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#1
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I would like to advise to the Conservative government of Stephen
Harper, that the best way, in my humble opinion, to tackle the thorny issue of the "secured border document" as requested by the US government as a potential substitute for carrying a passport when crossing the border would be to expand the citizenship cards issued to naturalized citizens to include all Canadian citizens and to make this card a counterfeit-proof one by adding one's DNA or other biometric characteristics. This card would be rendered a photo ID. I would strongly argue against the practice of using one's driver's license or even a birth certificate to cross the border, as these cards are prone to falsification as was in the case of Ahmed Rassam, who in 1999, being a landed immigrant of Canada, used a driver's license to cross the border, before being intercepted by border guards, on his way to carry out a terrorist attack in LA. Besides, driver's licenses do NOT reveal the carriers' citizenship. A citizenship card would include details about one's citizenship, as is already the practice in regards to naturalized Candians citizens, prevent forging a document by including DNA etc, be the size of a credit card and would be much cheaper than carrying a full-blown Canadian passport. On Jan. 1, 2007, all travellers crossing from Canada to the United States on a maritime or air route will have to show a passport to immigration officers, or an agreed-upon "secure document" which is yet to be announced. That includes American citizens returning to their own country. On Jan. 1, 2008, it would be expanded for people entering the U.S. on land crossings. No exceptions. Unless Canada and the U.S. can agree on an harmonized, biometric, high-tech substitute document, a passport would be the only recognized form of ID. The whole issue stems from the Western Hemisphere Travel Initiative, enacted in 2004 after it was discovered that a terrorist used counterfeit Caribbean driver's licences and birth certificates for people to illegally enter the U.S.. The U.S. Senate passed a resolution to delay the implementation of this initiative until June 2009. Nevertheless, due to disagreement with the House of Representatives on a comprehensive immigration bill regarding provisions granting amnesty to millions of illegal immigrants currently living in the U.S., this measure is bogged down and is far from reaching the president's desk for signature into law. Most countries require passports for entering them. Some of them require visas as well. Landed immigrants in Canada, even people born in Britain, who are not yet Canadian nationals are required to show a passport when crossing into the U.S. I'm not making it up. What's needed is harmonizing Canadian and American immigration and visa policy, for example using more NEXUS and FAST lanes. |
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#2
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ryanyoung26@hotmail.com wrote: Quote:
ooooh kaaaaayyyyy..... |
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#3
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ryanyoung26@hotmail.com a écrit :
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Thought about this for a long time, have you, or are you just cribbing from the Canada-U.S. "Smart" Border Declaration? http://www.international.gc.ca/anti...tionplan-en.asp "Smart", in this case, is a bit of sarcasm, I suspect. |
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#4
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ryanyoung26@hotmail.com wrote:
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You would strongly advise against it because someone using a falsified one was caught with it at the border? How about the 15 Arabs, mostly Saudis, who entered the US with valid passports and visas, and lived, worked and/or studied in the US for a long time before hijacking a bunch of planes and flying them into the WTC and Pentagon? Enforcement agencies have networked computer systems that allow them to access all sorts of data bases. While the driver licence may not have information about citizenship or criminal records, the information on them can be used to get information from other data bases that can provide it. |
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#5
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What would be the difference in cost of a passport compared to an enhanced
citizenship card? - small, I suspect. <ryanyoung26@hotmail.com> wrote in message news:1157982511.633567.133640@m73g2000cwd.googlegr oups.com... Quote:
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