Gransnet forums

Chat

The case against ID cards

(344 Posts)
volver Sat 05-Nov-22 21:17:21

We wandered into ID cards on another thread so I thought I’d start a separate thread so we could discuss it without derailing the original thread. There is often talk about how it would make life easier because you’d have a way of proving who you are, where you live etc. All our entitlements etc could be linked to the card.

Does that not scare people?

The government, of whatever colour, would be able to track you and your actions. If they or the police think that you are doing/have done something they don’t like, they could demand to see your “papers”. I have never had to prove who I am just to “be” in this country, and I don’t see any need to start now.

I understand having to prove that you are who you say you are to drive a car, for instance, because that is a responsible activity and you have to prove you are up to it. But I don’t have to prove that I’m up to just walking about in this country, wherever I want to be.

So if anyone is going to say something like “it would help with voter fraud”, please explain how having a biometric card in your wallet, and all your data linked to it, would actually solve the problem. (That problem doesn’t exit, of course, but that’s a whole different thread.)

You might say that they know all this already, mobile phones, bank cards etc. But none of these things are compulsory. I could give them all up tomorrow and I’d be quite entitled to do that; nobody gets to know what I’m up to just for the sake of it. That would be surveillance, and we know how that ends up. smile

Riggie Mon 07-Nov-22 12:07:22

I dont have a passport as I haven't been abroad for over 25 years. And thst was in my Maiden name anyway. I still have an old driving licence. So no photo ID until I got my bjss pass and that's not always accepted. To get a passport or photo licence there's cost and the palaver of having to find someone to sign a photo.

My disbled son also has no photo ID. Same thing - he's unlikely to go abroad given his needs and he'll never be able to drive.

So actually yes. Some form of official ID at a low cost (or free) would be useful.

pce612 Mon 07-Nov-22 12:02:49

aHere in Scotland you can apply for an entitlement card which has your photo on; it gives you free bus travel, acts as a library card and probably more.
I think that every person should have their DNA recorded, babies at birth.
Would be a deterrent to crime and helpful in identifying bodies with no other ID, for example after the dreadful London underground fire some years ago.
Also to help prevent adopted siblings getting together and having children (as happened recently in the Netherlands).
Could also be useful to track inherited genetic problems.

sandelf Mon 07-Nov-22 11:54:45

Voter fraud DOES exist - linked to postal voting so, without altering how that works, ID cards would not change it. My own experience of this is in inner city Coventry. Certain streets are almost transplants of villages in Bangla Desh. The senior man collects your postal vote papers and as a service deals with completion and return. The ladies are learning English and working with UK culture people, so it is getting harder to do. Other bad areas are Northern Ireland. www.electoralcommission.org.uk/who-we-are-and-what-we-do/our-views-and-research/our-research/electoral-fraud-data/2019-electoral-fraud-data

GranJan60 Mon 07-Nov-22 11:51:07

Can’t see the problem with ID card. It’s Right wing Gov that’s the problem. In EU you carry ID card now with fingerprint and photo-more secure than passport and can be used for travel. No-one forced to show without good reason. If used here could replace passport and help with travel delays on entering EU.

CleoPanda Mon 07-Nov-22 11:51:06

I’d love an ID card. I have no current/valid driving license or passport. All the utilities/bills are not in my name.
I couldn’t care less about tracking etc. I’ve been online for 20 + years; had a smartphone since they were invented etc.
If there’s a policeman on the street ( yay) and he wants to know who I am to eliminate me from his tracking of would be terrorists, I’d be happy to produce my ID.
Currently I don’t seem to have any acceptable ID and wish I did!
No systems will ever be perfect or foolproof but I’d be totally glad to comply with something that was designed to support the police/authorities if it helped eliminate me from their investigations.
As this is meant to be a discussion, I assume I’m as entitled to have my string opinion as much as the OP holds the opposite view. 😊

Nannashirlz Mon 07-Nov-22 11:45:32

Being an ex army wife we had to carry ID cards all the time. Personal I don’t see a problem. You on cctv everywhere you go you have a phone bank card etc docz Hosptial you already being followed and watched so personal don’t see a problem unless you got something to hid

Nannan2 Mon 07-Nov-22 11:44:42

No dont see how/why its neccessary.The govt already know too much about everyone as it is!

mokryna Mon 07-Nov-22 11:43:41

volver

^Most of Europe has ID cards, so has Australia.^

Australia doesn't have id cards.

I've lived there as well smile

Well, we needed some form of identification in Alice Springs to buy petrol. My SiL’ s driving license from Sydney wasn’t enough. I don’t know what the locals do but it was the law, no identification to verify with the police, no petrol. Same law for the local bottle shop.

maddyone Mon 07-Nov-22 11:39:17

Everyone will need to deal with Probate at some point of their lives. If they have no passport or driving license, that will prove very, very difficult. Probate do not accept bus passes, rail cards, credit cards, and the like as proper ID.

maddyone Mon 07-Nov-22 11:36:54

As I said up thread, if you need to go to Probate ever, you will need proper ID. They don’t accept bus passes. They accept passports or driving licences providing the license has photo ID. They also require further evidence that you are who you say you are such as a bank statement with your name and address on it.

Dandylion Mon 07-Nov-22 11:36:44

Yes, I lived in Brussels for some years and you had an Identity Card issued by the local Maison Communale. Was never asked for it, but it was useful sometimes - I forgot my British passport once and was able to come into and out of the UK with it! I don't see the problem with ID cards - when collecting a Post Office parcel I'd rather prove who I was with a British ID card, than certify my citizenship through B&Q!

WendyBT Mon 07-Nov-22 11:35:51

Well I have to have ID for work to prove who I am etc. plus loads of other identification such as bank cards. NHS nos blah blah so honestly it wouldn't bother me at all.

Baggs Mon 07-Nov-22 11:35:33

Neilspurgeon0

I don’t have a driving licence, and my passport lives at home but my bus pass seems good enough for most people who ask me for ID, like the shops and restaurants where I use my blue light card. I am not actually against an ID card, but cannot really see why I need yet another one just to prove I am me.

Why does anyone in a restaurant or shop need to know your ID?

effalump Mon 07-Nov-22 11:34:13

It's all tied into the New World Order run by the WEF and its CBDC with tracking. Which means that if you do not run your life to their doctrine, with the push of a button you cannot access your money, if you're a person who likes a drink and eats out a lot, they can stop that too. If you like more than one holiday abroad each year ... stopped! Check out all the Prime Ministers, Premiers, etc. around the world. You will find they are all part of the WEFs Young Global Leaders group. We are standing on the precipice. There is hope too, which we may find out sooner rather than later.

Cycorax Mon 07-Nov-22 11:34:12

I would have no problem with an ID card. If they were issued on the basis of your NI number at the age of 16 then it could be useful. I think it is odd that I am asked for my driving licence as proof of ID. If you are a British citizen then I would see it as a right to have a proper ID card. No reason to try and load it with lots of other data e.g. health records, etc.

Jess20 Mon 07-Nov-22 11:34:11

I had one when I lived in Sweden, we bought a new bike and had to present the ID card to back up a credit card, and the lady at the till wished me happy birthday as my dob was on the ID card. I don't want to share that sort of info with strangers. I also find it deeply uncomfortable to think people can demand to know so much about us in this day an age with the Govt wanting to crack down on our rights to protest etc They can already track us all sorts of ways, mobile phones, number plates, Facebook etc so why give 'them' (not just the government) more chances. Only takes a cloned ID card in Brighton to get you arrested in Yorkshire, mistakes do and will happen - mistaken identity etc remember the film 'Brazil' I think it was called...

Neilspurgeon0 Mon 07-Nov-22 11:33:18

I don’t have a driving licence, and my passport lives at home but my bus pass seems good enough for most people who ask me for ID, like the shops and restaurants where I use my blue light card. I am not actually against an ID card, but cannot really see why I need yet another one just to prove I am me.

Grandmachrisy47 Mon 07-Nov-22 11:32:23

My sil has no driving license or passport. Trying to get her a railcard was a nightmare!

Ramblingrose22 Mon 07-Nov-22 11:31:11

I am late coming to this thread but have no problem with ID cards.

However I would reconsider if someone can explain why I should be worried about them.

What extra information will the Government have about me that they don't already have apart from the biometric stuff?

And how would they use this additional information to restrict my freedoms?

granjan66 Mon 07-Nov-22 11:23:25

I have lived in three different countries where I D cards were mandatory. It never bothered me at all and I would be more worried about personal info on the internet.

grannyscott Mon 07-Nov-22 11:22:54

Maybe it’s a good idea to have a photo NHS card to show that we are entitled to free treatment just like our driving Licence.

Joy241 Mon 07-Nov-22 11:22:42

growstuff

But why wouldn't people have an ID card? I still have my official National Insurance card in my wallet (issued automatically when I first started work) and recently used it when ID was required for something.

I did not think that NI cards were valid as ID as they have no photograph, nor do they have address, dob details etc.

Treelover Mon 07-Nov-22 11:22:10

I think living in society we have responsibilities to society. We are not living independently. We claim things from Society and give things to it, that's the way it works.
Presently you have to prove entitlement for many things by passport/driver's licence, which many people don't have. A simple ID card would be efficient, fair and honest.

DC64 Mon 07-Nov-22 11:22:09

They’ll be wanting to microchip us soon -like my dog … scary how much information about us is out there for all to find if they are so inclined!

volver Mon 07-Nov-22 11:22:00

Let's just give up then.

Perhaps we could all get little cameras implanted into our foreheads so that "they" know where we are and what we're doing all the time?