Re: Papers Please?
Posted: Sat Oct 04, 2008 8:48 pm
i'll just use this famous quote...
didnt doubt your opinion on that subject. jus thought you werent considering it as much as is necessary. the safety of the vulnerable is of greater importance than the liberty of scum.
im strongly against capital punishment for any crime. although if guilt can be proven beyond any doubt at all (as in its actually 110% certain the person did it) id be in favor of executing violent rapists and pedophiles. my concern would be an innocent person being killed for a crime they didnt commit. you cant take that back. a prisoner can be released if wrongly convicted
hmmmm. . . well im not madly in favor of the cards but i think they would have uses. for example giving one to every violent criminal and foreign national in the uk would increase efficiency and make it easier for us to deal with them. thats definitely good thing.
i didnt really need the government to tell me whether the cards are needed. it seems a natural progression (and not because ive been conditioned etc lol). think of driving licenses. they moved from paper to proper cards and this makes it harder to fake them. this helps the police on a huge scale over time. think of all the man-hours saved by them being able to know who someone is if they have their license. biometric data cards is even harder to forge. i think this is good.
as far as i know the standard cards being brought out will not be able to track peoples movements. oyster cards will be better at tracking where people go than the new id cards. so their monitering ability isnt exactly astonishing.
i think one of the biggest problems the cards face is being secure. protecting the data is paramount.
i dont mind the general population being given cards on the condition they are not required to carry them at all times. that would be a step too far. most people would carry them anyway with their other ID. they could prove beyond doubt who they are when they need to. this would help them.
personally i think more money could be spent on iris, fingerprint, dna scanning, facial recognition techniques. they would not need a card. but this should be controlled to avoid the demolition man scenario. the killer takes the doctors eye on a pen to fool the scanner and open the door.
all i say is that if the government tries to force law abiding citizens to carry these cards there will be huge public anger. i for one would not tolerate it. a government would not do that as it would be suicide for them.
i tend to view the government as a clumsy child trying to work a new toy. she doesnt know exactly how to work it and she makes mistakes while learning but the intention is good. government isnt perfect. it has and will **Filtered** up from time to time, or often lol. but its inherently good and works for the people. parliament is made of people after all (except david cameron who is a robot, sent from the future to be smug).
btw this is that research i mentioned earlier:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/7649970.stm
and a little quiz for ya:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/programmes/6161425.stm
i got:
'26-50
Your responses indicate that you have a medium level of belief in conspiracy theories. You may well be quite trusting of your close friends, partners, those you work with and others but sometimes cannot be sure of all of them all of the time. You may also feel that your voice in terms of wider political decisions is rarely heard or acted upon, perhaps because government and big business is more concerned with their own interests than with those of the average person.'
you will either crash the bbc website or 20mins after you finish the secret police will kick your door down.
dont eat yellow snow
[KMA]Avenger wrote:2ndly, i have a wife and kids and if it was up to me, rapists and pedophiles would not live long enough to see an ID card or a tag, i REALLY shouldn't have to say that, should i ?!
didnt doubt your opinion on that subject. jus thought you werent considering it as much as is necessary. the safety of the vulnerable is of greater importance than the liberty of scum.
im strongly against capital punishment for any crime. although if guilt can be proven beyond any doubt at all (as in its actually 110% certain the person did it) id be in favor of executing violent rapists and pedophiles. my concern would be an innocent person being killed for a crime they didnt commit. you cant take that back. a prisoner can be released if wrongly convicted
.[KMA]Avenger wrote:are you in favour of the ID card for the general public as something you believe in, or as something the govt has told you is needed for what ever reason that maybe?
hmmmm. . . well im not madly in favor of the cards but i think they would have uses. for example giving one to every violent criminal and foreign national in the uk would increase efficiency and make it easier for us to deal with them. thats definitely good thing.
i didnt really need the government to tell me whether the cards are needed. it seems a natural progression (and not because ive been conditioned etc lol). think of driving licenses. they moved from paper to proper cards and this makes it harder to fake them. this helps the police on a huge scale over time. think of all the man-hours saved by them being able to know who someone is if they have their license. biometric data cards is even harder to forge. i think this is good.
as far as i know the standard cards being brought out will not be able to track peoples movements. oyster cards will be better at tracking where people go than the new id cards. so their monitering ability isnt exactly astonishing.
i think one of the biggest problems the cards face is being secure. protecting the data is paramount.
i dont mind the general population being given cards on the condition they are not required to carry them at all times. that would be a step too far. most people would carry them anyway with their other ID. they could prove beyond doubt who they are when they need to. this would help them.
personally i think more money could be spent on iris, fingerprint, dna scanning, facial recognition techniques. they would not need a card. but this should be controlled to avoid the demolition man scenario. the killer takes the doctors eye on a pen to fool the scanner and open the door.
all i say is that if the government tries to force law abiding citizens to carry these cards there will be huge public anger. i for one would not tolerate it. a government would not do that as it would be suicide for them.
i tend to view the government as a clumsy child trying to work a new toy. she doesnt know exactly how to work it and she makes mistakes while learning but the intention is good. government isnt perfect. it has and will **Filtered** up from time to time, or often lol. but its inherently good and works for the people. parliament is made of people after all (except david cameron who is a robot, sent from the future to be smug).
btw this is that research i mentioned earlier:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/7649970.stm
and a little quiz for ya:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/programmes/6161425.stm
i got:
'26-50
Your responses indicate that you have a medium level of belief in conspiracy theories. You may well be quite trusting of your close friends, partners, those you work with and others but sometimes cannot be sure of all of them all of the time. You may also feel that your voice in terms of wider political decisions is rarely heard or acted upon, perhaps because government and big business is more concerned with their own interests than with those of the average person.'