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Thousands
Standing Around |
I sometimes use my Hong Kong Identity Card as ID -- it is a government issued with a photo --- can recall Columbus, OH no problems but in LGA had problems of all places I would expect them to be familiar with Hong Kong identity documents, not Ohio.
Needless to say, the HKID does not have an expiration date. It only has the issuance date twice in two formats one in smaller font than the other, so it confuses some screeners as the date is from years ago in international format. It does not expire as it is my permanent identity. Typically they are issued to residents and/or HK passport holders, thus no need for an expiration as it really just reflects resdiency which you had to have in the first place in order to get it with some exceptions. Though, my identity does not change thus "permanent" ---- mine does not say permanent since I am not a current resident of HK...boo hoo I think most think of valid as current or applicable thus within expiration. That would be interesting if TN and some other staes do not put expiration dates on their DL's --- makes for interesting conversation with TSA screeners....traveller would be in the right and TSA in the wrong--makes you feel good that you won the arguement --- maybe they are dropping the "valid" wording since no one can find it in writing anywhere? |
Originally Posted by LV702
(Post 6779847)
I was in RDU a few weeks ago. For some reason TSA was supervising the ID checker. On my DL, there is a renewal sticker on the back. Hand over my DL, and they say it's expired. I say no it's not, flip it over. They stare at it for a good 30 seconds before they let me through.
idiots |
Had a third-party moron claim my birth date was the expiration date on my DL in Tampa a couple months ago. :rolleyes:
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Originally Posted by LarryJ
(Post 6776770)
Valid means unexpired. Without an expiration date they can't verify that it's unexpired. That's why you need the photo in combination with a non-photo unexpired ID.
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I would love to see these uncultured morons deal with my friends Japanese ID which gives dates in the traditional format, based upon years of the Emeperor's reign.
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Originally Posted by gradvmedusa
(Post 6781206)
I would love to see these uncultured morons deal with my friends Japanese ID which gives dates in the traditional format, based upon years of the Emeperor's reign.
We are currently in the year 95. So today is December 2, 95 means December 2, 2006. |
A PERSON'S IDENTITY DOES NOT "EXPIRE". Each human being is an utterly unique, irreplaceable individual. The old song is right, "There will never be another YOU". Even after death a person's unique identity remains, even if eventually unknown (till sometimes discovered)to all but the Lord.
His appearance or health may change, his address may change, he may change his name, citizenship, occupation or even his sex, BUT HE DOES NOT ACTUALLY BECOME SOMEONE ELSE. Requests for "Valid photo Identification Cards" are merely really requests for CURRENT mini-dossiers (linked to mega-historic or past dossiers) on the exact place in the social fabric that unique person fills and or filled. It is as true of even trees or animals as it is of people. There are no two trees of the same exact variety that are or ever were exactly identical in every respect to another tree of that exact same kind. What a challenge it must be to create an infinite variety of the same model! |
Originally Posted by gradvmedusa
(Post 6781206)
I would love to see these uncultured morons deal with my friends Japanese ID which gives dates in the traditional format, based upon years of the Emeperor's reign.
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Originally Posted by bitburgr
(Post 6779675)
Well, I can't cite the reg, but at the risk of being sarcastic...does "valid" mean "acceptable"? or "unexpired"?
Originally Posted by themicah
(Post 6780494)
Does TSA actually check ID at SFO now? I thought contractors were still checking IDs at most airports.
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Originally Posted by Superguy
(Post 6778779)
So if my license expires tomorrow, does that mean I'm no longer who the license says I am? Who do I become then? :rolleyes:
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OK, has anyone else had this one: In Kansas, when you go to renew a Driver's License, they hand you a temporary license on a piece of regular white printer paper. It has a photo, a valid DL number, and an expiration date.
By all accounts, it's valid government-issued photo ID - no question about it. I'm not really worried at all about handing it to MCI security. I'm sure they've seen these papers many times. I'm more worried about handing it over at LGA, SEA, IAD, or SFO. It sure as heck looks like I typed it up in Word, embedded a JPEG, and printed it on a cheap B&W printer. I know I can simply bring my passport instead - I just don't ordinarily do that on domestic trips. Also wonder how Hertz will react to this thing, but I guess that's off-topic for here... |
Originally Posted by tlglenn
(Post 6780472)
Arizona drivers licenses issued to younger people expire on the 65th birthday...
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Originally Posted by pinniped
(Post 8404116)
I know I can simply bring my passport instead - I just don't ordinarily do that on domestic trips.
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Tennessee Driver licenses expire on your birthday. Good for six years. I can't recall where I read it but somewhere in the past I read that an expired passport was good for ID purposes. Not for travel though. Of course, this could have been before 9/11 and TSA so things may have changed.
Dave |
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