Posted on 07/11/2011 7:53:48 PM PDT by SeekAndFind
Can you imagine being trapped inside your home country, unable to leave? It may be closer to a reality than you realize. Ill tell you a quick story to explain.
This weekend I rented a car in Bulgaria with the aim of driving through Serbia, Kosovo, Macedonia, and eventually into Greece. Now, Im no virgin to land border crossings in the developing world and understand the corruption and incompetence that typifies customs checkpoints. But this weekends experience was much more.
With documents in hand, I drove to my first border crossing in Strezimirovci, Bulgaria. After clearing customs on the Bulgarian side, the Serbian officers decided that they would not allow me to enter with the normal papers, and instead required that I obtain another customs form to proceed.
Unfortunately, they had no such customs form at their station, so they turned me around and sent me to another border check point in Kalotina, over an hour away.
The road from Strezimirovci to Kalotina skirts the Serbian border for a large part of the drive quite literally, on one side of the road is Serbia, and on the other is Bulgaria. Its all part of the same landscape with no discernable difference these are just invisible lines guarded by gun-toting monkeys.
When I arrived to Kalotina, I found the office where I was supposed to obtain the new document just a simple, roadside concession stand. The agent was the shops proprietor, a chain-smoking Serbian woman with rather mannish features.
Once I paid the appropriate fee, she spent the next 10 minutes hacking at her keyboard to produce an official looking Cyrillic document with lots of stamps and seals.
While I was waiting for her to finish, four different customers came into the shop to stock up on snacks and drinks. All they wanted was a cold one for the road, but they eventually got tired of waiting and left.
These four customers represented potential transactions that could have contributed something to the economy. Instead, though, they were preempted by an unnecessary bureaucracy that adds absolutely no value whatsoever.
As expected, the Serbian customs agent barely glanced at the form when I crossed the border this time. Finally on Serbian soil, I pointed my car towards Pristina.
Now, Serbia still pretends like Kosovo is part of its sovereign territory, and Serbian police are under strict instructions to make the immigration checkpoint on the Kosovo border as painful as possible.
The vehicle line at the checkpoint was backed up so much that it took several hours to pass. All along the way, there was not a single bathroom, vending machine, fuel station, or even street light. Its obvious that they want to incovenience travelers to the point that people will think twice before visiting Kosovo again.
When it was finally my turn, I drove up to the policeman and handed him all of my papers. He slowly went through every single detail, looking for any technicality he could find to prevent me from crossing.
The rest the station was staffed with 10 other agents. All brandished automatic weapons slung over their backs, yet each stood around doing absolutely nothing. One person was working, and the other ten were smoking, eating, drinking, and shooting the breeze.
Frankly, I pity all of these border agents whose only function is to deny, obstruct, or otherwise frustrate the forward progress of other human beings. These people will go their entire careers contributing nothing of value to the world, and destroying what others are trying to create. Its truly a pitiful existence.
This weekends affair was a clear example of what happens when a government imposes mind-numbing bureacracy to prevent freedom of movement. And if you think it cant happen where you live, think again.
In the US, the government now requires all citizens to have a passport in order to pass the border, even when driving into Mexico or Canada. Obtaining a passport, however, is neither free nor guaranteed. You must apply, pay an ever-increasing fee, and wait for weeks to be approved and receive it.
Recently, the State Department quietly proposed a new biographical questionnaire in lieu of the traditional passport application. The new form requires you to provide things like:
- names, birth places, and birth dates of your extended family members
- your mothers place of employment at the time of your birth
- whether or not your mother received pre-natal or post natal care
- the address of your mothers physician and dates of appointments
- the address of every place you have ever lived in your entire life
- the name and address of every school you have ever attended
Most people would find it impossible to provide such information, yet the form requires that the responses are true and correct under penalty of imprisonment.
Naturally, the privacy statement on the application also acknowledges that the responses can be shared with other departments in the government, including Homeland Security.
If this proposal passes, then US citizens will have a nearly insurmountable hurdle to obtain a passport and be able to leave the country at will. Even if it doesnt pass, its a clear demonstration of what the people who run the country are thinking.
Have you reached your breaking point yet, comrades?
“In the US, the government now requires all citizens to have a passport in order to pass the border, even when driving into Mexico or Canada. Obtaining a passport, however, is neither free nor guaranteed. You must apply, pay an ever-increasing fee, and wait for weeks to be approved and receive it. “
You should not be required to provide a passport to leave. The only thing they should be doing for people leaving is making sure they are not wanted criminals.
Is this article a joke?
Since the taxes from the liberal states went to the conservative ones it is only fair that the people be allowed to follow their taxes.
Its only agains’t the law if you get caught. LOL!!
A tip when you apply for a passport is to ask for the passport with lots of visa pages. I had to have pages added to my passport for $81. It doesn’t cost any more the passport with more pages.
I worked in the hinterlands of China in the fall and winter of ‘76 - ‘77. That’s exactly how it was to cross the bridge over the Yangtze River from the Yunnan Province to the Szechuan Province. I walked under the bridge along the riverbank one day and got stopped by a squad of 16 year old PLA cadets. My interpreter and I were interrogated for about an hour before they let us go.
Yes, coming soon the US the way things are headed.
That’s only if any one of the following applies:
Your annual tax bill for the past 5 years has been over $139,000
Your net worth in assets is over $2million
You cannot certify that you have met your tax obligation for the 5 years prior to renouncing your citizenship.
This is all the fault of Mark Rich, who absconded to Spain leaving behind a huge tax bill.
It won’t apply to the vast majority of you who want to get out while the getting’s good. Ask me how I know.
I’m from BC originally and I used to have multiple American girlfriends in WA state, and only needed a driver’s license to drive thru. Buy booze at Cost Cutter, and milk/eggs to show the idiot canadian border guard that I did NOT buy booze but ONLY milk/eggs.
How do you know?
How about requiring a PASSPORT from those who want to relocate from a liberal to a conservative state?
Gee, how about requiring a passport from those trying to enter the U.S.?
What if you do not have the info to the questions?
Haw... how can these PIs find such long lost information as one’s mother’s perinatal medical treatment? When that happened decades ago, if it happened at all, likely in the care of physicians now deceased who kept private records on paper and likely did not even involve insurance companies. This is another bureaucratic effup and once enough Congressbeasts learn about it, it will be dead.
Doubtless due to treaties. Otherwise one would expect Canadians to be manning the US side of checkpoints, and vice versa.
“There may come a day when TPTB figure out (much to their dismay) that I’m not trapped here with them - they’re trapped here with ME.”
Excellent. You have a spot on our Committee of Correspondence team if you want it.
I’d be honored, sergeantdave.
>Haw... how can these PIs find such long lost information as ones mothers perinatal medical treatment?
If that’s the case, then how could the government prove someone not only lied, but willfully did so on one of these forms?
To say otherwise is to presume guilt and place the onus not on the accuser but the accused.
>When that happened decades ago, if it happened at all, likely in the care of physicians now deceased who kept private records on paper and likely did not even involve insurance companies.
That only adds to the difficulty of the PROSECUTION thereof.
>This is another bureaucratic effup and once enough Congressbeasts learn about it, it will be dead.
I would hope; but given that people weren’t hanged for saying “we have to pass it to find out what’s in it” I doubt that this minor bureaucratic power-play will garner any attention.
"You coulda heard a pin drop when Tommy stopped and locked the door." -Kenny Rogers - Coward of the County
My ex in-laws.
They told the IRS to pound sand and will never come back to this country.
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