People who attempt to resist the forthcoming Big Brother
ID card and database system in the UK will never be able
to leave the country according to the Government official
in charge of the scheme.
As the UK
Daily Mail reported last weekend:
James Hall, the official in charge of
the supposedly-voluntary scheme, said the Government would
allow people to opt out - but in return they must "forgo
the ability" to have a travel document.
As of 2009 anyone who applies for a passport
in Britain will also be issued with an ID card, for which
they must also provide fingerprints, biometric details
such as a facial scan and a wealth of personal details
- including second homes, driving licence and insurance
numbers.
When asked what would happen to ID card
refusniks, Mr Hall stated: "There is no need to register
and have fingerprints taken - but you will forgo the ability
to have a passport".
Critics have denounced the idea of such
restriction of movement as a gross violation of human
rights.
Just as we
reported last January, a supposed "opt out"
clause, which was demanded by the Lords in order for the
ID cards bill to pass Parliament, will not matter a jot
as it will only apply to the actual issuing of the plastic
card.
At the time the ninnying liberal press reported
this as a great "defeat" for the government,
barely looking below the surface of what the actual bill
said. Now it has been confirmed that although you can
obtain a passport without an ID card, you must still provide
the biometric data which will still be placed on the national
database. In one final insult you must also pay the same
elevated price as you would to obtain a combined passport/ID
card.
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The card is somewhat of of trojan horse,
as under a so called government "compromise",
anyone who renews a passport will have their details put
on the national ID database - but will not have to get
a card until 2010.
The government has also accounted for those
who plan to renew their passports before ID cards start
being issued.
Up until recently Britons were able to renew
their passports for periods of ten years at any time.
This meant that many were planning to renew right before
it became compulsory to be issued with an ID card when
renewing your passport in 2009, giving ten years of ID
free existence.
The government has put the brakes on such
tactics by simply
announcing, with no debate or legislation, that passports
can now only be renewed for 9 months in advance.
In further developments, more details emerged
yesterday of how the government plans to sell
access to personal information stored on the database
to banks and other private companies, for around 60p a
time, in order to finance the scheme which is
expected to run into the billions according to studies
by leading economic experts.
A top firm of headhunters is already working
for the government, seeking a consultancy expert to market
the benefits of the database to the private sector.
The government sold the idea of the ID card database
by saying it would make our information more secure. Tony
Blair
said this would protect, not infringe our liberties.
Selling
the information of 44 million British citizens to private
companies. How secure and protecting is that?
Even the biometric information is to be outsourced as
checks on applications and the like are to be shifted
to places as far flung as Mumbai,
Delhi and Islamabad.
Joe public will not be allowed access to the ID database
but whichever companies the government sees fit to sell
the information to will. And of course the intelligence
services will be given unprecedented access. You will
of course have "voluntarily" given up your details,
thus you will have no course of reciprocation at any time
in the future.
Recently
leaked Whitehall documents have shown that ID cards
will not be officially made compulsory for more than a
decade, under present plans. “Compulsion will be
triggered once 80% take-up is achieved in [the first quarter
of] 2019,” they state. “It is assumed that,
following compulsion, a 100% registration will be achieved
two years later.”
The same documents also revealed that children as young
as 11 will also have their fingerprints taken and stored,
even though the ID card bill specifically only applies
to adults above the age of 16.
The London Times reported: