Move to National ID Cards Delayed

December 16th, 2009

Helpful map shows states that passed anti RealID legislation (Orange):

Legislative Efforts Against RealID (ACLU)

Legislative Efforts Against RealID (ACLU)

Via: Wired:

The United States’ quest for a national identification database associated with driver’s licenses won’t be finished by year’s end.

The deadline was Dec. 31 for the states to create what would be the largest identification database of its kind under the auspices of the Real ID program. The law also mandates uniform anti-counterfeiting standards for state driver’s licenses.

None of the states are in full compliance with the law, first adopted in 2005, requiring state motor vehicle bureaus to obtain and internally scan and store personal information like Social Security cards and birth certificates for a national database, according to the American Civil Liberties Union. About half the states oppose the mandate, or have said they would never comply.

Beginning Jan.1, the law was supposed to have blocked anybody from boarding a plane using their driver’s license as ID if their resident state did not comport with the Real ID program. But the Department of Homeland Security is set to extend, for at least a year, the deadline of the Real ID program that has raised the ire of privacy advocates.

2 Responses to “Move to National ID Cards Delayed”

  1. anothernut says:

    When this, http://9112010.com/9112010.html — or something like it — happens, all bets are off.

  2. Zuma says:

    @anothernut

    thanks for the url. and you’re right. or rather on another level. (yet again.)

    seems to me like all bets being off, in increments, might describe american history since WWII. or I maybe even.

    perhaps world history has always been that way.

    in any case, you’re right, and it’s not so farfetched at all nowadays. nothing is. damnably.

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