to have one anyway after the 1st of the year. How long before they make you stop at the NM border and show that your "papers are in order.?" Has the drug problem gotten better since we started the War on Drugs? did the formation of the Federal Reserve save people from 1929?
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      • Posted by $ AJAshinoff 8 years, 8 months ago
        A visa is authentication of approval to enter and defines a term of visitation. A visa isn't proof of citizenship.
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        • -2
          Posted by 8 years, 7 months ago
          More collectivist thinking
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          • Posted by $ AJAshinoff 8 years, 7 months ago
            open border, one world government pandering.

            Just saying...
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            • Posted by khalling 8 years, 7 months ago
              not one world. All men are free and so free men immigrate to free countries. As far as I know, there is no huge influx of immigrants into deeply communist countries. Am I missing something? People leave tyranny's. They do not flock to them
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              • Posted by $ jbrenner 8 years, 7 months ago
                Yes, you are missing something. People leave tyrannies, but enough of those tyrannies have "rubbed off" that the immigrants often bring some of those tyrannical values with them, often unknowingly. I cannot count the number of people I know who have moved with their companies from Long Island to east central Florida who tell me how relieved they feel from the tax burden of NY and then vote for higher county taxes, but the number of such people is more than two hundred. Pretty soon there is no place left for those who vote with their feet to go.
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      • Posted by $ jbrenner 8 years, 7 months ago
        The drug problem has not gotten better since the US started the War on Drugs. It was a colossal waste of money and time. Those who use drugs should have been allowed to see the lack of wisdom of their choices.

        However, the visa or passport or other documentation upon entry does allow those in the country to know that a person who has shown such documentation is here with honorable intentions, and thereby can reasonably be expected to engage in value for value exchanges. Those who do not do that much courtesy to the country they are emigrating to should reasonably be assumed to be here with dishonorable intent. In that case, it becomes impossible from a practical standpoint for the average citizen to know whether the immigrant is honorable or criminal. At that point, trade between individuals is diminished, and the citizenry is sacrificed to the immigrant.
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    • Posted by Zenphamy 8 years, 7 months ago
      AJ, you already have one. It's called One ID and it's your DL that if it satisfies the 5 steps required by DHS, will have a Gold Star. You need the Gold Star to travel on any TSA regulated transportation starting Jan of 16.
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      • Posted by Animal 8 years, 7 months ago
        "You need the Gold Star to travel on any TSA regulated transportation starting Jan of 16. "

        Source?
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        • Posted by Zenphamy 8 years, 7 months ago
          News for the last several years.

          You can also use a newly issued Passport that includes the facial recognition specs on you photo.
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          • Posted by Animal 8 years, 7 months ago
            I was looking for the specific legislation. Can you provide that? Also, I have a new passport that was just issued <6 months ago. It looks exactly like my old one issued in 2005, and the photo is one I had taken at a Walgreens, so I can't quite see how facial recognition specs would be in there.

            Can you be more specific than "news for the last several years?" Maybe a link?

            Also, how will this work with my Clear pass? In Denver airport, I breeze through TSA with no ID at all required; just my boarding pass. I put down my index finger at the Clear station (a private company) to confirm my ID, then buzz over to the TSA Precheck lane, and I'm through toot sweet. No ID examined, just my boarding pass. Are you telling me that Clear will go out of business Jan 1st? Because they are planning to expand in 2016 into several more airports.
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            • Posted by slfisher 8 years, 7 months ago
              I think he's referring to this:

              http://www.dhs.gov/real-id-public-faqs
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              • Posted by Animal 8 years, 7 months ago
                OK, that I'm familiar with.

                This was the assertion in the OP that triggered my question:

                "You need the Gold Star to travel on any TSA regulated transportation starting Jan of 16."

                From the link you provided:

                "Will TSA accept identity documents other than driver’s licenses?

                Yes. TSA currently accepts other forms of identity documents such as a passport or Permanent Residency Card and will continue to do so.

                For more information on acceptable forms of identification for boarding aircraft, please see TSA’s website (http://www.tsa.gov/traveler-informati...)"

                From that link:

                "dentification

                Adult passengers 18 and over must show valid identification at the airport checkpoint in order to travel.

                Driver's licenses or other state photo identity cards issued by Department of Motor Vehicles (or equivalent)
                U.S. passport
                U.S. passport card
                DHS trusted traveler cards (Global Entry, NEXUS, SENTRI, FAST)
                U.S. military ID (active duty or retired military and their dependents, and DoD civilians)
                Permanent resident card
                Border crossing card
                DHS-designated enhanced driver's license
                Airline or airport-issued ID (if issued under a TSA-approved security plan)
                Federally recognized, tribal-issued photo ID
                HSPD-12 PIV card
                Foreign government-issued passport
                Canadian provincial driver's license or Indian and Northern Affairs Canada card
                Transportation Worker Identification Credential"

                So the initial assertion is in fact false; TSA accepts a variety of IDs and will continue to do so. Also, there is no mention on either page of facial recognition standards; that assertion is also not supported.
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    • Posted by term2 8 years, 7 months ago
      I think citizenship should not be an automatic thing, even though you are born here. Being born here should allow you to apply, but there should be specific tests and agreements that you have to undergo before being granted citizenship ( just like if you are an alien and you apply). Maybe there are no citizens until the age of voting ( like 21)
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      • Posted by $ blarman 8 years, 7 months ago
        That is the way things are supposed to be. The Fourteenth Amendment clarifies that citizenship only rightfully belongs to those born to parents who fall under the jurisdiction of the United States. The notion of anchor-babies is completely false and the author of the Fourteenth Amendment says as much in his explanations. Further, the Constitution specifically charges Congress with the duty to define the requirements for jurisdiction, which they did in 1795.
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        • Posted by term2 8 years, 7 months ago
          Its as if we abandoned the constitution at some point, and the government just does what it wants at the time.
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          • Posted by $ blarman 8 years, 7 months ago
            Not necessarily that we abandoned it, but that we ceased teaching it to our children. How many public school classes teach the Constitution? None - not even AP History spends time on the content of the Constitution. How many civics classes even in college cover it? None I ever took. That it was passed and was a revolutionary document is mentioned in passing, but serious study?

            How does government get away with its shenanigans? An unenlightened public. It is tragically ironic that while we have the most potential for information and connectivity ever in the entirety of human history, yet the most important things are those least discussed.
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            • Posted by term2 8 years, 7 months ago
              The constitution was designed to LIMIT government, so its no wonder our government doesnt like it and refuses to teach it. Take the 2nd amendment for example- it was written to protect us FROM an unpopular and unfair government. No wonder our government wants to ban guns (to disarm us and force us to do what it wants, no matter what). The guns are supposed to be available to the public to fight against an unfair government like the british at the start of our country. REgistering guns with the government is equally bad as taking them away- the government from which we are protecting ourselves then knows where to go to get them.
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            • Posted by $ winterwind 8 years, 7 months ago
              If you make "civics" class and history class as boring as possible, no one is even going to pay attention, including the teacher. Somewhere, I heard "class' defined as "Transferring information from the notes of the teacher to the notes of the student without passing through the brains of either". When the student "knows" the material is boring and pointless and he'll never use it, he doesn't learn it.
              Making people ignorant is easy.
              Helping people learn is difficult.
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              • Posted by $ blarman 8 years, 7 months ago
                Agreed, especially when you attempt to tell the teachers how they have to teach - aka Common Core. You have to start with teachers who not only are passionate about their material, but passionate about the learning process. Then you have to allow them to teach to their students, individualizing and accommodating the students. You can't do that with bureaucrats 200 miles away trying to look over your shoulder.
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      • Posted by $ AJAshinoff 8 years, 7 months ago
        If I had a choice in where I was born I would agree. If my parents are citizens and I am born of them, I am a US citizen no matter where I am. This is as it should be.
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        • Posted by term2 8 years, 7 months ago
          I do think that as a group, we should choose who are to be considered citizens and who are not based on who we want in the country. Whats wrong with having a homogeneous group of people as citizens eligible to vote. Thats why I say everyone applies when they are old enough to make such a decision. In the meantime, we have work permits and visas to allow others to be here.

          Its not my decision to make the laws, so you have nothing to worry about. If you were born here, you are a citizen here. Look at the problems its resulted in, however.
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  • Posted by $ Abaco 8 years, 7 months ago
    They'll do it anyway. Then, they'll force everybody to carry one or face jail time. "Paypus pleeez. All iz en oida."

    It's the natural progression of governments, this constant tightening.
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    • Posted by slfisher 8 years, 7 months ago
      I'm definitely worried about this. The whole thing about voter ID was a camel's nose for a national ID card in general. I shouldn't need a state-issued ID card to exercise my rights as a citizen to vote.
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      • Posted by DrZarkov99 8 years, 7 months ago
        You need ID to travel, buy alcohol or tobacco, drive, etc., so why is voter ID such a problem? Without ID, or some form of confirmation that you're a legitimate voter, you may discover (as some have) that you've "already voted", thanks to a phony who's been given your name to use. Maybe people on voters lists should be notified when a vote in their name has been recorded, so they can confirm or deny the vote? of course that would drag the voting process out, but it would be a way to avoid voter ID.
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        • Posted by slfisher 8 years, 7 months ago
          Yes, some people have done a lot to make people think that voter fraud is widespread so they can justify requiring a state-issued id to exercise your right to vote. But it's not true.
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          • Posted by DrZarkov99 8 years, 7 months ago
            Again, if you're so concerned about having to have an ID to vote, why aren't you equally as agitated about all of the other circumstances requiring a personal ID?
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            • Posted by slfisher 8 years, 7 months ago
              Because voting is a right, not a privilege, like the other things you mention.
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              • Posted by DrZarkov99 8 years, 7 months ago
                Are you in favor of completely unrestricted firearms ownership? That is a right as well, but most people favor some sort of system that identifies dangerous, unstable persons, to make it difficult for them to own guns. To be consistent, you need to maintain we should not restrict firearms ownership in any way, even if the owner is psychotic.
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              • Posted by $ MichaelAarethun 8 years, 7 months ago
                It's more than a right it's a responsibility which carries with it something more than just a right. One is to protect the system. Right now it's open to fraud which renders your rights meaningless. I don't agree with using the national name (SSAN) which has been abused completely but I don't agree with simply stating it's a right and then letting the likes of George Soros buy as many as he cares to nor Oregon making a sham of the whole thing.

                We all get voter registration cards. A simple data check for duplicate voter registration card numbers and addresses would get rid of a lot of the fraud and then make it possible to stop the soft money artists from making a fraudulent prone system a joke.

                On the other hand you can cry rights rights rights while the left left left is sticking it to you big time.

                What's the point of unprotected rights?

                NOTHING

                Which brings us to where we are now.
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  • Posted by Herb7734 8 years, 7 months ago
    Get rid of the incentives and you get rid of the problem. It seems to me that the solution is simple to the illegal immigration problems we have south of the border.
    1. Speed up the legal immigration process - X10.
    2. Secure the border -- Really Secure it!
    3. Getting rid of all illegals is too complicated. Only known criminals to be deported. Who cares where. (A South American Jungle would do.)
    4. When an illegal is caught they should be made to study the requirements to become a citizen and then apply.
    5. Get rid of welfare. Private charities to take over.
    If these five principles are applied the problem will, over time, solve itself.
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    • Posted by $ AJAshinoff 8 years, 7 months ago
      Incentives are part of the problem. The main issue is the deplorable and dangerous conditions in those countries causing people to come here, illegally or otherwise.

      I agree with the sped up immigration process. Thats said, the US should establish in their embassies a computer network linked to the US and they should validate and qualify any and all who wish to enter our country. More, the host country SHOULD provide proper documentation, electronic or otherwise, to speed up the process.
      Secure the border- absolutely. Defended and patrolled by the US National Guard of each state in concert with civilian border patrol.

      Get rid of the illegals - yes, its not that complicated. Wait for them to use the system - welfare, medical, school, etc.. and expel them as you find them. No child left behind. The 14th Amendment wasn't written for illegal aliens or invaders, it was to ensure freed slaves received the citizenship they were entitled to.

      No argument about welfare. Churches in this country should be doing a lot more. In fact, they are actually encouraged by the government not to do anything. I'll tell you about my experience with this if you like.
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  • Posted by nsnelson 8 years, 7 months ago
    "Illegal immigration is the price we pay in America for being a free and prosperous nation."

    I agree that people want to immigrate here because we are a relatively free and prosperous nation. Also because of our welfare state (which needs to stop). But that should not justify "illegal immigration." Immigration and Illegal Immigration are commonly confused in today's media. Will we ever get past that simple distinction?

    It seems to me that most of the article argues in favor of immigration. I couldn't agree more. Immigration should be easy. But I also affirm a people's right to say "no more visitors, please." I disagree with that strategy, but I affirm their prerogative. Also, I affirm the importance of a nation to regulate, control, understand who is coming in to immigrate (legally). The regulation should be light, in my opinion, but it should be there. We have to know who is coming in, because the job of the Government is to protect us against those who would take away our rights. It cannot stop those people if it doesn't even see them enter. It is important that we are able to control the border.

    And voting in the USA is not a "natural right" for just anyone on the Globe. It is a civil right reserved to USA citizens. Especially today, when it is clear that we are plagued with millions of illegal immigrants, I don't see why we wouldn't want people to prove their citizenship in order to exercise the privilege of that citizenship.
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    • Posted by JohnConnor352 8 years, 7 months ago
      Only the owner of a piece of property has any rights over its use, and if a piece of property is unowned, no one controls it. Government ownership of anything is immoral, and I reject the concept as valid.
      Therefore, "the people" do NOT have the right to say "no more visitors." And that is simply because they do not own the city, state, or country. There is no such thing as collective ownership. Shared ownership, like a marriage or corporation, yes. That's still private. But a country only has the right to restrict entry in favor of self defense, such as to keep out criminals or elements from enemy nations.
      Such restrictions cannot be based upon whims such as race or religion, national origin, politics, or a desire to stay the population thy are. Those criteria are fine for a private business or residence, but not for a government.

      Remember, rights are only freedoms to act, and they do not interfere with others rights. If your "right" prevents another from exercising one of their rights, such as freedom of movement or self determination, who to hire, or where to live, then it's not a right.
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      • Posted by nsnelson 8 years, 7 months ago
        Okay, good points. If something is not privately owned, so you say nobody owns it, what prevents Mexico from claiming it as their own, even giving it to their private citizens to own? To own something means you have rights over it; practically, that ownership is meaningless unless you claim it and are willing to defend it. Mexico would be stopped at the point of a gun, because for all intents and purposes our "public lands" are claimed, defended, owned.

        "A country only has the right to restrict entry in favor of self defense." Okay, I agree! But how can this be done when we don't even see people coming across, much less to we know who they are? Even if we decide not to limit immigration at all, we at least ought to know who is immigrating. Control it, even if we don't try to stop it.

        Your last point is what bothers me every time I discuss this. I have a right to my private property. This is as fundamental as my right to life. You say man has a right to move freely? Even over my private property? You see, you are the one introducing a right that conflicts with my right. When someone's right to travel, right to "self-determine where to live," contradicts my right to private property, who wins? I suggest there are no contradictions between rights, and that the "right to travel" is not fundamental. A man has the right to leave a country (to deny this would be to condone slavery), but that does not translate into the right to trespass where he is not welcome.
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  • Posted by davidmcnab 8 years, 7 months ago
    If a couple, Alice and Bob, own a house and land in which they are living and raising their family, they have sovereign right to dictate who can enter the property, and of those who enter, who can stay.

    They can agree to allow Alice's mother to come and live there, permanently, and get an extension added to the house to make her comfortable. They can allow Bob's deadbeat cousin to come and stay there briefly while he's looking for his next job. They can disallow Alice's creepy ex from entering the property at all.

    This is the concept of collective ownership. Property which is public when viewed from within the family, but private when viewed from outside the family. A form of public property at the scale of family.

    A country is the exact same idea, except scaled up to a larger population unit. A country's population has a sovereign right to decide who can come, and who can stay. Any objection to such sovereignty or ownership on a national scale must also apply to sovereignty on a family scale. If a family has a right to exclude unwelcome entrants from its property, then so must a country.
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    • Posted by JohnConnor352 8 years, 7 months ago
      Objectivism rejects the metaphysical existence of an such entity as "society" and therefore there is no entity to own the property known as a nation.
      There can be agreement among a family unit, there can be no universal agreement among a nation, and so you end up with the tyranny of the majority when a nation makes such decisions.
      What about the farmer who wishes to hire someone from across the border? Why would the collective have the ability to restrict his right of choosing who to hire?
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  • Posted by bsmith51 8 years, 7 months ago
    A convention of the states could amend to specify that welfare be relegated solely to the states and prohibited at the national level.
    This would remove the head from the monster that is progressivism and go a long way to restoring financial sanity.
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  • Posted by term2 8 years, 7 months ago
    why dont they go all the way and require microchips be implanted into all citizens so the government has complete control over the whereabouts of all citizens. Where you go, how long you spend there, etc. why play around with cards that you may not carry around if you didnt want to. If its going to be a dictatorship of arrogant Obama-types, lets go all the way so we can realize exactly what we have and perhaps rebel against all of it
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  • Posted by $ WilliamShipley 8 years, 8 months ago
    This is an issue that I find myself on both sides of. Clearly I don't want to have the government track me and all aspects of my life.

    On the other hand, as we build medical systems which interconnect we are continually faced with the problem of whether this "Jim Smith" is the same as this other "Jim Smith". Failure to properly match records can have life-threatening consequences.

    Some of our systems are in countries which do have a national id number, most notably Malaysia which uses a smart MYKAD card for pretty much everything -- passport, banking, healthcare etc.

    This makes building reliable health care systems much easier. It's also a privacy nightmare. Would I want to be carrying one of these cards? I'm not sure.
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    • Posted by Zenphamy 8 years, 7 months ago
      I wonder how I've managed to stay alive all these years without an interconnected medical records system.
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      • Posted by $ WilliamShipley 8 years, 7 months ago
        Mostly by either not having anything seriously go wrong with you or by dealing with the same physician or hospital who keeps a physical file.

        These issues don't just come up in national linkages. Our most typical issue is a doctor's practice computer system, our laboratory computer system and a reference laboratory's computer system. All of this takes place at the same office.

        We usually insist on them using the same ID's in our system as the practice system uses but then they put in a new practice system that changes all the numbers!
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        • Posted by Zenphamy 8 years, 7 months ago
          I've traveled and lived all over the Western US and had some issues, but I fill out an information form, then get treated. I just don't get what a new Dr. for a new problem is going to gain from a Medical History that he can't get directly from me.

          It seems that the records are not for the reasons stated. I don't think they have a damn thing to do with my health or my Dr's ability to treat what ever symptoms I present.

          The numbers referenced on your computer system are primarily for Medicair/Aid, Insurance, and other billing and for reporting.
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          • Posted by $ jdg 8 years, 7 months ago
            The interconnected medical records system is all about busybodyism. The proponents are afraid that people denied pain drugs they need (for example) will successfully go "doctor shopping." To hell with 'em. I hope plenty of doctors start refusing insurance rather than join the system.
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    • Posted by khalling 8 years, 8 months ago
      especially if a death panel screws up reading your records
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      • Posted by $ WilliamShipley 8 years, 8 months ago
        Actually, I'm not sure having a death panel accurately reading my records is any better.

        But accurately identifying patients is an ongoing problem in our health system.

        Just this morning a Histology email list I am on was embroiled in a discussion of a new NIH requirement that they randomize the id numbers on slides to protect privacy. This, of course, runs afoul of other regulations requiring two ID's on every sample and good medical practice designed to prevent sample mix-up.

        When I get blood drawn at Quest, they label the tubes with my name and show them to me so that I can verify that it is, indeed, my name on the blood that just came out of my veins.
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  • Posted by handyman 8 years, 7 months ago
    As long as the predominant culture in the countries from where most immigrants come is antithetical to freedom, it is in the best interests of those on this side of the borders to restrict their entry. The culture here is getting bad enough already! If that is collectivist, so be it. I see nothing anti-collectivist in upholding the concept of borders within which the occupants seek and support properly limited government.
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  • Posted by wiggys 8 years, 7 months ago
    where does mr. moore live on antarctica? WE the citizens of the usa already have id cards. it is the immigrants that come across the southern border regardless of country of origin that do not have id cards. drivers lic., ss card from birth, all cc cards, should i name more. what freedoms do we have left as citizens of the country, certainly not as much as those who cross the border illegally. when i consider ALL of the conversation about the immigration issue I am convinced that the powers to be that run the usa like things as they are and I do not see any changes for the better EVER taking place, except an increase in taxes so the government can increase the number of illegal recipients receiving a welfare check. I believe the die has been cast and we are just sliding down that slippery slope without any chance of reversing it like greenspan now saying to invest in gold after he advised nixon to outlaw owning the stuff. russia, cuba, south america here we come to join you.
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