Xequecal wrote:
DFK! wrote:
Should people traveling abroad be required to carry passports? Same same.
Only difference is the form of ID and the length of stay.
REALID is a strawman in this case, and this is coming from somebody who hates REALID.
How many Western countries require you to carry the passport on your actual person at all times?
All hotels in Europe require a passport on check-in.
The entirety of the US requires presentable ID in some form or another if questioned by law enforcement.
Why aren't you whining about that? Oh, because this disparately affects one ethnic group. So what.
Xeq wrote:
I sure can't think of any, there might be one or two, but it's not common.
Then you need to read more, at least when it comes to traveling or living abroad. If, as an example, I move to New Zealand and utilize the ANZUS and other treaties to take advantage of the ability to live in their country for 90 days, I still require certain documents, even if I don't need a visa. Namely, the fact that I'm a US citizen and thus subject to the treaty that allows me to live there for a portion of time.
The ID required might vary, but requirements to have one while living abroad is one of the things you have to do if you wish to
legally live abroad!
Xeq wrote:
This law is a nightmare because of this provision, not just because it makes them targets of criminals, but the nightmare that will result for every immigrant when they lose their wallet or whatever. Those documents are non-trivial to replace, there's an expensive fee and you have to go to an official interview where they grill you on what happened and you have to swear in writing that you don't really know where it is, didn't sell it, etc.
Whatever. Don't emigrate from your home country if you don't wish to follow the laws of your host country. You have to replace a passport or green card as it is if you lose it, the risk of doing so is no different after passage of this law than before.
Xeq wrote:
Furthermore, how can it even possibly be enforced without massively expanding police powers? The cop stops someone and they don't have their papers. They claim they're not am immigrant. Is "I suspected he was an immigrant" enough cause now for them to arrest anyone they want? Yeah, that's not going to get abused. Or if they're not allowed to arrest just for that, then the criminals will just walk away laughing, while other, legal immigrants who went through the process and are stupid enough to be honest about forgetting it at home or whatever get ****.
What happens if you drive your car without a license and get pulled over? I don't mean you don't
have a driver's license. I mean you forgot it that day. Perhaps you forgot your whole wallet and thus don't have
any ID?
Same thing happens here, yet I don't see you complaining about driver's license requirements. Nor is the left.
I'm against required ID at all, but if we're going to have a state that says we can demand your "papers" (to quote major media this week) for
operating a car or
loitering on a corner, demanding "papers" to prove you're even in the country legally is actually a far less offensive demand.