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On 13 May 2005 18:58:11 GMT, "-=jd=-"
wrote: On Fri 13 May 2005 08:55:42a, David wrote in message : On 12 May 2005 21:17:07 GMT, "-=jd=-" wrote: On Thu 12 May 2005 09:32:04a, David wrote in message : On 11 May 2005 22:42:44 GMT, "-=jd=-" wrote: I don't have anything o hide; hence, I have no problem at all with RID. -=jd=- That is traitorous speech. The state has no right to know your business, legal or not. The more they know the more they control. OK, Here's your big chance - Explain the logic and fear underlying your conclusion: "The more they know the more they control". -=jd=- Scroll down to the big blue meatball: http://www.geocities.com/totalinformationawareness/ Well, Let's see... you didn't copy & paste the article Yeah, isn't it a pain in the ass that others don't like to play fast and loose with copyrighted material? and only copy & pasted the link. At least you didn't dissappoint us - I told you (and everyone else) Adequate proof, I'm sure, to a blowhard like you. that you are wholly incapable of articulating an intelligent response in support of your kook assertions. So, we'll call this a "Do-Over" because that link didn't explain the logic and fear underlying your conclusion: "The more they know the more they control". Here's opportunity #2 to prove you're more than a mere liberal parrot. I'll even rephrase it to make it easier to understand by someone of your limited "copy & paste" capabilities: Why should I, or anyone I know, be the least bit concerned about RFID? -=jd=- For the same reason you should be concerned about all the rest of the information "collected" about you -- it's mostly bull**** and will be interpreted by people who do not have your best interests at heart. Example -- my ex's info was compromized in the recent Lexis-Nexis ****up. They sent her a letter explaining what she should do. It arrived in my mailbox. She has not lived here in thirteen years. We're still good friends, so I let her know right away. She has lived at five addresses since we separated. I have not changed my address for thirty-five years. When I went to a couple of sites and looked myself up, I was listed in various databases at all five of the addresses she's been at. So if I look for a job and tell the prospective employer I've lived here for 35 years, and the employer spends fifteen minutes in the palces I looked (all very common), how is that going to affect my chances of getting the job? Of course, he should not be doing such loose-ass research on me, but I'll never know. I'll just hear some corporate crap about "not an exact match for the skillset we're looking for." I've also gotten my credit report and found various non-authorized corporations looking into my credit history by claiming me as a "customer." Completely illegal, or, at best based on yet more mistaken information, transposed SSNs or other sloppiness on the part of the data aggregators. If you aren't concerned yet, on the basis of just these trivial examples, then, as they say, "If ignorance is bliss, you must be orgasmic." |
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