So the UK government has been proposing what they call an Entitlement Card – a universal ID card for every man, woman and child in Britain. Every government seems to propose this the moment they get into office, and ever since 1952, the voters have rejected it. It’s one of those things that civil servants like to slip into the “TODO” list while the Minster isn’t looking.
The usual way of stopping it is to complain that there’s no mandate. The present government are getting around this by holding a “Public Consultation”, where they write a 13MB PDF document (here’s an HTML version we hacked up) talking about how great ID cards would be. They then solicit comments. The government is very pleased with this scheme. Lord Falconer, the government’s ID card point man, keeps talking about how the majority of responses have been positive (they’ve had over 1500 so far).
I’m not so sure that’s true. NTK subscriber Dan Blanchard emailed them to complain about the proposals, and got a nice mail back saying “Thank you for your e-mail in support of the introduction of an entitlement/identity card scheme.”. Whoops.
Now I can’t be sure they’re miscounting here. I am pretty sure that there’s a large number of people who are anti-ID cards, but haven’t spoken up. So we’ve set up an easy front-end to their consultation process: you can just check the boxes, add your own comments, and mail the consultation email address automatically. We’re counting all the messages that are against the proposal, and we’ll see how they match up against the government figures.
Also, I can’t help thinking that 1500 replies is pathetic compared to a good slashdotting. I think the blogosphere might be able to swing the balance around in a week or so.
Anyway, if you’re British and you don’t like the ID card proposal, have a look over the site and make your voice hear. We’ve only been going for a few hours, and we’ve already got around three hundred responses.
Oh, almost forgot to add: Bwahahahahaha.