Moderator: Dictators in Training
Zanchief wrote:I'm going to have to agree with the fascists on this one, I really wouldn't care of a similar thing was introduced here. Hell, I don't really mind have a chip put in my brain personally.
araby wrote:I thought the antichrist was also going to be someone who is wonderful, and yet not.
Narrock wrote:
I don't live in a shell at all. You're just making a mountain out of a mole-hill. Don't try to hide behind the cost factor. You are against everything Bush does, period. I see right through your bs.
If you ever got involved with any kind of bible study (I'm guessing probably not) you'd know that the chip is referring to a requirement to engage in any kind of commerce, and that to be eligible for this chip you would have to denounce God and accept the new world leader as your new "god" or "savior."
Bush is a Christian, and would never advocate or support the new world order chip.
Now, getting back to the ID card... if it means we will live safer as a society by requiring this ID, then I'd be all for it.
Why the REAL ID Act May Actually Harm, Not Bolster, National Security
Supporters of the REAL ID Act claim that its provisions will make America safer from terrorists. Yet, one of the main reasons America is a target is the perception that it is arrogant, and lacks respect for people beyond our borders. By flouting well-known international norms, the REAL ID Act only exacerbates such a perception.
Even as the U.S.'s own allies - such as the European nations who are linked through the European Court of Human Rights - try to connect their international norms with their domestic system, the U.S. blatantly violates these very norms.
It thus risks alienating the very nations on which we have repeatedly been dependent in war-on-terrorism enforcement. These - and many others - are among the nations we most need to cooperate with, and share information and expertise with, if we are to effectively prevent another attack. (This is equally true as it pertains to other national security goals, such as partnering with Europe to challenge China's growing military capabilities, as pointed out in the June edition of The Atlantic Monthly) Unfortunately, the REAL ID Act only moves us even further apart.
By contrast, abiding by the international norms the U.S. has promised to honor - and even, in some cases, touted - would present the U.S. as a nation that wants to share a set of values with the rest of the world. It would reassure allies that they are right to join together with the U.S.
For all these reasons, the REAL ID Act may compromise our collective security more than it protects it. Thus, refusing to support this Act is not only the right thing to do; it is also the wise and safe thing to do.
As Eleanor Roosevelt said, "One's philosophy is not best expressed in words; it is expressed in the choices one makes... and the choices we make are ultimately our responsibility."
Raymond S. Kraft wrote:The history of the world is the history of civilizational clashes, cultural clashes. All wars are about ideas, ideas about what society and civilization should be like, and the most determined always win.
Those who are willing to be the most ruthless always win. The pacifists always lose, because the anti-pacifists kill them.
Tossica wrote:araby wrote:I still can't help the feeling I got about Obama when I saw him. I immediately thought of the antichrist.
Since there was no "Christ", there will not be an antichrist. Don't lose any sleep over it.
Darcler wrote:I worked with Jesus at my first job. True story. I'm pretty sure he was an illegal.
Tossica wrote:Jesus existed, sure. He just isn't the son of god and all that other foolishness.
Harrison wrote:Tossica wrote:Jesus existed, sure. He just isn't the son of god and all that other foolishness.
Wow, you sure do know a lot.
I am so glad to be graced by your presence!
Fucking moron...
Harrison wrote:Tossica wrote:Jesus existed, sure. He just isn't the son of god and all that other foolishness.
Wow, you sure do know a lot.
I am so glad to be graced by your presence!
Fucking moron...
Harrison wrote:Everything is going overboard, and borderlines on pure stupidity and ignorance.
A lot, obviously, everything...now you're just fucking dumb.
Lyion wrote:I don't see any laws being waived, nor do I see any liberty impact outside of the fear mongering being wrongly represented here. Please tell me any laws being violated.
The latter things you are addressing are merely addendums to this particular bill that Evermore is against without any good factual reasoning why. I still don't see any. Well, outside of it's from those evil Republicans.
Evermore wrote:Lueyen wrote:I don't see any laws being waived, nor do I see any liberty impact outside of the fear mongering being wrongly represented here. Please tell me any laws being violated.
The latter things you are addressing are merely addendums to this particular bill that Evermore is against without any good factual reasoning why. I still don't see any. Well, outside of it's from those evil Republicans.
Raymond S. Kraft wrote:The history of the world is the history of civilizational clashes, cultural clashes. All wars are about ideas, ideas about what society and civilization should be like, and the most determined always win.
Those who are willing to be the most ruthless always win. The pacifists always lose, because the anti-pacifists kill them.
Lueyen wrote:Evermore wrote:Lueyen wrote:I don't see any laws being waived, nor do I see any liberty impact outside of the fear mongering being wrongly represented here. Please tell me any laws being violated.
The latter things you are addressing are merely addendums to this particular bill that Evermore is against without any good factual reasoning why. I still don't see any. Well, outside of it's from those evil Republicans.
Evermore I think this is the second time you've "quoted" me when you were actually quoting Lyion. Quite frankly on this issue I'm not a fan of the idea of a national ID.
arlos wrote:You ignored every single one of my comments except as regarding standardization and ID theft. Both of which positions of yours I completely disagree with. Standardization is bad because driving conditions across the nation are NOT STANDARD. Thus, every region will have different needs when it comes to creating the standards for driving in that region.
You also ignore the fact that there is a LOT more to that bill than just standardization. It requires people to have that ID for *EVERYTHING* which is not currently the case. You aren't required to display your social security card when you wish to travel, for example. If ALL the bill did was standardize driving test requirements, I would have a lot less problem with it. But that's not all it does, and you know it. It turns the driver's license into a national ID card system, and that I am 100% opposed to. So, STOP insisting it's all about standardization, because that is patently untrue, as you well know. So stop lying.
-Arlos
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