Home › Forums › News & Current Events › Give up your rights if you drive or ride in vehicle
This topic contains 5 replies, has 5 voices, and was last updated by
James Mitchner 1 year, 3 months ago.
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February 28, 2019 at 10:36 am #9308
https://massprivatei.blogspot.com/2019/02/digital-drivers-licenses-and.html?m=1
Land of the free usa usa…
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February 28, 2019 at 10:38 am #9309
AnonymousThey’ve tried doing that for years. Regardless even if they do, it won’t replace showing ID and proof of physical card at a grocery store. Most of them are scared of accidentally selling to a minor and won’t accept digital IDs or even pictures of IDs right now.
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February 28, 2019 at 12:40 pm #9312
It’s an expressed consent law.
By the act of driving, you are giving your expressed consent for “X”. You don’t have to drive, you can walk, take a bus, a bicycle, etc.
By the act of posting on an openly public forum, you have given your expressed consent for those words to be used in and for other purposes, including future prosecution.
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This reply was modified 1 year, 3 months ago by
Whirlibird.
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This reply was modified 1 year, 3 months ago by
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March 1, 2019 at 2:33 am #9342
My friend in MO was in an accident and her phone was taken….not returned. Showed she was NOT on that device at the time of the collision. Anyone else from MO know their law or did they take her phone without the law? “Evidence” She canceled the account and got a new phone.
OldMtWoman ….but I don’t HAVE a cell phone…what, I can’t drive?
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March 1, 2019 at 10:53 pm #9408
As to the phone, it should have been returned as soon as the case disposition was made official.
Sadly most of the time, the district attorney’s office does not inform local law enforcement about case disposition and when evidence is able to be released.
In a previous life, I would contact our DA’s office regularly to get exactly this information and if I was lucky, I would actually get an acknowledgement but only occasionally an answer.
IN the end I ended up making a form that was submitted to the judge with my reports that essentially stated that any “property” that was non-evidentiary would be returned to the owner at the time of sentencing.
The DA didn’t like it, I didn’t like keeping hundreds of cases worth of junk for no reason.
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March 2, 2019 at 7:19 am #9431
None of that is surprising. I haven’t thought I lived in the “Land of the free, home of the brave” for a very long time. We live in a police state as evidenced by the contents of that article and knowing that I can not do anything of any consequence without government permission in the form of a fee, permit, license, or tax. (Can you think of anything?) Our vehicles have been spying on us ever since the inclusion of the computer modules on the engine. Now there is GPS and no way I am aware of to temporarily disable it. Its wireless feature means you are open to surveillance. For what its worth, I do use a VPN on both my phone and my computer at home. Its not fool-proof but does help increase privacy and security. I also have a wireless-proof phone pouch that I can carry my phone in that blocks all signal should I choose to travel from place to place without the GPS tracking me. The phone is inoperative at that time, or course, but often I don’t care to be interrupted with phone calls anyway. Especially now that tellamarketer bots systematically call numbers to bother people.
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