We are working on a brand new version of the game! If you want to stay informed, read our blog and register for our mailing list.
Bill: Removing Compulsory ID Cards
Details
Status[?]: defeated
Votes: This is an ordinary bill. It requires more yes votes than no votes. This bill will not pass any sooner than the deadline.
Voting deadline: May 4327
Description[?]:
Compulsory ID cards are not needed, it is another way for the Government to keep too close of an eye on its citizens |
Proposals
Article 1
Proposal[?] to change Government-issued identity card policy.
Old value:: All citizens are issued with identity cards and are required to carry them at all times.
Current: All citizens are issued with identity cards and are required to carry them at all times.
Proposed: Citizens are not issued with identity cards.
Debate
These messages have been posted to debate on this bill:
Date | 14:06:27, January 01, 2018 CET | From | Grüne Demokratische Partei | To | Debating the Removing Compulsory ID Cards |
Message | This bill makes no sense whatsoever. State issued IDs help people in our country to prove their identity to employers, clubs, people and the government. They help them prove their identity to the police when a crime has been committed, help the police to find culprits and allow for body identification. They are extremely useful. I also wonder how the government can use these to keep 'too close an eye on their citizens'. They don't come with DNA databases, retina scans, tracking chips or fingerprint identification. They simply prove who you are, which can be very useful for them and government services. Again, 'Our Party' is stoking libertarian conspiracies to get votes. Céline Schroeder Leader of the Bright Alliance |
subscribe to this discussion - unsubscribe
Voting
Vote | Seats | |||||
yes |
Total Seats: 196 | |||||
no |
Total Seats: 285 | |||||
abstain | Total Seats: 0 |
Random fact: Particracy has 464 player slots. |
Random quote: "We must show that liberty is not merely one particular value but that it is the source and condition of most moral values. What a free society offers to the individual is much more than what he would be able to do if only he were free. We can therefore not fully appreciate the value of freedom until we know how a society of free men as a whole differs from one in which unfreedom prevails." - Friedrich August Hayek |