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#1
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posted to rec.boats
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USA Today reports this morning that Homeland Security has ordered one
of its divisions, (the USCG) to define a plan to positively identify boaters. The rationale is that small boats could be loaded with explosives and used to blow up military or commercial vessels, ala USS Cole. Until the USCG presents its plan we don't know the details, but possible requirements *could* include, at a minimum, carrying a national Boater ID card. (Something the Administration seems to favor, based on its proposals in several areas). These programs tend to grow like Topsy. Once the "ID Card" gets the camel nose under the tent, some bureaucrat on a 4-hour lunchbreak in DC will get the bright idea..."Hey, if we require every boat to carry a GPS transponder we'll need a new department with 50,000 employees and 200 locations to track the movement of every boat on the water. I can be appointed supervisor and get promoted from a GS(whatever) to a grade where I'll make another $100k a year! We can require every boater to buy a transponder, and put in a tax of $100 per boat per year to support the monitoring!" ID card?, maybe mandatory transponders?, perhaps eventually mandatory GPS "chips" carried on the person 24/7 so everybody can be monitored at all times wherever they go? If the 9-11 terrorists had a goal to prfoundly change our way of life in America, it looks like they succeeded. George Orwell was right, he just never anticipated the government would be spying on us all by satellite. At least it will be easy to know how the bad guys are. They will be the folks who don't carry the ID, don't use the transponder, and don't carry their mandatory GPS personal tracking chip 24-7. Of course we won't know *where* they are until it's too late.......so what's the real difference between all of the potential government snooping and just letting people live their lives with a modicum of privacy? |
#2
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posted to rec.boats
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On Oct 31, 12:28 pm, John H. wrote:
On Wed, 31 Oct 2007 07:17:12 -0700, Chuck Gould wrote: USA Today reports this morning that Homeland Security has ordered one of its divisions, (the USCG) to define a plan to positively identify boaters. The rationale is that small boats could be loaded with explosives and used to blow up military or commercial vessels, ala USS Cole. Until the USCG presents its plan we don't know the details, but possible requirements *could* include, at a minimum, carrying a national Boater ID card. (Something the Administration seems to favor, based on its proposals in several areas). Snipped I'm a believer in a national ID card, whether it helps ID boaters or not. Of course, many who are in favor of illegal immigration are opposed to same. Your rationale could easily be applied to boat or vehicle registration or birth certificates. Europeans don't leave home without their national ID. We should be doing the same. If the price of fuel keeps going up it won't be difficult to spot the bad guys, they'll be the only ones out there! |
#3
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posted to rec.boats
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On Wed, 31 Oct 2007 07:17:12 -0700, Chuck Gould
wrote: USA Today reports this morning that Homeland Security has ordered one of its divisions, (the USCG) to define a plan to positively identify boaters. Old news - in fact, I posted something about this a couple of months ago. This is very problematic both in terms of concept and execution. Ain't gonna happen. |
#4
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On Oct 31, 9:28?am, John H. wrote:
I'm a believer in a national ID card, whether it helps ID boaters or not. Of course, many who are in favor of illegal immigration are opposed to same. Your rationale could easily be applied to boat or vehicle registration or birth certificates. Europeans don't leave home without their national ID. We should be doing the same. There would be some practical applications. We have a strident but influential voice in our community who keeps demanding laws that would "put landlords in jail who rent to illegal immigrants!" As a landlord, I can say there a couple of problems with his plan.....first there is no exiting law that makes it a crime to rent shelter to a person based on their immigration status and secondly there is no workable way to sort out who is a legal resident and who is not. The illegals don't volunteer the fact that they swam across the Rio Grande last week, and citizens don't routinely carry any document that identifies them as such. I know for a fact that I will find myself in deep dog doo if I just summarily begin denying apartments to people simply because they "look Hispanic". (There are *plenty* of existing laws that address that!) There are illegal immigrants from Canada, Europe, etc....and lots of legal Hispanic Americans. Overall, I'm opposed to to asking people to carry general ID cards. First you need to carry one, then you need to show it along with your registration card to vote, then merchants begin demanding it for major transactions, then pretty soon you need to show it to get on a bus, cross a state border, buy an aspirin, etc......... And odd aspect of the discussion, IMO, centers on the fact that so many people who seem willing to form a militia and rise up against the FEDGOV before consenting to federal registry of their firearms apparently have very little difficulty with registering their persons. You may not be one of those people, JohnH- but I have met a fair number. While a federal boater ID card doesn't seem that aggregious, it can be a first step toward oppressive federal regulation. "Going fishing this weekend, John?" "Naw, dammit. Some government flunky lost my application for a 3-day navigation permit. *******s cashed my check for the $50 processing fee, however. Looks like I'll be back on the water for a weekend in another 45 days, assuming they don't lose the paperwork again." Wherever that is, I don't want to live there. :-) |
#5
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posted to rec.boats
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On Wed, 31 Oct 2007 08:58:37 -0700, Chuck Gould
wrote: secondly there is no workable way to sort out who is a legal resident and who is not. In a sense. I don't know what you do, but when we rent, positive identification, a credit check, valid bank account and positive work history are all part of qualifying to rent one of ours. While it dosen't keep one from renting to immigrants, legal or otherwise, it cuts down on the possibility. |
#6
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posted to rec.boats
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On Wed, 31 Oct 2007 08:48:09 -0700, Capt John
wrote: On Oct 31, 12:28 pm, John H. wrote: On Wed, 31 Oct 2007 07:17:12 -0700, Chuck Gould wrote: USA Today reports this morning that Homeland Security has ordered one of its divisions, (the USCG) to define a plan to positively identify boaters. The rationale is that small boats could be loaded with explosives and used to blow up military or commercial vessels, ala USS Cole. Until the USCG presents its plan we don't know the details, but possible requirements *could* include, at a minimum, carrying a national Boater ID card. (Something the Administration seems to favor, based on its proposals in several areas). Snipped I'm a believer in a national ID card, whether it helps ID boaters or not. Of course, many who are in favor of illegal immigration are opposed to same. Your rationale could easily be applied to boat or vehicle registration or birth certificates. Europeans don't leave home without their national ID. We should be doing the same. If the price of fuel keeps going up it won't be difficult to spot the bad guys, they'll be the only ones out there! ROTFL!!! |
#7
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posted to rec.boats
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On Wed, 31 Oct 2007 07:17:12 -0700, Chuck Gould
wrote: USA Today reports this morning that Homeland Security has ordered one of its divisions, (the USCG) to define a plan to positively identify boaters. The rationale is that small boats could be loaded with explosives and used to blow up military or commercial vessels, ala USS Cole. Until the USCG presents its plan we don't know the details, but possible requirements *could* include, at a minimum, carrying a national Boater ID card. (Something the Administration seems to favor, based on its proposals in several areas). Snipped I'm a believer in a national ID card, whether it helps ID boaters or not. Of course, many who are in favor of illegal immigration are opposed to same. Your rationale could easily be applied to boat or vehicle registration or birth certificates. Europeans don't leave home without their national ID. We should be doing the same. |
#8
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posted to rec.boats
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On Oct 31, 9:13?am, wrote:
On Wed, 31 Oct 2007 07:17:12 -0700, Chuck Gould wrote: USA Today reports this morning that Homeland Security has ordered one of its divisions, (the USCG) to define a plan to positively identify boaters. The rationale is that small boats could be loaded with explosives and used to blow up military or commercial vessels, ala USS Cole. Until the USCG presents its plan we don't know the details, but possible requirements *could* include, at a minimum, carrying a national Boater ID card. (Something the Administration seems to favor, based on its proposals in several areas). I don't know where USA Today got their information, but the USCG proposal specifically REJECTS creation of any additional or special ID. They adamantly DO NOT want one. The idea is that any photo ID such as a drivers license or state issued ID in lieu of a drivers license would be all that is needed. In a speech made in December of 2006, Admiral Thad Allen, ranking admiral in charge of the USCG, specifically proposed instituting a "national license" for pleasure boaters. The USCG has since made some PR-type statements disavowing that proposal. One of the challenges is that under existing law, a USCG boarding officer cannot ask anybody aboard the boat for identification, but only for documents identifying the boat. Some additional insight on this issue: http://www.nationaldefensemagazine.o.../Gov.Lacks.htm |
#9
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posted to rec.boats
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"Chuck Gould" wrote in message
ups.com... On Oct 31, 9:13?am, wrote: On Wed, 31 Oct 2007 07:17:12 -0700, Chuck Gould wrote: USA Today reports this morning that Homeland Security has ordered one of its divisions, (the USCG) to define a plan to positively identify boaters. The rationale is that small boats could be loaded with explosives and used to blow up military or commercial vessels, ala USS Cole. Until the USCG presents its plan we don't know the details, but possible requirements *could* include, at a minimum, carrying a national Boater ID card. (Something the Administration seems to favor, based on its proposals in several areas). I don't know where USA Today got their information, but the USCG proposal specifically REJECTS creation of any additional or special ID. They adamantly DO NOT want one. The idea is that any photo ID such as a drivers license or state issued ID in lieu of a drivers license would be all that is needed. In a speech made in December of 2006, Admiral Thad Allen, ranking admiral in charge of the USCG, specifically proposed instituting a "national license" for pleasure boaters. The USCG has since made some PR-type statements disavowing that proposal. One of the challenges is that under existing law, a USCG boarding officer cannot ask anybody aboard the boat for identification, but only for documents identifying the boat. Some additional insight on this issue: http://www.nationaldefensemagazine.o.../Gov.Lacks.htm That's weird. I haven't read the link yet, but if the CG thinks a crime has been committed, who are they supposed to call, who *IS* allowed to ask for ID? |
#10
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posted to rec.boats
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On Oct 31, 9:07?am, Short Wave Sportfishing
wrote: On Wed, 31 Oct 2007 08:58:37 -0700, Chuck Gould wrote: secondly there is no workable way to sort out who is a legal resident and who is not. In a sense. I don't know what you do, but when we rent, positive identification, a credit check, valid bank account and positive work history are all part of qualifying to rent one of ours. While it dosen't keep one from renting to immigrants, legal or otherwise, it cuts down on the possibility. We check ID, verify employment, and run a credit check as well. It's possible to get a driver's license without being a citizen, most of the illegals have a job of some kind, and it's pretty easy to qualify for many types of credit. It would be tough for a guy who just sneaked over the border last week to have enough stuff together, but pretty easy for somebody who came across last year to have as many credentials as a freshly graduated college student. |
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