ChatterBank3 mins ago
id cards
It has been stated that the goverment would like to make the I.D.CARD. compulsory by 2011.
With the cost of these cards going to be approx �100, How do the goverment intend to extract payment from people with no financial funds, are children's cards the same price etc.
Finally. Will it make Britain a safer place to live in, And how are we to be convinced that the World's criminal element in 6 years time WILL NOT have the technology to forged I.D.CARDS.
Apologies that this subject has been raised before, But now the goverment won yesterdays Vote, has anyone views somewhat changed for the Good/Bad of these I.D.CARDS.
Answers
No best answer has yet been selected by laurence2. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.There will be an enormous cost over run,loads of technical problems and no doubt lots of legal challenges to various aspects of the whole business.
Apparently you will have to have a new card at your own cost should you change your address,no doubt there will be an exemption from this part if you a a member of the travelling fraternity,so when I fill my form in I will put "no fixed abode"
The record on delivery is not good either, Since 2001, four government agencies, including the Passport Agency, have seen projects with a total budget of �8.9 million record spectacular failures, racking up a combined overspend of �33.9 billion.
Even simple databases have proved beyond the ability of the Home Office to deliver, such as the firearms register which they were asked to set up 8 years ago, and which is still not operational.
Lets not forget (for those who were around at the time) that credit cards were sold to the British public as the way to end fraud by doing away with cash, and having fool-proof secure financial ID. Didn�t work out that way in practice, I live in hope that one day a UK Government will actually learn lessons from past mistakes, but I�m not holding my breath.
Weirdly, whilst I feel I should in principle be against them...I'm not.
However, I'm against the principle of us being charged for them. If you want to travel abroad, drive a car, watch the BBC etc - there are charges you have to pay. That's your choice...but the ID card charge is a charge that we have to pay...to live.
And that's what I find wrong.
And I work in IT and have read far too many industry stories about public sector IT initiatives which have imploded to feel any confidence in this scheme.
The idea is that you get a passport and at the same time you have to get an ID card, what if you cant afford the cost of the ID card, a passport is expensive enough. No ID card no passport !. Every think tank outside of Phoney Blairs govt. has stated that it will not make us any safer or secure and is not necessary. Its all part of Blairs Totalitarian dream for us. What about the unemployed the old etc etc.how will they afford it ? When they become compulsory what will happen to all the illegal immigrants that will be stopped, will they be deported on the next plane ? dont think so.
Heres my advice Tony, take your card and shove it up sideways.
Big Brother Totalitarian Govt. thats what its all about.
This current Labour govt has infringed and taken away more civil liberties and with the help of the EU has criminalised more people than any other British govt in history and it has no intention of stopping with ID cards. Just wait until you see how the new Gallileo sat system will be used a few years down the line, GPS !!? yeah right, if only. ID cards will mean the criminal fraternity will now only have to forge one document instead of several, how much easier could it be made for them
1. The July 7th bombers were British citizens. ID cards would not have stopped them.
2.Spain has ID cards. This didn't stop the Madrid bombing.
3.For over 30 years the IRA (etc) were(?) active on the British mainland. The idea of ID cards wasn't brought up then.Why now?
4. I'll be in the next cell to you, madein1978!