Paul Crowley (
ciphergoth) wrote2002-07-03 02:58 pm
ID cards
http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/uk_politics/newsid_2084000/2084860.stm
Note that the discussion of "what information might be stored on the smart chip" is pointless - for the most part, they can just as easily look up in a central database anything that isn't directly stored on the card.
Note that the discussion of "what information might be stored on the smart chip" is pointless - for the most part, they can just as easily look up in a central database anything that isn't directly stored on the card.

no subject
Poll booth
(a) with the traffic on the BBC site, you're not stuffing that without a script.
(b) is this country really that far down the toilet?
:(
Denny
Re: Poll booth
Re: Poll booth
Fairly trivial to do though.
no subject
I used to be very, very strongly anti this, but I'm so used to carrying my bleeding passport all the time these days I'm more or less resigned to it all. Plus, I've lived in Switzerland, where they have ID cards, and if the UK ever approached the level of direct democracy and (apparant at least) personnal liberties there, I'd be a happy man. I might even move back - if class-conciousness and the clut of the celebrity were gone too ... :o/
no subject
They've got a wide circle of friends who Reg regularly plays (with) his organ for.
10 minutes walk away is the local municipal sports centre, which is of the quality of the best private (and very very expensive) health clubs in the English countryide.
Not much further is the train station, which will whisk you in an air-conditioned, quiet, clean, virtually-bump-free double-storey carriage to Zurich itself, which is full of night-life etc.
And, of course, come November time you can grab your skis and go up the mountain...
I would love to live there - albeit when I'm a bit older, a lot richer, and am near-fluent in French, German and Italian.
J