Originally Posted by
Chaos the Crazy
Using someone's signature as 'verification' is still one of the silliest things to me. Signatures can and do evolve. Mine is a fascinating scribble, and I have had people try to call me out on a fake ID because my signature now is nowhere near what it was when I first got married (ie had to learn new scribble)
If you can sign a credit card slip with "Minnie Mouse" and the charge still goes through without a hitch, that means the system is borked.
When people look at my signature and ask what that is, my response is... legally binding.
Originally Posted by
PVDtoDEL
I thought that you can use it to Bermuda or Canada or something.
By land, or sea. Not by air.
http://travel.state.gov/passport/ppt...card_3921.html
Question 2:
Why can’t I use the passport card to fly to Canada, Mexico, the Caribbean, or Bermuda?
The passport card was designed for the specific needs of northern and southern U.S. border communities with residents that cross the border frequently by land. The passport book is the only document approved for international travel by air.
Yet if you're traveling to Bermuda frequently by sea... more power to you.