NORTH AMERICAN UNION DRIVERS' LICENSE CREATEDLogo intended to standardize documentation across continent
Posted: September 6, 2007
1:00 a.m. Eastern
By Jerome
R. Corsi
© 2007 WorldNetDaily.com
The first "North American Union" driver's license, complete with a hologram
of the continent on the reverse, has been created in North Carolina.
"The North Carolina driver's license is 'North American Union' ready,"
charges William
Gheen, president of Americans
for Legal Immigration.
Gheen provided WND with a photo of an actual North Carolina license which
clearly shows the hologram of the North American continent embedded on the
reverse.
"The hologram looks exactly [like] the map of North America that is used as
the background for the Security and Prosperity Partnership of North America logo
on the SPP website," Gheen told WND. "I object to the loss of sovereignty that
is proceeding under the agreements being made by these unelected government
bureaucrats who think we should be North American instead of the United States
of America.
"To protest, I don't plan on applying for a North Carolina driver's license,"
Gheen told WND, "even though I am a resident of the state. I don't see how a
Division of Motor Vehicles authorized in a Department of Transportation of a
state of the United States can force me to have a license place that is designed
with a North American Union insignia printed on the backside.
"My decision not to get a North Carolina driver's license could have very
difficult consequences for me," Gheen told WND. "Without a valid driver's
license, I may not be able to drive a car, fly on an airplane, or enter a
government building."
Gheen told WND he does not have a U.S. passport.
In 2005, WND reported North
Carolina was the state where illegal immigrants go to get a driver's
license, with busloads of aliens traveling south on I-95 to get an easy ID.
The Tar Heel State's requirements to obtain a license are weaker than those
of many surrounding states.
Marge Howell, spokeswoman for the North Carolina DMV, affirmed to WND the
state was embedding a hologram of North America on the back of its new driver's
licenses.
"It's a security element that eventually will be on the back of every
driver's license in North America," Howell told WND.
Howell explained the hologram of the continent was the creation of the American Association
of Motor Vehicle Administrators, a tax-exempt, nonprofit organization that,
according to the group's website, "develops model programs in motor vehicle
administration, law enforcement and highway safety."
Founded in 1933, AAMVA represents state and provincial officials in the
United States and Canada who administer and enforce motor vehicle laws. The
government of Mexico is also a member, though the individual Mexican states have
yet to join.
According to the group's
website, AAMVA's programs are designed "to encourage uniformity and
reciprocity among the states and provinces."
"The goal of the North American hologram," Howell explained, "is to get one
common element that law enforcement throughout the continent can look at on all
driver's licenses and tell that the driver's license is an official document."
Jason King, spokesman for AAMVA, affirmed the North American hologram was
created by AAMVA's Uniform Identification Subcommittee, a working group of its
members.
He explained the goal is to create a continental security device that could
be used by state and provincial motor vehicles agencies throughout North
America, including the U.S., Canada and Mexico.
King referenced a
document on the AAMVA website that describes guidelines for using the North
America continent hologram as an Optical Variable Device (OVD) that AAMVA has
now licensed with private manufacturers to produce.
AAMVA supplies member motor vehicle agencies with a quantity of North
American continent hologram OVD foils to use on their driver's licenses and ID
cards as needed.
As the AAMVA guidelines document explains, each North American hologram OVD
foil is embedded with a unique set of control numbers that permit law
enforcement electronic scanners to identify the exact jurisdiction and precise
individual authorized to hold a driver's license or ID card.
"AAMVA understands its unique positioning and the continuing role
identification security will play in helping the general public realize a safer
North America," King explained to WND in an e-mail. "The association believes ID
security will help increase national security, increase highway safety, reduce
fraud and system abuse, increase efficiency and effectiveness, and achieve
uniformity of processes and practices."
Jim Palmer, press director for ALIPAC, told WND his group first became aware
of the hologram when Missouri State
Rep. Jim Guest held a seminar in North Carolina to protest the Real ID law.
The surprise came at a meeting July 28 on the Real ID that Palmer held in
Raleigh, N.C.
"When Rep. Guest asked participants to take out their driver's license and
see what was on it," Palmer explained, "one gentleman was a state employee and
on his license there was this hologram with the North American continent on the
back. We were all surprised to see that on a North Carolina driver's license.
Right there, that stopped the show."
Guest has formed a coalition called Legislators
Against Real ID Act, or LARI.
"I was astonished when I saw that North American hologram on the North
Carolina driver's license," Guest told WND. "I thought to myself that the state
DMV has already included this North American symbol on the back of the driver's
license without telling the people of North Carolina they were going to do this.
"I thought right then that this was going to be the prototype for the
driver's license of the North American Union," Guest said.
"When we called the North Carolina DMV, they hedged at first," Guest said,
"but finally they admitted that, yes, there was a North American continent
hologram on the back of the license.
"This is part of a plan by bureaucrats and trade groups that act like
bureaucrats to little by little transform us into a North American Union without
any vote being taken and without explaining to the U.S. public what they are
doing," Guest argued.
King explained AAMVA's Uniform Identification Subcommittee created a number
of task forces, including the Card Design Specification that developed the North
America hologram.
"The Task Group surveyed and met with many stakeholders during the
development effort," King wrote to WND. "The Task Force gathered information
from government and non-government users of the driver's License/ID card to
determine their uses for the DL/ID card and how they believe the card should
function. In addition, the Task Group surveyed and met with industry experts in the area of
card production and security to gather their advice, especially about the
physical security of the card."
King told WND the Task Group work was repeatedly reviewed by the UID
Subcommittee as a whole, with final approval coming from the AAMVA Board.
In 2006, WND reported Pastor
Rios Sanchez, 55, an illegal alien, was accused of killing three people,
including two North Carolina State University students and a 26-year-old, while
driving drunk.
"People who think the Real ID was created to keep illegal aliens from getting
driver's licenses and IDs should come to North Carolina," Gheen told WND. "What
the North Carolina DMV is doing is creating the basis for a continental driver's
license.
"What difference does it make to North Carolina if an illegal alien gets a
driver's license?" Gheen asked. "The photo on the license creates a close face
scan that can be identified by face recognition technology, whether the DMV
admits it or not.
"Illegal aliens who get driver's licenses are just being scanned in advance,"
Gheen concluded.
"Illegal aliens who get driver's licenses or IDs in North Carolina are just
being prepared for their admission into the North America Union driver pool that
North Carolina is at the vanguard of creating," Gheen said. "That is the truth,
whether the North Carolina DMV or the AAMVA want to admit it or not."
King told WND North Carolina is the first AAMVA member jurisdiction to use
the North America hologram on a driver's license or ID card.
World Net Daily
New security logo on the reverse of
North Carolina's driver's licenses
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