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  1. #11
    Senior Member jp_48504's Avatar
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    I am encouraging my New Congressman Heath Schuler former football player to sign onto this. I wonder if he is smart enough to do the right thing for America or if he is looking to be defeated by a newcomer in 2008. I have no problem running against him. He might have more money than me, but something like that wouldn’t stop me.
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  2. #12
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    BTT
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  3. #13
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    No Response from Congressman Heath Schuler.
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  4. #14
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    Anyone hear from their CongressCritters about this issue?
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  5. #15
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    Actor Danny Glover will March to stop REAL ID
    3/15/2007

    Madison – Film star and activist Danny Glover will travel to Madison to join the March for Immigrant Rights which steps off at 2 pm on Saturday, March 24, at Brittingham Park proceeding to a rally at the State Capitol. Glover will be accompanied by Bruce Raynor, international president for UNITE HERE, a union representing a large number of immigrant workers in the hotel and apparel industries.

    Speakers at the State Capitol rally will call on Congress to craft a humane and workable immigration reform bill – and also call on the state of Wisconsin to put a moratorium on Act 126, the first step in implementing the federal REAL ID Act, scheduled to go into effect April 1.

    Organized labor, the Immigrant Workers Union and other allies are asking the legislature and Governor's office to take a closer look at the problems Act 126 (Legal Presence in Wisconsin) will create for everyone in the state. As of April 1, anyone applying for (or renewing) a Wisconsin driver's license must prove they are in the country legally, which may be difficult to do without a certified birth certificate or U.S. passport. See new requirements at: http://www.dot.wisconsin.gov/drivers/dr ... -legal.htm

    Measures like the Wisconsin law also mean more red tape, longer lines, repeat trips, and higher fees. Implementation of REAL ID is expected to cost $23 billion in taxpayer dollars nationally while doing little if anything to protect against terrorism. Critics of REAL ID, including the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), say the law will also increase the risk of identify theft, enable the routine tracking of individuals, and propel us toward a surveillance society.

    According to the ACLU, there is a growing rebellion against REAL ID nationwide. In January, the Maine legislature passed a resolution rejecting participation in the ID scheme and Idaho enacted a similar law this month. Measures to resist the implementation of Real ID have been passed by one chamber in the legislatures of ten states including Arizona and Georgia. Bills rejecting Real ID have also been introduced in Hawaii, Kentucky, Maryland, Massachusetts, Missouri, Oklahoma, Washington and West Virginia, with more expected in the coming weeks.

    Federal legislation to repeal REAL ID has also been introduced but Wisconsin is still moving forward with new restrictions.

    "We hope that the legislature and the Doyle administration will consider the best interests of the people in Wisconsin. REAL ID is far from being accepted at the state level and citizens are not prepared to meet the requirements of ACT 126," said Alex Gillis of the Immigrant Workers Union.

    "The state is moving forward with higher fees and a policy that will cause massive confusion and inconvenience at the DMV, while making our roads less safe with more unlicensed drivers," said Gillis. "The only wise and responsible way to proceed with ACT 126 is to wait until after comprehensive immigration reform and the fate of the REAL ID Act are decided in Congress."

    For more on Real ID visit the ACLU's website: http://www.RealNightmare.org

    About the campaign

    The Immigrant Workers Union is a grassroots organization focused on immigrant and worker rights advocacy in the Dane County area. Other organizations supporting the campaign against REAL ID and ACT 126 include: South Central Federation of Labor, the Interfaith Coalition for Worker's Justice, SEIU Local 1 "Justice for Janitors", SEIU District 1199W, PRD (Madison branch of the Mexican Party), UNITE HERE, immigrant rights groups in Beloit and Whitewater, and many others.

    http://www.wisbusiness.com/index.iml?Article=91034
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  6. #16
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    Editorial: Slow down on Real ID
    A Cap Times editorial, March 16, 2007

    Wisconsin is moving forward with implementation of new rules and regulations related to the federal "Real ID" law, which requires radical changes in how driver's licenses are issued and requires a host of other shifts designed to make it easier for the federal government to pry into our lives.

    Wisconsin has its eye on an April 1 deadline despite the fact that the American Civil Liberties Union and other groups say the law will increase identity theft, enable the routine tracking of individuals, and propel us toward a surveillance society.

    Those concerns have caused a number of federal officials to question the wisdom of the law and to propose its repeal. Smart states, such as Maine, are thinking about rejecting participation in the national scheme until all the issues are sorted out.

    Wisconsin should do the same. Instead of rushing to put in place a whole new set of rules and regulations by April 1, Wisconsin should adopt a wait-and-see approach, which has the advantage of protecting civil liberties and avoiding the waste of taxpayer dollars on an initiative that may well be scrapped.


    Published: March 15, 2007

    http://www.madison.com/tct/opinion/inde ... 81&ntpid=0
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  7. #17
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    Biblical prophecy finds way to legislators in battle over ID plan

    By Jon Gambrell, Associated Press Writer | March 11, 2007


    LITTLE ROCK --As state legislators line up against the U.S. government's attempt to standardize driver's licenses nationwide, some believe it is a beastly plot that will draw the world closer to the apocalypse.

    Their inspiration: a magazine dedicated to biblical prophecy. Their fear: national ID numbers given to residents are the mark of the beast, the 666 from the Book of Revelation.

    "The ramifications are horrendous," said Sen. Ruth Whitaker, whose resolution opposing the Real ID Act of 2005 has passed the Arkansas Senate. "If there is anything akin to Nazi Germany, it is this act."

    Congress hopes to reduce identity theft and boost national security by requiring people to use Real IDs to board airplanes, enter federal buildings and open some bank accounts. Those who dabble in biblical prophecy say the new government-issued numbers mark the beginning of the end.

    "People are very concerned if the federal government gives you a number, it will be the mark of the beast," said Missouri Rep. Jim Guest, the sponsor of a resolution similar to Whitaker's. "There are everyday people who get the connection to 666."

    Legislators in Georgia, Maine, Montana, New Mexico, Vermont, Washington state and Wyoming have also balked at Real ID and a bill filed in Congress by Rep. Thomas Allen, D-Maine, would repeal it. Many complain that states will have to pay billions of dollars to put the system in place by the end of 2009, as mandated by Congress.

    Resolutions in Arkansas, Georgia, Maine and Missouri were offered after legislators read materials, spoke to or had indirect contact with Endtime Ministries of Dallas, whose magazine, radio show and outreach examines current events through the prism of Christian apocalypse.

    Recent popular topics in Endtime magazine have also included speculation that Pope Benedict XVI is the false prophet from Revelation and that the United Nations' agenda includes establishing a global army, parliament, court and tax structure.

    "If we reach a point where every person is given a number without which they cannot buy or sell, and if your number is in a national database so that the government can track everywhere you go and everything you do, the word is control, and control and freedom are opposites," said Irwin Baxter Jr., who runs Endtime.

    Any effort to repeal the Real ID Act is not to stall the eventual end of the world but to ensure the country stands against the Antichrist, Baxter said.

    "Daniel 11:40-45 reveals that there will be nations opposing the Antichrist during the Great Tribulation," according to an Endtime magazine article cited by Whitaker, who said she obtained it from Maine Senate Democratic Majority Leader Elizabeth Mitchell.

    "We want the United States, Australia, and as many other nations as possible to be on the side that will fight Satan's plan to number the human race," says the article. It calls the Real ID Act "the death of freedom."

    In an interview, Whitaker told The Associated Press the idea of being assigned a number was frightening.

    "Your name will not mean anything anymore," Whitaker said. "You'll just be known as X203 or something."

    Whitaker acknowledged that she has a Social Security number assigned to her by the government, but said it wasn't as intrusive as the Real ID Act. Also, Arkansas' child-support law requires people to provide a Social Security number as a cross-reference with their driver's license number.

    Baxter said that, under Real ID, Americans must have a government number to hold jobs and have bank accounts. While the same could be said for Social Security numbers, Baxter said Real ID would force all of that information into an easily accessed database for the first time.

    Mitchell described her fear of Real ID in terms of losing a key ring. If a thief finds a key ring, the most he'll know is that someone drives a Chevrolet or has a bicycle or a certain type of deadbolt -- not where those things are.

    If a Real ID database can be hacked, a thief could hold the key to a whole lot more -- such as banking information and travel habits, Mitchell said.

    But "nobody in Maine ever thought about" the biblical connection before voting on her resolutions, Mitchell said, or if they did, "they didn't share it with me.

    "We're pretty pedestrian," she said.

    With a number of state legislators contacting her office about their Real ID resolution, Mitchell said a staffer may have taken all of the articles she's received and sent them on without vetting their content -- including one from Endtime.

    Guest, a Missouri Republican who has spoken on Endtime's radio program about Real ID, said legislators from 45 states had promised him they would push some type of resolution denouncing Real ID. He said his constituents share fears about the ID being the mark of the beast.

    The 666 from Revelation, sometimes translated as 616, is generally regarded as a coded reference to the Roman emperor Nero, who persecuted early Christians. The book says those who receive his mark will be thrown into the eternal abyss at the end of time.

    Mitch Seabaugh, the Republican majority whip in the Georgia Legislature, also has appeared on the Endtime radio show. His bill authorizing Georgia's governor to delay implementing the act until privacy concerns are met passed out of the state Senate in February.

    U.S. Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas, also has appeared on the Endtime radio program.

    Fears about the federal government and the mark of the beast stretch back 100 years. Carl Raschke, chairman of religious studies department at the University of Denver, said 666 worries came up when the U.S. established Federal Reserve banks and the Social Security system. The fears are anchored in St. John's warnings about the Roman government -- which conducted census surveys in Jesus' time -- that are recorded in Revelation, he said.

    "Whenever you have an active government that seems like it's trying to gather data on its citizens or take away certain freedoms, pretty often this particular prophesy is cited," he said.

    http://link.toolbot.com/boston.com/69391
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  8. #18
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    Whitaker acknowledged that she has a Social Security number assigned to her by the government, but said it wasn't as intrusive as the Real ID Act. Also, Arkansas' child-support law requires people to provide a Social Security number as a cross-reference with their driver's license number.

    Baxter said that, under Real ID, Americans must have a government number to hold jobs and have bank accounts. While the same could be said for Social Security numbers, Baxter said Real ID would force all of that information into an easily accessed database for the first time.
    This looks a lot like misdirection to me, just like the ID chip implant. As is clear from the above, we don't need a new ID system to have the charagma of the Beast - we already have it in the SSN.

    Note: The legislation that removed the remaining deterrents to using the SSN as a unversal identifier and that allowed states to require it for drivers and occupational licenses is Title 42, Sec. 666.

  9. #19
    Senior Member jp_48504's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by CrocketsGhost
    Whitaker acknowledged that she has a Social Security number assigned to her by the government, but said it wasn't as intrusive as the Real ID Act. Also, Arkansas' child-support law requires people to provide a Social Security number as a cross-reference with their driver's license number.

    Baxter said that, under Real ID, Americans must have a government number to hold jobs and have bank accounts. While the same could be said for Social Security numbers, Baxter said Real ID would force all of that information into an easily accessed database for the first time.
    This looks a lot like misdirection to me, just like the ID chip implant. As is clear from the above, we don't need a new ID system to have the charagma of the Beast - we already have it in the SSN.

    Note: The legislation that removed the remaining deterrents to using the SSN as a unversal identifier and that allowed states to require it for drivers and occupational licenses is Title 42, Sec. 666.
    Yes, the plan is in motion, but we can and should always fight that plan.
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  10. #20
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    SUMMARY AS OF:
    2/10/2005--Passed House amended. (There is 1 other summary)

    REAL ID Act of 2005 - Title I: Amendments to Federal Laws to Protect Against Terrorist Entry - (Sec. 101) Amends Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) provisions concerning asylum to: (1) authorize the Secretary of Homeland Security, in addition to the Attorney General, to grant asylum (retroactive to March 1, 2003); (2) require asylum applicants to prove that race, religion, nationality, membership in a particular social group, or political opinion was or will be (if removed) the central reason for their persecution; and (3) provide that an applicant's testimony may be sufficient to sustain this burden of proof only if the trier of fact determines that it is credible, persuasive, and fact-specific. Requires corroborating evidence where requested by the trier of fact unless the applicant does not have the evidence and cannot reasonably obtain it without departing the United States. States that the inability to obtain corroborating evidence does not excuse the applicant from meeting his or her burden of proof.

    Lists factors relevant to credibility determinations in asylum cases, including (but not limited to) the: (1) demeanor, candor, or responsiveness of the applicant or witness; (2) inherent plausibility of the applicant's or witness' account; (3) consistency between the applicant's or witness' written and oral statements; (4) internal consistency of each such statement; (5) consistency of such statements with other evidence of record (including the Department of State's reports on country conditions); and (6) any inaccuracies or falsehoods in such statements regardless of whether they go to the heart of the applicant's claim. States that there is no presumption of credibility.

    Makes this Act's provisions regarding proof requirements and credibility determinations in asylum proceedings applicable to other requests from relief for removal.

    Limits judicial review of determinations regarding the availability of corroborating evidence.

    Removes the numerical limit on the number of aliens granted asylum who may become lawful permanent residents in any fiscal year (currently set at 10,000).

    Repeals provisions of the Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act of 2004 (IRTPA) requiring a study and report on terrorists in the asylum system.

    (Sec. 102) Amends the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996 (IIRIRA) to authorize the Secretary of Homeland Security (the Secretary), in the Secretary's sole discretion, to waive all laws as necessary to ensure expeditious construction of certain barriers and roads at the U.S. border. Prohibits courts, administrative agencies, and other entities from reviewing the Secretary's decision or from ordering relief for damages alleged to have resulted from such decision.

    (Sec. 103) Expands the grounds of inadmissibility and deportability due to terrorist or terrorist-related activity to include aliens who: (1) are representatives of terrorist organizations or political, social, or other groups that endorse or espouse terrorist activity; (2) are members of designated terrorist organizations; (3) are members of organizations that engage in specified acts of terrorism; (4) endorse or espouse terrorist activity or persuade others to do so; or (5) have received military-type training from or on behalf of any organization that at the time was a terrorist organization.

    Modifies the provision defining "engage in terrorist activity" to eliminate the possibility of discretionary waivers of inadmissibility for material support of organizations or individuals that have engaged in terrorist activity.

    Expands the definition of "terrorist organization" to incorporate a broader range of underlying activities.

    Makes this section applicable to removal proceedings instituted, and grounds of inadmissibility occurring, before, on, or after the enactment of this Act.

    (Sec. 104) Expands the grounds of deportability due to terrorist activity to include aliens who would be inadmissible on terrorism-related grounds.

    Makes this section applicable to: (1) removal proceedings instituted before, on, or after the date of enactment of this Act; and (2) grounds of inadmissibility, excludability, deportation, or removal occurring or existing before, on, or after such date.

    Repeals overlapping deportation provisions of the IRTPA.

    (Sec. 105) Bars inadmissible arriving aliens from seeking judicial review of removal orders through habeas corpus, mandamus, or other extraordinary petitions.

    Imposes a similar bar on denials of discretionary relief and orders against criminal aliens, with an exception for petitions for review concerning constitutional claims or pure questions of law.

    Establishes the INA's judicial review provisions as the sole avenue for challenging removal orders and reviewing claims arising under the United Nations Convention Against Torture and Other Forms of Cruel, Inhuman, or Degrading Treatment or Punishment.

    Requires petitions for review filed under pre-IIRIRA law to be treated as if filed under INA as amended by this section. States that such petitions shall be the sole and exclusive means for judicial review of orders of deportation or exclusion.

    (Sec. 106) Sets forth requirements for delivery bonds (guaranteeing delivery of an alien against whom the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has issued an order to show cause or a notice to appear) and bonding agents. Requires such bonds to expire one year from the date of issue, at cancellation or upon surrender of the principal, or immediately upon nonpayment of the renewal premium. Authorizes annual renewal.

    Requires cancellation of delivery bonds and exoneration of the surety: (1) for nonrenewal after the principal's surrender for removal; (2) if the surety or bonding agent provides reasonable evidence of misrepresentation or fraud in the bond application; (3) upon the death or incarceration of the principal or the surety's inability to produce the principal for medical reasons; (4) if the principal is detained by a law enforcement agency; (5) if it can be established that the principal departed the United States without permission; (6) if the foreign state of which the principal is a national is designated under temporary protected status provisions after posting of the bond; or (7) if the principal is surrendered to DHS, upon removal by the surety or bonding agent.

    Authorizes the surrender of the principal to DHS for removal at any time, before bond conditions are breached, if the surety or bonding agent believes that the principal has become a flight risk.

    States that a principal may be surrendered without the return of any bond premium if the principal: (1) changes address without providing advance written notice to the surety, bonding agent, and Secretary; (2) hides or is concealed from the surety, bonding agent, or Secretary; (3) fails to report to the Secretary annually; or (4) violates the contract with the bonding agent or surety, commits any act that may lead to a breach of the bond, or otherwise violates bond obligations or conditions.

    Gives bonding agents or sureties desiring to surrender the principal the right to: (1) petition the Secretary or any Federal court, without payment of fees or court costs, for an arrest warrant; (2) receive two certified copies of such warrant and the bond undertaking; and (3) pursue, apprehend, detain, and surrender the principal to any DHS detention official or facility or to any detention facility authorized to hold Federal detainees.

    Requires all delivery bonds to be secured by a corporate surety that is certified as an acceptable surety on Federal bonds and whose name appears on Treasury Department Circular 570 and to set forth specified information. Requires information about warrants for a principal's arrest to be entered into the National Crime Information Center database. Gives bonding agents or sureties complete access to information about the principal held by Federal, State, or local governments (or any related subsidiary or police agency) that the Secretary determines may be helpful in locating or surrendering the principal. Establishes graduated penalties for bonding agents and sureties who fail to surrender a principal within 15 months of the issuance of an arrest warrant, subject to waiver.

    Gives bonding agents or sureties the absolute right to locate, apprehend, arrest, detain, and surrender any principal, wherever he or she may be found, who violates any bond term or condition. Limits total liability on any surety undertaking to the face amount of the bond.

    Makes this section applicable to bonds and surety undertakings executed before, on or after the date of enactment of this Act.

    (Sec. 107) Requires aliens arrested and detained pending a removal decision to post a delivery bond of at least $10,000 (currently, $1,500) in order to be released from custody, unless an immigration judge orders such alien's release on his or her own recognizance upon a finding that the alien is not a flight risk and is not a threat to the United States.

    (Sec. 10 Requires the Secretary to take into custody any alien subject to a final order of removal and to cancel bond if the alien is produced within the prescribed time limit whether or not DHS accepts custody. States that the obligor on the bond shall be deemed to have substantially performed all conditions and shall be released from liability if the alien is produced within such time limit.
    Makes this section applicable to all immigration bonds posted before, on, or after the date of enactment of this Act.

    Title II: Improved Security for Driver's Licenses and Personal Identification Cards - (Sec. 202) Prohibits Federal agencies from accepting State issued driver's licenses or identification cards unless such documents are determined by the Secretary to meet minimum security requirements, including the incorporation of specified data, a common machine-readable technology, and certain anti-fraud security features.

    Sets forth minimum issuance standards for such documents that require: (1) verification of presented information; (2) evidence that the applicant is lawfully present in the United States; and (3) issuance of temporary driver's licenses or identification cards to persons temporarily present that are valid only for their period of authorized stay (or for one year where the period of stay is indefinite).

    (Sec. 203) Requires States, as a condition of receiving grant funds or other financial assistance under this title, to participate in the interstate compact regarding the sharing of driver's license data (the Driver License Agreement).

    (Sec. 204) Amends the Federal criminal code to prohibit trafficking in actual as well as false authentication features for use in false identification documents, document-making implements, or means of identification.

    Requires the Secretary to enter into the appropriate aviation security screening database information regarding persons convicted of using false driver's licenses at airports.

    (Sec. 205) Authorizes the Secretary to make grants to assist States in conforming to the minimum standards set forth in this title.

    (Sec. 206) Gives the Secretary all authority to issue regulations, set standards, and issue grants under this title. Gives the Secretary of Transportation all authority to certify compliance with such standards.

    Authorizes the Secretary to grant States an extension of time to meet the minimum document requirements and issuance standards of this title, with adequate justification.

    (Sec. 207) Repeals overlapping document provisions of the IRTPA.

    (Sec. 20 States that nothing in this title shall be construed to affect the authorities and responsibilities of the Secretary of Transportation or the States under existing laws governing the establishment of a National Driver Register.

    Title III: Border Infrastructure and Technology Integration - (Sec. 301) Directs the Under Secretary of Homeland Security for Border and Transportation Security to study the technology, equipment, and personnel needed to address security vulnerabilities within the United States for each Customs and Border Protection field office that has responsibility for U.S. borders with Canada and Mexico.

    (Sec. 302) Directs the Under Secretary of Homeland Security for Science and Technology to develop and report to specified congressional committees on a pilot program to utilize, or increase the utilization of, ground surveillance technologies to enhance U.S. border security. Requires technologies to include video camera, sensor, and motion detection technologies.

    (Sec. 303) Requires the Secretary, acting through the Under Secretary for Border and Transportation Security, to develop and implement a plan to: (1) improve communications systems of Federal agencies to facilitate integrated communications among such agencies, State and local government agencies, and Indian tribes on border security matters; and (2) enhance related information sharing among such entities.
    http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/bdquery/z ... D&summ2=m&

    By no means is the bill perfect, but I can find a lot more to like than dislike. Furthermore, no one is being "branded" or "numbered" as some have suggested. Furthermore, we need a national standard for the issuance of driver's licenses. Currently there are seven states that openly issue licenses to criminal aliens: Connecticut, Georgia, Minnesota, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, and West Virginia. Additionally, legal residency is not required in these states: Alaska, Hawaii, Illinois, Maryland, Michigan, Nevada, New York, Oregon, Rhode Island, Texas, Utah, Vermont, Washington, West Virginia and Wisconsin. In addition, states that have verification loopholes are: the District of Columbia, Indiana, Iowa, Maine, Massachusetts, Montana, Nebraska, New Hampshire, North Carolina, North Dakota, and Tennessee. Now, you tell me which states are yelling the loudest to repeal the REAL ID Act and I can probably point them out from the states I've listed above. Moreover, doesn't it bother you to side with the National Council of La Raza (NCLR) on this issue'?

    For those waiting for the perfect solution, you'll be waiting along time.

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