I got you are subscriber of [url=http://2server.sakura.ne.jp/newnews/pc/index.php?res=1551]Hariko no Tora!
You always comment in Japanese on this site?
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FG Lurker wrote:The Bilderbergers are not a family. At least get your conspiracy theories straight before you spew them out to the world.
and guests are often seen as belonging to a secretive Bilderberg Group.
Donald Rumsfeld is an active Bilderberger.
Kuang_Grade wrote:Slashdot users notice this happening. Not as jokey as other slashdot threads.
http://yro.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=07/11/19/0436218
Slashdot wag wrote:Dog semen is the best solution. Not only does it make your fingerprints unreadable, but it also obscures any DNA traces you might be leaving. Make sure your fingers are always dripping with the stuff.
canman wrote:The article was published in 2006, that is why they referred to Koizumi.
canman wrote:I will await those of you traveling to report what things are like.
momotobananaoishii wrote:yeah they are. A family/group of modern day nazi/NWO. Get your antifacts straight.
Taro Toporific wrote:Really?:p
Protestors inflated a 3-meter-high yellow hand with an extended forefinger and thrust it toward the Justice Ministry's offices in Tokyo on Tuesday to demonstrate against a controversial fingerprinting policy beginning at ports of entry across the country the same day.
About 80 protestors turned toward the ministry building and shouted in unison their opposition to the new policy, which requires all but a handful of foreigners to have their fingerprints and face photos taken to gain entry into Japan.
Representatives of human rights groups, labor unions, foreigners' groups and individuals spoke out against the system -- similar to the US-VISIT policy operating in the United States since 2004, but also targeting residents and not just tourists -- calling it, among other things, "racist," "xenophobic," "retrogressive" and "an invasion of human rights and privacy."...more...
Captain Japan wrote:Protesters 'flip the bird' at Justice Ministry over forced fingerprinting
Mainichi
The Justice Ministry began to take measures Tuesday to force five foreign nationals to leave Japan under a revised immigration law as their fingerprints were identical to those of five people who had been evicted, ministry officials said early Wednesday.
Mulboyne wrote:From here
...A system glitch at Kansai Airport occurred at about 5:30 a.m. with the day's first planeload of passengers. One of the installed fingerprinting devices stopped responding soon after immigration procedures started for foreigners arriving on a Singapore Airlines flight from Bangkok. To try to avoid delays, foreigners waiting in line for the booth with the technical problem were guided to other booths, and the fingerprinting device was successfully put back in operation soon afterward. There were no reports of major confusion over the system or of foreigners refusing to be fingerprinted.
At Tokachi Obihiro Airport in Hokkaido, a fingerprinting device displayed an error message for about 10 minutes from 10:45 a.m. when dealing with tourists from Taipei. At Fushiki Port in Toyama Prefecture, a fingerprinting device malfunctioned at about 8:30 a.m. during immigration procedures aboard a cargo ship.
At Narita Airport, a Qantas Airways flight from Sydney with 212 passengers arrived at 6:10 a.m. About 210 immigration officers--about 70 more than usual--dealt with the passengers to avoid problems. The passengers pressed their index fingers on the glass scanning panels, had their photos taken, answered questions from immigration officers and headed to the arrival lobby. When a number of flights arrived from Southeast Asia at about 8 a.m., the process was clearly taking longer than usual.
Every parent in the country has been put at risk of fraud and identity theft after the Government lost 25 million personal records in Britain’s worst ever data protection breach...Two compact discs containing bank details and addresses of 9.5 million parents and the names, dates of birth and National Insurance numbers of all 15.5 million children in the country went missing after a junior employee of HM Revenue and Customs put them in the post, unrecorded and unregistered...
Catoneinutica wrote:A Slashdot commenter noted that since Japan apparently has a reciprocal fingerprint-sharing agreement with the US, both countries are getting a huge pool of fingerprints of their own non-lawbreaking citizens - all without lifting a legal finger, as it were. Spooky.
Kuang_Grade wrote:This is actually the thing that bothers me the most. I don't have any particular concerns about what the J gov would do with with the fingerprint data but I have huge concerns about what my own government will do with it.
http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9B05E1D8153EF935A15756C0A9629C8B63&n=Top/Reference/Times%20Topics/People/M/Mayfield,%20Brandon
Kuang_Grade wrote:This is actually the thing that bothers me the most. I don't have any particular concerns about what the J gov would do with with the fingerprint data but I have huge concerns about what my own government will do with it.
Kuang_Grade wrote:I have huge concerns about what my own government will do with it.
FG Lurker wrote:I think you are missing a point in your logic. How and why do you think the US government is going to get your prints? Perhaps because of something the Japanese government has done...? (Like take them in the first place and then happily hand them over to the US.)
Kuang_Grade wrote:I'm not concerned what the J government would do with the data FOR THEMSELVES and their own internal purposes. Recording the data when I arrive and then verifying that the same person is seeking to leave the country doesn't bother me nor does verifying the passport number with the data collected in the past for repeat visitors to make sure they match. But the use of the data should end at the J national borders. I just don't care for the US security infrastructure getting my data for 'free' without any justification and also in a way that I have no specific knowledge about or control over. Not that I have a specific worry about something coming up out of my past, but, then again, who knows how badly they will manage this and whose data my name could be mixed up with. Given how poorly the J government safeguards the data of J citizens, I can only imagine the complete lack of concern they will show towards the data of foreigners.
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