So the argument is that people who can't find the means to get an ID for 
driving, buying alcohol, starting utility services or cashing in their welfare 
checks are the same people who are clamoring to vote at the local high school?  



> Matthew Small <[email protected]> wrote:
> >
> > In all seriousness, why is it a problem for one particular segment 
> of the population to show an ID just to prove identity?
> 
> I think the idea is that the poor, the homeless, and others may be
> generally unorganized or simply not need their ID and/or not have one.
> 
> 
> In other words, in our daily corporate lives everyone wears khakis,
> polos, and pays with a credit card but there's another segment of the
> population that lives check to check, doesn't have a car (no license),
> 
> etc but they are citizens.
> 
> The idea is that these people are disenfranchised since they're
> Americans, born here, living here, and simply do not have the
> documents we all consider a routine part of life.  They are too busy
> just trying to survive every day and generally don't have time or
> money to get to the government office 50 miles away to file the 
> papers
> and wait for documents to come to an address they might not have.

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