If you are a resident of Washington state, Minnesota, New Mexico, Missouri, or Illinois, you may soon have trouble boarding an airplane. The federal government says that sometime in 2016 they will start enforcing the "Real ID" standard for state driver's licenses; unless your state complies, you may not use your driver's license as ID when boarding a plane.
Right now, only 20 states are fully compliant with Real ID, which was enacted during the fear-frenzy of post-9/11 legislation. Real ID requires that states verify citizenship status when issuing driver's licenses, and issue electronically-readable cards with consistent data formatting so that the data can be easily shared by various state and federal agencies.
According to the NY Times (12/29/2015, pageB4), "a press officer for the Department of Homeland Security said the law's intention was not to create a national identification card but to extend what the agency calls best practices on issuing driver's licenses that apply to all states". That statement is a lovely bit of crap-filled doublespeak. Let me explain.
A driver's license is, above all else, documentation that a person knows how to drive. Since it is valid in all states, there is a valid reason for national standardization. But that standardization should be focused on driving skills. Yes, it is necessary to show that the holder of the card is indeed the person licensed to drive, and so a driver's license is a de facto identification card. But that is not its primary purpose. Real ID provides no standardization of driving practices; it standardizes identification and makes it easy to share that data.
How is that NOT creating a national identification system? Simply because it is issued by the individual states does not make it less of a federal ID.
We actually HAVE a federal ID card. It's called a passport card, and you can get one for $30 from the Passport Office. The first time you apply, it is $55; processing the paperwork to prove citizenship is the reason for the extra fee for a first-time applicant (why the processing fee for a full passport is $10 more is puzzling, since they are vetting the same information.) I have no problems with a passport card. I have one, and I try to use it whenever I am asked for positive identification. Unfortunately, not many people know what it is. It SHOULD be the highest, most secure form of positive ID we can have. But the Federal government has not particularly pushed its use, and it remains a curiosity.
There are two problems with using driver's licenses for non-driving related ID. First, states are not equipped nor qualified to determine citizenship status of applicants. The brouhaha with Obama's birth certificate shows that. Hawaii does not follow the same conventions in its paperwork as certain other states, so people questioned the validity of the paperwork. It is not reasonable to require each state to be fully conversant with the paperwork conventions of all the other states - or rather, requiring such expertise is an expensive burden to place on the state. And even the Feds don't consider it adequate; a driver's license from a Real ID-compliant state is not sufficient documentation to obtain a passport.
The second problem lies in that data-sharing. How secure is a data pool designed to be read and written to by millions of police officers in 50 states and at least two territories? Not very, and this is the aspect that alarms civil libertarians.
Oh, and there is a third argument - surprise; many people in the US do not drive. City dwellers, the elderly, people on certain medications or with certain medical conditions. Or people who simply choose not to drive. Since they do not drive, they have no need for a drivers license. Now, states allow the issuance of a non-driver ID card, but they are often hard to obtain (DMV offices tend to be away from places served by public transportation) and expensive. A passport card would be more suitable in those cases, since a passport card can usually be obtained through the Post Office, which is much more likely to be located in an accessible location. Plus, a passport card lasts for ten years; most licenses (or non-driver ID cards) are valid for 5 years or less.
My solution: get a passport card, and use it whenever you can. It will not be accepted in many places, because a) people do not know what it is (but that should change if more people use it), and b) it doesn't show an address. But that, with any other ID—even a utility bill; remember when that was acceptable ID?—should be sufficient proof of identity and residence that anyone would need. No need to put the burden on the states, and no need to put so much personal information in a non-secure database.
Wednesday, December 30, 2015
Tuesday, May 13, 2014
Labeling GMOs
I just read a poster which said:
I have discussed food labeling with those who strongly believe in the harmlessness of GMO foods, and who object to any sort of labeling requirement.
The reasoning against labeling goes thusly:
I find this reasoning specious.
I will not get into whether GMOs are safe or not. That is where most discussions founder, as one side presents studies that support their argument, which are then not accepted by the other. To me, that is not really relevant. The question is not one of safety, but of labeling. Do we have the right to know what is in our food?
As far as I can tell, the argument against labeling comes down to this: people are too stupid to assess the risks and benefits, and make up their own minds whether to buy GMO. The crazies will win. Everywhere else, we say, provide information and let the free market decide. Not here.
If the problem is truly that people are too easily swayed by people fearful of technology, and ignorant of science, then mount an advertising campaign to educate people. Make your case. Convince people. If GMOs are really that much more efficient, then their use should result in lower food prices - that's a pretty big incentive, that will overcome a lot of negative PR. If GMOs allow farming practices that help the environment, tell people. Make GMO labeling an advertising plus. That is what "Organic" has done. A lot of fruits and veggies are sold with blemishes that are overlooked because the produce is "organic".
The mere fact that so many people are uneasy about GMOs is a reason to label. If their fears are groundless, then those fears they will eventually be allayed. Hiding GMO status, on the other hand, will simply, inevitably, cause a future scandal. Somebody will have a problem, it will be "discovered" that GMOs were involved, and the story will then be one of conspiracy and coverup. A little reluctance to adopt now is much better than what will happen in the future if the knowledge of GMO status is suppressed.
Another reason to label is that there will always be some people who have a sensitivity to an ingredient. We label peanuts, gluten, milk products; all sorts of things because some people - not most - need to know. We now require country of origin labeling on fruits and veggies. We even label religious status (kosher, pareve) for some foods.
Are there any reasons NOT to label? Public aversion is often cited, but as I said, the response to that is to provide more information, not to withhold it. Respect people's ability to make up their own minds. It may take awhile, but what's the hurry?
Some people I have discussed this with have likened objections to GMOs to objections to vaccination. In both cases, they say, people ignore the actual science. There is no evidence that GMOs are harmful, they say, and no evidence that vaccination causes autism or any of the other things detractors claim. That may be so. But I see a huge distinction between the two.
Vaccinations work on the herd level. A certain percentage of the population needs to be vaccinated, or else you have a reservoir in which the pathogen can hide. A few unvaccinated people will not have a significant effect, and there will always be a few who have impaired immune systems and cannot be vaccinated. But if too many people refuse to be vaccinated, the entire group can be endangered. Refusal to vaccinate has consequences for public health, and can literally kill nearby kids who are immune-compromised. There is a compelling public interest in vaccination.
Is there a similar compelling pubic interest in the acceptance of GMO foods? I don't think so. If people avoid GMO foods, I can think of no consequences for public health. The major consequences would be in the bottom line of companies like Monsanto, and of some in the food industry.
Do the finances of these companies constitute a public-health concern that would justify withholding information, to essentially fool customers into ingesting a particular product? No. If there are any ecological or public health ramifications that might constitute a compelling reason for widespread GMO ingestion, over the objection of customers, I'd like to hear them.
Until then, I remain adamantly in favor of GMO labeling.
"The law requires labels telling us what's in our mattresses.
How can anyone object to telling us what's in our food?"
I have discussed food labeling with those who strongly believe in the harmlessness of GMO foods, and who object to any sort of labeling requirement.
The reasoning against labeling goes thusly:
- GMOs are harmless.
- People are easily swayed by fearmongers.
- Labeling will cause people to discriminate against GMO foods.
- GMO foods have certain advantages for farmers and distributors.
- higher yield (greater pesticide effectiveness)
- easier mechanization of farming
- less spoilage of food during transport and storage - If GMO foods don't sell, those advantages will not be realized. And Monsanto will not recoup their research money (a lot of which came from the federal government.)
I find this reasoning specious.
I will not get into whether GMOs are safe or not. That is where most discussions founder, as one side presents studies that support their argument, which are then not accepted by the other. To me, that is not really relevant. The question is not one of safety, but of labeling. Do we have the right to know what is in our food?
As far as I can tell, the argument against labeling comes down to this: people are too stupid to assess the risks and benefits, and make up their own minds whether to buy GMO. The crazies will win. Everywhere else, we say, provide information and let the free market decide. Not here.
If the problem is truly that people are too easily swayed by people fearful of technology, and ignorant of science, then mount an advertising campaign to educate people. Make your case. Convince people. If GMOs are really that much more efficient, then their use should result in lower food prices - that's a pretty big incentive, that will overcome a lot of negative PR. If GMOs allow farming practices that help the environment, tell people. Make GMO labeling an advertising plus. That is what "Organic" has done. A lot of fruits and veggies are sold with blemishes that are overlooked because the produce is "organic".
The mere fact that so many people are uneasy about GMOs is a reason to label. If their fears are groundless, then those fears they will eventually be allayed. Hiding GMO status, on the other hand, will simply, inevitably, cause a future scandal. Somebody will have a problem, it will be "discovered" that GMOs were involved, and the story will then be one of conspiracy and coverup. A little reluctance to adopt now is much better than what will happen in the future if the knowledge of GMO status is suppressed.
Another reason to label is that there will always be some people who have a sensitivity to an ingredient. We label peanuts, gluten, milk products; all sorts of things because some people - not most - need to know. We now require country of origin labeling on fruits and veggies. We even label religious status (kosher, pareve) for some foods.
Are there any reasons NOT to label? Public aversion is often cited, but as I said, the response to that is to provide more information, not to withhold it. Respect people's ability to make up their own minds. It may take awhile, but what's the hurry?
Some people I have discussed this with have likened objections to GMOs to objections to vaccination. In both cases, they say, people ignore the actual science. There is no evidence that GMOs are harmful, they say, and no evidence that vaccination causes autism or any of the other things detractors claim. That may be so. But I see a huge distinction between the two.
Vaccinations work on the herd level. A certain percentage of the population needs to be vaccinated, or else you have a reservoir in which the pathogen can hide. A few unvaccinated people will not have a significant effect, and there will always be a few who have impaired immune systems and cannot be vaccinated. But if too many people refuse to be vaccinated, the entire group can be endangered. Refusal to vaccinate has consequences for public health, and can literally kill nearby kids who are immune-compromised. There is a compelling public interest in vaccination.
Is there a similar compelling pubic interest in the acceptance of GMO foods? I don't think so. If people avoid GMO foods, I can think of no consequences for public health. The major consequences would be in the bottom line of companies like Monsanto, and of some in the food industry.
Do the finances of these companies constitute a public-health concern that would justify withholding information, to essentially fool customers into ingesting a particular product? No. If there are any ecological or public health ramifications that might constitute a compelling reason for widespread GMO ingestion, over the objection of customers, I'd like to hear them.
Until then, I remain adamantly in favor of GMO labeling.
Sunday, April 20, 2014
Easter lamb or Easter ham?
Here's a question for you: lamb or ham?
Just as there are strong opinions as to whether to place toilet paper on the spindle so it unrolls from the top and over the roll, or from the bottom and under the roll, there are strong opinions as to whether you should eat lamb or ham on Easter.
I don't really remember if we had a family tradition on this, but I always thought it was amusing that people either eat the Lamb of God, or eat ham to prove to everyone that they're not Jewish.
Lamb makes sense to me. Easter is a Christian extension of the Jewish Passover. The Last Supper, after all, was a Passover seder. The reason Jesus was taken down from the cross on the same day he was crucified is that it was Friday evening, the start of the Jewish Sabbath. I'm not quite sure why the Sabbath was a factor, since Jesus was accused as a blasphemer under Jewish law, and crucified in accordance with Roman law. Nevertheless.
The name "Passover" refers to the Egyptian Captivity. To make the Pharaoh release the Israelites, God visited them with a series of ten plagues, the last and worst of which was the death of the firstborn. To let the Angel of Death know they were the good guys, the Israelites marked their doors with the blood of a lamb, which caused the Angel to "pass over" that house without killing anyone. The lamb itself was roasted and eaten.
Having lamb at Easter honors this tradition and this history. Yes, there is a slightly creepy aspect, which is the part that amused me as a kid. Jesus is referred to as "the Lamb of God". Since I did not grow up in a tradition that practiced Communion ("this is my body and this is my blood"), the implied cannibalism always seemed outrageous. However, partaking of lamb on Easter elevates the meal to a symbolic Communion, an acceptance of the sacrifice. The Paschal lamb was sacrificed so that the Angel of Death would pass by; Jesus sacrificed himself as a Paschal Lamb to ensure that Spiritual Death would pass by.
So what about ham? I really can't find any symbolism for this as a traditional Easter dish.
Easter, of course, is also the time of several pagan traditions celebrating the rebirth of life in the spring. The name "Easter" itself comes from the name of the Anglo-Saxon Goddess, Oestre, a goddess of fertility whose name also survives in female reproduction-related words, such as estrus and estrogen. The policy of the early Church in Great Britain was to absorb previous religions, and so the symbols of Oestre were adopted and converted to Christian symbols. Eggs are obvious symbols of fecundity; they were adapted to symbolize the emergence of new spiritual life from the empty tomb.
Rabbits are eaten in some areas of Europe, probably as a symbol of fecundity, but they are rarely eaten in the US, and with the anthropomorphizing of the Easter Bunny, would not be acceptable to children.
The nearest I have come to a justification for having ham comes from the Encyclopedia of Religion, which states that in pre-Christian Europe, pigs were considered lucky. Perhaps, but that doesn't really explain why one eats ham at Easter. More likely might be that pigs were fed all winter, and during lent; now it's spring, and time to slaughter the pigs and reclaim the barn space for the newly born lambs.
Or, as I suggested near the beginning, eating ham simply showed everyone that you were not Jewish.
Just as there are strong opinions as to whether to place toilet paper on the spindle so it unrolls from the top and over the roll, or from the bottom and under the roll, there are strong opinions as to whether you should eat lamb or ham on Easter.
I don't really remember if we had a family tradition on this, but I always thought it was amusing that people either eat the Lamb of God, or eat ham to prove to everyone that they're not Jewish.
Lamb makes sense to me. Easter is a Christian extension of the Jewish Passover. The Last Supper, after all, was a Passover seder. The reason Jesus was taken down from the cross on the same day he was crucified is that it was Friday evening, the start of the Jewish Sabbath. I'm not quite sure why the Sabbath was a factor, since Jesus was accused as a blasphemer under Jewish law, and crucified in accordance with Roman law. Nevertheless.
The name "Passover" refers to the Egyptian Captivity. To make the Pharaoh release the Israelites, God visited them with a series of ten plagues, the last and worst of which was the death of the firstborn. To let the Angel of Death know they were the good guys, the Israelites marked their doors with the blood of a lamb, which caused the Angel to "pass over" that house without killing anyone. The lamb itself was roasted and eaten.
Having lamb at Easter honors this tradition and this history. Yes, there is a slightly creepy aspect, which is the part that amused me as a kid. Jesus is referred to as "the Lamb of God". Since I did not grow up in a tradition that practiced Communion ("this is my body and this is my blood"), the implied cannibalism always seemed outrageous. However, partaking of lamb on Easter elevates the meal to a symbolic Communion, an acceptance of the sacrifice. The Paschal lamb was sacrificed so that the Angel of Death would pass by; Jesus sacrificed himself as a Paschal Lamb to ensure that Spiritual Death would pass by.
So what about ham? I really can't find any symbolism for this as a traditional Easter dish.
Easter, of course, is also the time of several pagan traditions celebrating the rebirth of life in the spring. The name "Easter" itself comes from the name of the Anglo-Saxon Goddess, Oestre, a goddess of fertility whose name also survives in female reproduction-related words, such as estrus and estrogen. The policy of the early Church in Great Britain was to absorb previous religions, and so the symbols of Oestre were adopted and converted to Christian symbols. Eggs are obvious symbols of fecundity; they were adapted to symbolize the emergence of new spiritual life from the empty tomb.
Rabbits are eaten in some areas of Europe, probably as a symbol of fecundity, but they are rarely eaten in the US, and with the anthropomorphizing of the Easter Bunny, would not be acceptable to children.
The nearest I have come to a justification for having ham comes from the Encyclopedia of Religion, which states that in pre-Christian Europe, pigs were considered lucky. Perhaps, but that doesn't really explain why one eats ham at Easter. More likely might be that pigs were fed all winter, and during lent; now it's spring, and time to slaughter the pigs and reclaim the barn space for the newly born lambs.
Or, as I suggested near the beginning, eating ham simply showed everyone that you were not Jewish.
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