I am actually a supporter of having passports if you are coming and 
going via an airplane into the USA.

When I went into Germany, before the wall went down, we had to go 
through, as all do, the "points" where we were "checked" for proper 
papers, in 1985, I was a teen and all I was told was that we had to 
get through the bad section to get to the good section by the 
teachers, as idiotic as it sounds, I was told that, again, the wall 
was still up seperating east and west Germany.

Well, after our visit, we were off to Amercia, and boy, wasn't that a 
difference...we just skipped onto the plane.

I found it scary back then, but see now how lax America has been on 
these simple things. 

I do not think it crosses the line into effecting my personal 
information. 

***********



--- In [email protected], "Victor Bozzo" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
wrote:
>
>  
> Back to Story - Help
> 
> 
> U.S. to implement passport requirement 
> By BEVERLEY LUMPKIN, Associated Press WriterWed Nov 22, 1:04 PM ET 
> 
> Virtually all air travelers entering the United States beginning 
Jan. 23 will need to show passports - even U.S. citizens, the 
Homeland Security Department announced Wednesday.
> 
> Until now, U.S. citizens, travelers from Canada and Bermuda, and 
some travelers from Mexico who have special border-crossing cards for 
frequent visitors were allowed to show other proofs of 
identification, such as drivers' licenses or birth certificates.
> 
> "The ability to misuse travel documents to enter this country opens 
the door for a terrorist to carry out an attack," Homeland Security 
Secretary Michael Chertoff said in a statement.
> 
> Chertoff, who disclosed the effective date in an interview with The 
Associated Press on Tuesday, said the change was a crucial next step 
to helping ensure the nation's security.
> 
> The department had been expected to institute the passport 
requirement for air travelers around the beginning of the year. 
Setting the date on Jan. 23 pushes the start past the holiday season.
> 
> "Each of these steps raises the bar to an attack. None of this is 
perfect. None of them is foolproof. But we're always better off when 
we build higher levels of security," he said in the interview.
> 
> "Right now, there are 8,000 different state and local entities in 
the U.S. issuing birth certificates and driver's licenses," Chertoff 
said. Having to distinguish phony from real in so many different 
documents "puts an enormous burden on our Customs and Border 
inspectors," he said.
> 
> In a few cases, other documents still may be used for air entry 
into the U.S. by some frequent travelers between the U.S. and Canada, 
members of the American military on official business and some U.S. 
merchant mariners.
> 
> Under a separate program, Homeland Security plans to require all 
travelers entering the U.S. by land or sea, including Americans, to 
show passports or an alternative security identification card when 
entering the U.S. starting as early as January 2008.
> 
> The Homeland Security Department estimates that about one in four 
Americans has a passport. Some people have balked at the $97 price 
tag.
> 
> The Sept. 11 Commission said in its report, "For terrorists, travel 
documents are as important as weapons."
> 
> The commission recommended strengthening security of travel 
documents. A 2004 law passed by Congress mandated the change to 
require passports as the only acceptable travel document, with few 
exceptions, but the exact date had been in question.
> 
> Canadian officials and some members of Congress from border states 
have expressed concern that the changes could interfere with travel 
and commerce.
> 
> Chertoff said his agency's data revealed that in September 2006, 90 
percent of passengers leaving from Canadian airports had passports. 
The department estimated that 69 percent of U.S. air travelers to 
Canada, 58 percent of U.S. travelers to Mexico, and 75 percent of 
U.S. travelers to the Caribbean hold passports.
> 
> "Could James Bond and Q come up with a fake passport?" Chertoff 
asked, referring to the fictional British spy and his espionage 
agency's technical genius. Of course, he replied, because "nothing is 
completely perfect."
> 
> Still, he said, with new technology, it is increasingly difficult 
to forge passports, and having just one document to scrutinize should 
make inspection easier for both inspectors and travelers.
> 
> 
> Copyright © 2006 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. The 
information contained in the AP News report may not be published, 
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without the prior written 
authority of The Associated Press. 
> 
> 
>       Copyright © 2006 Yahoo! Inc. All rights reserved.
>       Questions or Comments
>       Privacy Policy -Terms of Service - Copyright/IP Policy - Ad 
Feedback 
>  
> 
> 
> 
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>



Reply via email to