Keeping me away from America

Unless I burn off my fingertips!

I'm really sorry, but I've deleted this article. In light of the responses which it provoked, I thought it best. Before writing it I didn't stop to think about the obvious offence (in hindsight) that it would cause. Not that the subject matter was 'offensive', but maybe I could have written it in a much more sensitive way. Thanks for everyone who responded, I got alot out of it. Btw. Thanks MasonM - your last response made me feel a hell of alot better :-)
2,329 views 8 replies
Reply #1 Top
BTW just in case you wanted to read what this is all about:

U.S. starts fingerprint program
Monday, January 5, 2004 Posted: 3:53 PM EST (2053 GMT)

ATLANTA, Georgia (CNN) -- Up to 28 million visitors to the United States now have to stop for photographs and fingerprinting under a new government program launched Monday and intended to make it harder for terrorists to enter the country.

Homeland Security Secretary Tom Ridge said the new US-VISIT program applies to any visitors who must have a visa to enter the United States.

By October, all visitors will be required to have a machine-readable passport or some other method of biometric identification, such as fingerprints or retina scans.

"As the world community combats terrorism ... you're going to see more and more countries going to a form of biometric identification to confirm identities," Ridge said.

Citizens from more than two dozen countries, mostly in Europe, aren't required to carry a visa if their visit is less than 90 days. Visitors from those countries are exempt.

Visitors from exempt countries who are working in the United States, however, require a work visa, and therefore must leave their fingerprints and photographs with U.S. authorities.

"We want visitors from abroad to continue to come to the United States, but we also want to secure our borders," Ridge said.

First steps
Ridge acknowledged that US-VISIT -- United States Visitor and Immigrant Status Indicator Technology -- will only cover a small fraction of the estimated 500 million annual visitors to the United States, but he said the program was but the "first significant step in a series of steps" the government plans to take in the coming months and years.

Outside of Europe, the exempt countries include Japan, Singapore, Australia, New Zealand and Brunei. Citizens of Canada generally do not need a visa to enter the United States.

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security says the goal of the US-VISIT program is to track the millions of people who come to the United States every year on business, student and tourist visas -- and to use the information as a tool against terrorists.

Critics say the broad-reaching program will cause unnecessary travel delays and may never prove to be effective.

"There's so much information in such volumes that there's a limit to what any analyst can absorb," said Larry Johnson, an aviation security consultant.

Faiz Rehman, president of the National Council of Pakistani-Americans, points to the disruption in travel.

"Without proper training, there will be long lines, there will be missed flights, there will be people who would be wrongly stopped," Rehman said.

Brazilian backlash
Outside the United States, there has been a backlash as well.

In reaction to the U.S. policy, Brazil last week began fingerprinting and photographing American visitors arriving at Sao Paulo's airport. Brazil's Foreign Ministry has also requested that Brazilians be removed from the U.S. list.

Ridge said that "if the Brazilian government thinks it's in their interests (to fingerprint and photograph Americans), so be it."

"It's not two standards, one for the United States and one for the rest of the world," he said.

The U.S. program, which has a budget of $380 million, will require an estimated 24 million visitors to submit two finger scans and have a photograph taken upon entering any of 115 airports or 14 seaports.

Homeland Security spokesman Bill Strassberger said once screeners become proficient, the extra security will take only 10 to 15 seconds per person, The Associated Press reported.

Inkless fingerprints will be taken and checked instantly against a digital database for criminal backgrounds and any terrorist lists. The process will be repeated when visitors leave the United States as an extra security measure and to ensure they complied with visa limitations.

http://www.cnn.com/2004/US/01/05/fingerprint.program/

Maybe that will help also..

Cheers..
Reply #2 Top
awwww. you shouldn't have deleted it Dune! I thouht it was a really great thread with lot's of good input and discussion. I really don't think anyone was actually offended.
Reply #3 Top
awwww. you shouldn't have deleted it Dune! I thought it was a really great thread with lot's of good input and discussion. I really don't think anyone was actually offended.
Reply #5 Top
Ya Dune! Why in the world did you delete it?? It was a very good discussion and I didn't see anyone being offended. It was a very good point you had and your opinion is worth discussion. Please don't worry even if you offend a few people, everyone is entitled to their opinion. You had a good discussion going.

Reply #6 Top
Bah.... pie
Reply #7 Top
Yeah, it was a brilliant discussion, but some of the comments were making me feel pretty shitty about what I'd written, not because anyone was right or wrong but because my own writing let me down and I miscommunicated my original point. I dithered over wether or not to delete the responses, - but in the end I decided to simply erase the whole thing... this article and what it produced isn't what I wanted my blog to be about. But please, tell me nore about the pies...
Reply #8 Top
Aww, i wish i could have read it. anyway is this article something about a "Big Brother" type of thing? anyway i havent been keeping up to date with international news lately since i started work. So what is it about?