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Moderators: Casa, archigabe, CR001, push, JAJ, ca.funke, Amber, zimba, vinny, Obie, EUsmileWEallsmile, batleykhan, meself2, geriatrix, John, ChetanOjha, Administrator
Hi meats, the harm is that taking these fingerprints is against the lawmeats wrote:Where's the harm in giving them your finger prints? Unless you're a criminal of course.
There was a bit more than finger prints involved in those stupid ID cards this incompetent government were trying to force upon us. I seem to remember retina scans and a chip that had all your personal details on it. So, no, you can't really compare the two.Obie wrote:Interesting isn't. When Meats' compatriot were rejecting having their biometric taken for the government's abandoned Compulsory ID Card scheme, i don't remember people insinuating they might be criminals, that is why the vast majority of Brits were rejecting the idea. There was a huge public outcry, not to mention the campaign from the civil liberty organisations.
I remember. I was living there then. I use to think, what is all the force about. A civil rights expert told me, "it is a violation of one's privacy and their liberty there is a potential for misuse" and i understood fully.
It is funny, the double standards that are usually applied to foreigners.
The bottom line is, if the UK government don't make it compulsory for their citizens to have their biometrics taken, then beneficiaries of EU law, should not be made to take it. That would be illegal, fullstop. No two way about it.
Meats i hope you follow the gist. Are you with me bro. Then again i won't be surprised if you are not, taking into account our past encounters.
One can only hope.
I applied for a passport this year. The big one was having your personal details on the chip that people didn't like. The passports are going to get worse and worse with data due to terrorism in the world and in an attempt to try and catch out the people who forge passports.Obie wrote:Meats, it appears you haven't applied for a passport lately. Retina data is now taken. Which is why you photograph has to be of certain quality.
Also the newly issued passport has biometric information.
Brits rejected it, not because of their criminality, but because of the civil rights violations associated. Fingerprint is one thing that did not make it appealing to them.
Not to mention the possible harassment members of the ethnic minority community would have had to endure.
Alas, i think the freedom of movement will be retained unfortunately and a similar agreement will no doubt be put in place to that of Switzerland and Norway.Obie wrote: I can't wait to see the further isolation, the millions of them that work in the community being kicked out, the trade opportunities and business establishment been curtailed, those pensioners in Spain being expelled.
Thanks to Lisbon, they can peacefully make their exit. That is if they have any dignity of course.
Meats when the EC was created by 6 countries namely Germany, Belgium, Netherlands, Luxemburg, Italy and France , the intention was to create a single market and promote economic intergration.meats wrote: That would be by far the best thing to do, no freedom of movement but having it as a trade bloc.
We were part of EFTA when we joined the EEC, it was then primarily a trading bloc. Please brush up on your history with regards to that Obie. de Gaulle vetoed the UK's entry to the EEC twice as he was scared of American interference. It was only when Pompidou (i think that's who followed de Gaulle) came into power that the UK's and the other EFTA's members applications were accepted.Obie wrote:Meats when the EC was created by 6 countries namely Germany, Belgium, Netherlands, Luxemburg, Italy and France , the intention was to create a single market and promote economic intergration.meats wrote: That would be by far the best thing to do, no freedom of movement but having it as a trade bloc.
You cannot have economic integration without moving Good, Services and capital. You cannot move goods, service and capital without moving people. You cannot have Economic integration without having political integration, which is how the ECC and subsequently the EU came to be born in 1993.
Therefore, this idea that it was created as simply a trading block, where these good and services and economic integration are meant to happen, without the movement of people hold no vericity, and frankly speaking impractical. I hope i make sense to you.
No one forced the UK to join or to continue to stay. In 1960 they applied and it was vetoed by Charles De Gaulle, they reapplied again in 1970, before the veto was lifted and there application approved 2 years later.
In 1975, the Brits voted by well over 2 to 1 to stay in the EU, therefore it is not as if the option hadn't been provided to them in the past.
It was simply rejected by the Brit.
I am sure the mechanism which will facilitate there departure, should they wish, will be implemented soon.
I am sure there won't be a civil war in the EU. The likelihood of that will most likely decrease after the UK's departure, due to their polarising effect on the Union.