“It is a lie that you cannot fly without REAL ID,” Brase continued. “There are at least 16 identification cards, and passengers without any ID can submit to a search, as noted in the Gilmore vs. Gonzalez ruling. The “you can’t fly” lie is being used to convince Americans to give up their constitutional rights and submit to federal control over identification, transportation, and, in the future, a broad swatch of personal interactions and commercial transactions.”

“In the future, #REALID could be required to access medical care, buy a gun, get married, build a business, lease a car, rent a hotel room, and much more,” says Brase.

“The American Association of Motor Vehicle Administrators testified to Congress of plans to digitize REAL ID, put it on phones, and make it remote and real time accessible.”

CCHF’s call to action, in a joint effort with Stand for Health Freedom, asks citizens to refuse the REAL ID. CCHF also asks them to contact members of Congress with a request to shut down the TSA’s REAL ID rule, which launches two years of “progressive enforcement” and “progressive consequences” beginning on May 7, 2025.

CCHF is asking Americans to call Congress and take action by going to www.RefuseREALID.org.

#DigitalID #Surveillance #SurveillanceState #USpol nostr:note198sjunz4lgqdr5pwfv5rad9vswkkkqfp9msqd4s3nfysmngkw40qshp47c

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I’m not sure what’s going on with this URL, here is the URL from the website: https://www.votervoice.net/SFHF/Campaigns/122494/Respond

It’s a redirect to https://www.cchfreedom.org/national-id/ but it doesn’t work with the “www.”

Not just REAL ID. I have been "given the option" to "register" with ID.me "to protect my sensitive data". In the case of the Social Security website, the invitation was optional. With Security Benefit Life Insurance, a 100% "private" (meaning non-governmental) company, the demand was mandatory.

Gee whiz, signing up for ID.me would be great! Imagine the same signon for every website! Hey, we could even set it up so that one couldn't even access the internet at all without registering with ID.me! Besides the obvious danger of putting your information in a single location where it could be stolen, sold, shared or all of the above, this would also of course make it very easy to "cancel" (censor) someone completely. Not that it would ever happen. We live in a free country. Right?

BTW, I ended up calling SBLI. I got my document and severed ties with them forever.