News1 min ago
No Passport
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How many people don't have a passport and are then looked down upon or disbelieved? Just because I have no desire to travel to other countries why am I treated with disgust and then I have a real problem proving I am me! If proof is an everyday problem then we should have gone ahead with ID cards shouldn't we?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.In England and Wales, only 16.9% of people over the age of 16 don't hold a passport. (75.7% hold a British passport; 7.4% hold a non-British passport).
So it is quite unusual not to have a passport in this country. ID cards would actually have been useful to many people as they were meant to cost only around half of what a passport does but they would have still been valid for travel (instead of a passport) within the whole of the EU.
So it is quite unusual not to have a passport in this country. ID cards would actually have been useful to many people as they were meant to cost only around half of what a passport does but they would have still been valid for travel (instead of a passport) within the whole of the EU.
I have a passport but I concur with you Susan. This country was in danger of licking Uncle Sam's "ass" by inflicting ID cards on us whether we wanted it or not. Murmurings of discontent were felt and the powers that be realised that a huge chunk of the population would effectively accept 'voluntary ID' in the form of passports and photo driving licenses. Many would shout "if you've got nothing to hide then it shouldn't be a problem" but that misses the point. We are a nation under surveillance and it's up to everyone to choose how much they feel the need to buy into it (or not).