redleafjumper said:
Zipperhead_cop, while I respect your zeal in defending Canada, I must dispute your method. The attraction of Canada for many is not its reputation for security but its reputation for freedom. From my way of thinking, a national ID card has nothing to do with providing anything but a false sense of security, while at the same time providing a means of tracking large numbers of people for dubious purposes, more related to control, than security.
Your reputation for freedom is the worlds reputation for being suckers. Are you actually saying you would rather have this wide open terror and criminal playground for a country than be safer from identity theft? The mind reels...
redleafjumper said:
What type of terrorism would such a card prevent? The Air India attack? Marc Lepine shooting people? Someone sneaking a nuclear device into a Canadian port through the security sieve that those places are, and detonating it even at point of inspection? Hmm, I don't think so. When a terrorist is below the radar, that is, doesn't associate with suspicious folks, keeps away from such toys as cell phones and computers and engages in otherwise legitimate activities, up until their act of terrorism, no fancy ID card in the world is going to stop that.
Okay, your terror example is an old one, and Marc Lepine was a psycho. An ID card also has NOTHING to do with port security. You are arguing apples and base ball bats. This isn't to stop violence, it is to identify people. Does your SIN card or drivers licence save you from peril now? Must be better than the ones issued here in Ontario. The reason they are below the radar is that they are POSING as people who don't show on the radar. You can get hundreds of dollars for selling your passport to a criminal. What do you think happens to the passport? It's not used to wallpaper someones bathroom ???
The ID card isn't some magic bullet, it IS AN ID CARD.
redleafjumper said:
One of the things that I appreciate most in this country is that it is not a "Your papers please!" environment that I have seen operate in tin-pot dictatorships all around the world. It is an historical fact that state terrorism (Armenia, Bosnia, Rwanda, Guatemala, Cambodia, USSR, China, etc. gee, did I mention Germany?) has killed far more people in even the past 100 years than spectacular single acts by ideologically-driven fanatics.
So, by your thinking, because you have the card, it will obviously be brought into force of law, on pain of arrest, to present it at any and all times with no probable cause. No doubt, all of the worst demogouges around the world got launched to power with a wallet sized piece of plastic with a photo and some numbers. By the way, currently, refugees are required at all times to carry their papers with them. Think that happens?
redleafjumper said:
I disagree that we haven't seen terrorist attacks based in Canada, I think the examples provided show that we have. I do agree that the lack of a major attack is more of a function of the temporary lack of desire on the part of those who would do such things. I also disagree with your characterisation that it is a function of the left to criticize security and statist control over people in the way that you describe. Far from it, such statist activities are highly characteristic of the "mommy democracy" of the left that claims to provide all the measures to protect and look after all of us throughout our lives.
I will concede that there are more learned persons on this site who can speak to the left and right ends of the political spectrum and their typical characteristics. As a generality, the left in Canada are winy, socialist crybabies that fear all things conservative (IMHO).
redleafjumper said:
I think my philosophical objections to such a card would include premises that I do not believe that such a thing would provide the security claimed, and that I am concerned that it would be abused for purposes well beyond trying to stop something that it cannot. In short, I don't belive it would "work", and I don't believe that any percieved benefit is worth the range of costs that would be associated with it.
And I am sure that in your professional opinion, which includes the ability to do national threat level assessment, terrorist interdiction and international document codification that is a great assessment. Because otherwise, you just posted "Me don't like it, make me feel poo poo".
redleafjumper said:
I am all in favour of enhanced security procedure at points of entry, but realize that procedures that would work would be very expensive, not only in direct costs, such as more Customs Officers, screening equipment, shipping container inspections, etc., but also in terms of the necessary delays which would slow transportation down to the point where the economy is affected.
Proposals for such things as national biometric-based ID cards tell me that any terrorists don't have to do much here, as we are quite prepared to do their work of limiting freedom and creating an environment of fear for them.
(edited to fix apostrophe error)
Again, you are talking about importation of goods and commercial interdiction. It has nothing to do with identifying individuals, unless they turn up in a shipping container or transport truck.
Brad Sallows said:
>Were they not basically the same arguments?
Yes, and in each case some degree of freedom was surrendered to security.
Those of you on the "inside" of security endeavours also know that the bad guys recruit people to work on the "inside" as well. One of the (possibly) tall tales I rather enjoyed was the one about the officer who undertook to infiltrate a criminal organization and wound up trussed like a turkey dumped on the lawn of a local law enforcement property with a note to the effect "we think this belongs to you". That could certainly have gone worse. Regardless whether that incident actually happened, those of you on the "inside" must be aware of the fact that the human element is not watertight. Information grows legs.
Have credit cards and ATM cards made it easier or harder to rip people off? I can turn them both off tomorrow and go back to making cash withdrawals from my local bank branch. I have control over the decision to use those. Whether I've conceded to use them is irrelevant to my other objections.
The more trustworthy the ID, the less additional verification people seek. Is that a good thing?
Having a deep cover agent burned has nothing to do with a card to identify people within Canada (although what you describe sounds like something from an episode of Smokey and the Bear). It is the human element that is being eliminated.
Honestly, there have got to be some really guilty conscience's leaking out here. There are thousands upon thousands of criminals in and out of Canada trying to do harm here. There are even thousands of more radical and alarming vocal disenters who on an outside chance may attract someones attention. You as Joe Nobody is just not interesting enough to warrant attention. Sorry. Don't want to burst anyones bubble here. I know for my part, I do a lot of crazy crap, and I could seriously care less who is watching. And I actually have a whole set of rules that can give me real penalties that most of you don't.
Brad, you got all bent earlier when you felt that I was bragging about the powers that exist for policing. That was not my intention. I am just trying to show that there is nothing special about this stuff (search warrants, bugs, GPS). It happens all the time, but only to the worst people whom you would want on a short leash.
So you don't trust the Government? No one really does completely. But what do you think, in your worst case scenario, they could do to misuse the information? Please illuminate this info boogie man you are so terrified by, because I for one just don't get it.