Has the thought occurred to this genius that those 1.6 million may have already made a decision - a decision that they have no need for a gold star on their driver's license?
@@electiangelus Some may have passports. Some may not need a passport or a gold star. Last time I had to get past a guard shack at a military base was decades ago. Can't remember ever entering a nuclear powerplant and have no expectation of doing so in the future. TSA became a big enough headache that if I have to get an airline ticket to go somewhere, I'm probably not going. What difference does it make if my driver's license has a gold star, or not?
According to the Dems. The current administration believes its racist to require ID to vote. Thats Jim Crow 2.0. It is kind of funny that all Senators voted yes to this bill in 2005, which was eventually signed into law by President Bush. One of the Senators that signed Yea to the Bill? You guessed it, Old Jim Crow 2.0 himself, the current President Joe Biden.
Looks like my previous reply didn't make it for some reason. Certain people don't think you should have to show ID. But one of those people that is in charge of the country now, voted for the bill when he was in the Senate in 2005. All Senators signed Yea to the bill also.
If the state of TN had kept all the documents I’d submitted since 1975, I’d be willing to do this. But the state had these documents. I don’t understand what happened to my documents before now.
The state likely still has each of those documents, but they are scattered to some degree among various offices, with some of them in mostly forgotten storage. Converting files to electronic form now allows the state the option of linking all those files together in an easily accessible (for authorized individuals) way, but the problem is how to collect them all, since the old paper files weren't really 'linked' to anything. Even if the state were to commit to the massive clerical task of digitizing all of those old files, there's still the task of confirming that each document is truly yours and not a document that belongs to someone with a similar name. In short, it is much easier, and less expensive, for the federal government to coax you into gathering copies of the documents yourself, then submit them to a clerk and sign a declaration that you are the individual identified in each document.