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DHS says REAL ID is too unreliable to confirm U.S. citizenship


Honestly I might not be against a central database considering my experience with the current system, where my AZ driver's license got suspended because my non-existent NJ driver's license got suspended. How does that work? The states all share data about licenses, but there's no oversight on the accuracy, got a problem, go deal with the agency that screwed up. At least with a central database, you only have one agency to deal with, and the local branch can fix it without you having to travel across the country to sort things out.


reason.com/2025/12/31/dhs-says…

#uspol

Bruce Heerssen reshared this.

in reply to 🌴 Seph πŸ’­ πŸ‘Ύ

So what, then, would DHS consider to be reliable proof that one is a citizen? Is there anything at all?
in reply to Bruce Heerssen

@Bruce Heerssen Then depends on your skin colour and what you have on you, its whatever document you don't have on you, whether such a document exists or not.
in reply to 🌴 Seph πŸ’­ πŸ‘Ύ

Well, it was up to the state to follow the national requirements. The documents that I was required to provide are the basic citizenship documents. Birth certificate, passport, proof of residence. That should be the minimum in all states. There is no need for a "national database" of citizens other than the ones that already exist, IRS, SS for instance.
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