What's the difference between a Voter and a Bank Customer?

One uses a Voting Machine and the other uses an ATM. One is not secure, while the other is. This reveals that voters are given a lower priority than bank customers. Many voters are bank customers. Voters are important people because they fund the military with their taxes.

The 2000 Election -- Stolen or Legitimate?

POLL:    Stolen or Legitimate?

Election Fraud -- The Crisis Papers

"In each case the tallied outcomes favored the incumbent, George W. Bush. The odds for such an occurrence is one in 250 million for this to have occurred by chance."  

The 2004 Election -- Stolen or Legitimate?

POLL: Stolen or Legitimate?

Dozens steal Californian's identity

One stolen Social Security number was used in 17 states. The shadow of suspicion falls on "The Undocumented".

Worker verification is a double-edged sword

"A U.S. social security card, Native American tribal document, or a certification of birth abroad issued to the Department of State can be used to establish employment eligibility only."

panel hears cost of illegal aliens

Less than 2 percent of Missouri State prison population born outside the United States.

The right for the whole world to own a piece of the American Dream

It may come as a terrible shock to some, but the whole world doesn't want a piece of the American Dream.

Banks are providing home loans to undocumented U.S. residents

The banking industry is opening its doors to a controversial new market: illegal immigrants.

nobody knows who is hiring the illegal immigrants

"We keep saying, 'Don't come, don't come' but SOMEONE (nobody knows who) keeps hiring them."

Implanted Identification -- The Next Evolution of RFID

RFID chips are already implanted in people. At some time in the future, you might be offered RFID implantation. It's much easier than carrying plastic ID or paper ID.

Consumer reports finds personal privacy concerns in planned uses of RFIDs

May, 2006. The tiny radio chip traveling with you in your shorts.

Lost Ernst & Young laptop exposes IBM employees

Update: Ernst & Young pushed forward a company-wide rollout of encryption software made by Pointsec. Employees were ordered to install the software on March 9. 

Ernst and Young loses four more laptops

"A team of auditors from Ernst and Young met Feb. 9 at Beacon Pointe at Weston, FL. At noon, they left for lunch, leaving their laptop computers just inside the front door of a conference room. The door-locking...

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