Stories
Slash Boxes
Comments

News for nerds, stuff that matters

Slashdot Log In

Log In

Create Account  |  Retrieve Password

DHS To Grab Biometric Data From Green Card Holders

Posted by Soulskill on Thu Dec 25, 2008 12:12 PM
from the imports-with-documentation dept.
An anonymous reader writes with this excerpt from Nextgov: "The Homeland Security Department has announced plans to expand its biometric data collection program to include foreign permanent residents and refugees. Almost all noncitizens will be required to provide digital fingerprints and a photograph upon entry into the United States as of Jan. 18. A notice (PDF) in Friday's Federal Register said expansion of the US Visitor and Immigrant Status Indicator Technology Program (US VISIT) will include 'nearly all aliens,' except Canadian citizens on brief visits. Those categories include permanent residents with green cards, individuals seeking to enter on immigrant visas, and potential refugees. The US VISIT program was developed after the Sept.11, 2001 terrorist attacks to collect fingerprints from foreign visitors and run them against the FBI's terrorist watch list and other criminal databases. Another phase of the project, to develop an exit system to track foreign nationals leaving the country, has run into repeated setbacks." Reader MirrororriM points out other DHS news that they're thinking about monitoring blogs for information on terrorists.
+ -
story

Related Stories

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.
The Fine Print: The following comments are owned by whoever posted them. We are not responsible for them in any way.
 Full
 Abbreviated
 Hidden
More
Loading... please wait.
  • Give it a couple of years and another homegrown terrorist. The only thing holding them back is that citizens, uh, vote!

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Remember the fear of being asked for "Your papers?" in the old USSR?. This is going to be just as bad - this junk needs to stop. How you you feel as an American citizen, when going into another country, and being fingerprinted, retinal scanned, etc.

      Lack of privacy, unreasonable search, etc..... I say no way.

      • by Alex Belits (437) * on Thursday December 25 2008, @01:45PM (#26230955) Homepage

        Remember the fear of being asked for "Your papers?" in the old USSR?

        No. And I lived there. USSR had single document -- passport -- serving as the primary ID for everything. "Your papers?" stuff was from Nazi Germany, where government was extremely concerned about losing track of ethnic minorities, what seems to be the exact equivalent of this "effort" in US.

          • In USSR, all citizens were supposed to carry their passports at all times, and show them to the police and other authorities whenever they demanded to see it, or face detention.

            Not "were", "are". There's no USSR anymore, but the rules haven't changed in Russia in that regard.

          • by Alex Belits (437) * on Thursday December 25 2008, @05:40PM (#26231989) Homepage

            In USSR, all citizens were supposed to carry their passports at all times, and show them to the police and other authorities whenever they demanded to see it, or face detention. It's like having to have a driver's license while driving, only for just being there.

            No. Who told you that?

            For example, my friends who chose to wear their hair long learned to never forget their passport at home.

            Your "friends" lived in USSR in early 60's when things like that still bothered cops? Then passports wouldn't help them.

            In major cities like Moscow, your passport had to have a stamp permitting you to live in that city, or you had to have papers showing that you are there on business. You could not just come to Moscow and live there, you needed a permission and that stamp.

            That's propiska, residence registration, you moron. It means that you have an apartment or house in the city. Government provided apartments for token rent, so when you moved to another city you had to go through official channel exchanging apartments, buying a house or getting employer/school-sponsored one. People didn't have to spend anything significant on rent -- having a place to live was considered a basic right, however having it in, say, center of Moscow, obviously was not.

              • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

                Americans have "freedom of movement" (actually freedom of not telling the government that they have moved) at the expense of a right to a dwelling, and 30%-50% of their income being eaten by rent or mortgages.

                After living in both countries I can assure all of you that "right to a dwelling" alone provides more impact than all your piddly "you have a right if you are rich enough, otherwise you are screwed" rights.

        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          "Like it or not, the bill of rights doesn't apply to non-citizens."

          Where in the bill of rights does it say that?

          • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

            Actually, it does! The Constitution applies to the U.S. government, stating what it may and may not do to or for ANYONE.

            In the few cases where the Constitution means for something to apply only to citizens, it is spelled out quite clearly (things like voting, being eligible for the presidency, etc).

      • by cayenne8 (626475) on Thursday December 25 2008, @12:51PM (#26230693) Homepage Journal
        I love this quote from the article : "Almost all non-citizens will be required to provide digital fingerprints and a photograph upon entry into the United States as of Jan. 18. "

        I guess the 'small' exception to this are the 'few' illegal alien, non-citizens coming in periodically from the southern border.

        So, if you want to avoid HS survellience, just come across the border along TX, AZ, CA.....and don't register. It has worked so far, I doubt they'll be changing that anytime soon....

      • by theshowmecanuck (703852) on Thursday December 25 2008, @03:45PM (#26231423) Journal
        I find it hard to understand why many Americans don't understand why people in the world are sick and tired of America, and have lost most of their respect for the country. Especially as this article demonstrates, they are now treating many of their friends as criminals and enemies. After years of living and working in the U.S. I no longer want to have anything to do with the place, especially after being made to feel like a criminal the last time I went down there. I know... some nutbar patriot will yell at me "so stay the f**k out blah blah blah"... this is another problem with many down there. Patriotism blinds people too much to see the flaws of the current mindset there. A good example is how after the ridiculous Iraq war started, people would label others unpatriotic if you voiced your objection to it. Now of course, most in the U.S. realize this was a bad war entered into by a lie, poorly executed, poorly managed, and a waste of people's lives. But at the time, even the media lost their objectivity. Anyway, the reasons I feel like I do should be considered a symptom of the current state of affairs in the U.S. and a cause of concern. There are a lot of people outside of the U.S. that I talk to that don't like the U.S. I used to always take the side of the U.S. in conversations with them. I like the place. I liked the place. I now find it very difficult to side with America's point of view and actions, and don't side with America nearly as much in conversations with people. It no longer welcomes people... it eyes them with distrust and makes you feel like an outsider when you arrive at the border (hi welcome to America... foreigner... smile for the camera, give me your fingers). Distrust is only marginally this side of outright dislike and xenophobia. America, get some help, take off the tinfoil hat.
        • by flajann (658201) <flajann&linuxbloke,com> on Thursday December 25 2008, @05:04PM (#26231825) Homepage Journal
          Paranoia in the US reigns supreme. Apparently, it somewhat does as well in Canada. But I am not sure that the annoyance going on with crossing from the US into Canada is not just 'tit for tat' of the nonsense that happens with Canadians attempt to cross into the US, or if Canada has taken on some paranoia of its own.

          The last time I tried to cross the Canadian border was so annoying I have not bothered going back to Canada in a long time. Every since 9/11, paranoia has been reigning supreme.

          Of course, tracking fingerprints and pictures will not make anyone more secure, since (a) the probability of dying from a terrorist attack is tiny in comparasion to many other daily dangers we embrace everyday without a second thought, like driving, for instance, and (b) the would-be terrorist organizations, if they are really all that inclined, need only find fresh recruits who have not been fingered by the FBI or Homeland Insecurity yet.

          41,000 people die on US highways every year. How many people die in the US from terrorism every year? The attention to the so-called threat does not mesh with the actual facts and the real risk factors.

          So I am not impressed in the least about any of this crap. Just another excuse for the government to stir up fear to create its own "need".

          • by theshowmecanuck (703852) on Thursday December 25 2008, @07:44PM (#26232537) Journal
            I will give you that. Canadian border (so called) guards are really a pain in the ass. Really, they are glorified tax collectors who will rip your car apart looking for something they can apply a duty to. They grill Canadians to see if you might look guilty and they can then have an excuse to search your vehicle. "Where are you going, whey are you going there", etc. etc. etc. My brother one time finally lost it and asked said to them, "look I'm a Canadian coming back to Canada, you can't deport me, so why are you giving me such a hard time." They searched his car for three hours in retaliation. They won't say it was retaliation, but we all know what happens when you step on a rent-a-cop's ego. And they are rent-a-cops. When they get word that bad guys might be trying to cross the border (like suspected murderers on the run), the Canadian border guards run away. This happened a couple of times in 2006 at the Peace Arch Crossing in British Columbia/Washington State (Highway 99/I-5 respectively). But at least you know they are after money and not treating anyone any different. Up until the last time I went to the U.S.A. I hated crossing into Canada more. But now, the U.S. wins the 'onerous prize'.
            • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

              ...Up until the last time I went to the U.S.A. I hated crossing into Canada more. But now, the U.S. wins the 'onerous prize'.

              Yes, indeed. The last time I came back from Canada, the US ding dongs gave me a very hard time, and was deliberately trying to work up my ire. It's as if these guys have nothing better to do other than to harass border crossers.

              To which I say, what's the point? What is gained by bad-assing people crossing the border? It's really takes from the whole idea of a "good getaway" if you are always being steamed at the border.

              For me, it's a 3-4 hour drive to the border, and it's not something I look forward t

  • In a world where wiretaps, illegal searches, etc are very big issues, how on earth is simply keeping track of public and readily available, likely easily searchable blogs not an obvious choice over the other ways to gather information??

    If slashdot had a terrorist corner, id expect the DHS to log in now and again. anything less would be negligent.

    P.S. they should post anon. you know, for security.

    • In a world where wiretaps, illegal searches, etc are very big issues, how on earth is simply keeping track of public and readily available, likely easily searchable blogs not an obvious choice over the other ways to gather information??

      Wiretaps happen in real time at chokepoints.
      Illegal searches are relatively narrow.

      Blogs = the internet. And searching that is a much harder and broader task.

      I'm not defending the illegal government actions, just pointing out that what they've been doing is vastly easier than monitoring *the internet* for terrorist chatter.

            • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

              Just because you say there are many people with have no problem with this does not make it true.

              The people who "dont have a problem: are most like
              illegal immigrant , or people from countries with similarly totalitarian governments anyway, You are right, I am sure Russians and Chinese will be used to such treatment.

              I certainly would not consider traveling to the US
              whilst such draconian measures are in place.

              I would have thought a considerable reduction in tourism would be missed.

  • This doesn't effect me as I am a citizen. That said, this is getting ridiculous. This data doesn't do DHS any good for terror tracking as there has been research suggesting that the overwhelming amounts of information is a hindrance rather then a benefit. All it's good for is when the DHS, FBI, DEA, ATF, etc. decide they don't like you, they can dig through the data to find any trivial issue to drag you into an interrogation room and work you over.

    Thankfully, with Obama becoming president, the odds of yo

    • by jcr (53032) <jcr@@@mac...com> on Thursday December 25 2008, @12:40PM (#26230635) Journal

      This doesn't effect me as I am a citizen.

      I disagree. Tolerating routine violations of privacy for one class of people desensitizes us to routine violations of privacy for everyone.

      Thankfully, with Obama becoming president, the odds of you getting Gitmo'd have reduced drastically.

      The odds were always far lower than the odds of getting killed by a drunk driver, but that's beside the point. The problem is that our government has gotten away with imprisoning people without charges for the first time since the Roosevelt administration, and the public outcry was negligible.

      -jcr

      • by ScrewMaster (602015) * on Thursday December 25 2008, @01:09PM (#26230801)

        I disagree. Tolerating routine violations of privacy for one class of people desensitizes us to routine violations of privacy for everyone.

        I would go a little further and say that systematic abuse of any class of individuals, no matter how unpopular, is something worthy of caution. Take punitive taxation of smokers, just to pick an example. I've never smoked, never will smoke, think it's a spectacularly bad idea ... but I still disagree with heavy taxes applied to cigarette sales. Why? Because if we tolerate governmental mistreatment of one group (no matter what the justification) the odds are they'll eventually do something that hits closer to home. Keep firmly in mind that a significant fraction of our leadership and senior bureaucrats are either sociopaths or have a few well-intentioned screws loose. Either way, it's best not to give them too much authority, because they'll misuse it.

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        It will also be slowly expanded to include citizens.

        Give them an inch, and they take a foot.

    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      This doesn't effect me as I am a citizen.

      Wrong.. Brazil has a policy of exact reciprocity with border regulations and (at least in theory; I think they often don't care in practice) takes Americans finger prints. Even more interesting, the UK is beginning to do exactly the same thing (take fingerprints of non-citizens), following on from the US example. US people are of course, not citizens of the UK.

      However, part of your point is right. It's very difficult to get people to fight something where most of

  • by whoever57 (658626) on Thursday December 25 2008, @12:30PM (#26230565) Journal
    In order to become a resident alien (green card holder), fingerprints and photos are already taken by the DHS (was INS). So how is this going to help? Can't they digitize the existing fingerprints?
  • Monitoring Blogs (Score:3, Insightful)

    by the eric conspiracy (20178) on Thursday December 25 2008, @12:37PM (#26230607)

    Sounds like a good way to poison your monitoring database.

  • D.H.S. (Score:4, Insightful)

    by MRe_nl (306212) on Thursday December 25 2008, @12:37PM (#26230613)

    der heutigen Stasi.

    • by PolygamousRanchKid (1290638) on Thursday December 25 2008, @01:14PM (#26230827)

      der heutigen Stasi.

      . . . this means something like, "today's Stasi."

      The Stasi were a nasty and creepy bunch of East German secret police: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stasi [wikipedia.org].

      They ended collecting *so* much information, that they couldn't analyze it all:

      The MfS infiltrated almost every aspect of GDR life. In the mid-1980s, a network of civilian informants, Inoffizielle Mitarbeiter (IMs, Unofficial Collaborators), began growing in both German states; by the time East Germany collapsed in 1989, the MfS employed an estimated 91,000 employees and 300,000 informants. About one of every 50 East Germans collaborated with the MfS â" one of the most extensive police infiltrations of a society in history. In 2007 an article in BBC stated that "Some calculations have concluded that in East Germany there was one informer to every seven citizens."

      The lesson here is that if you are collecting a lot of data, that doesn't necessarily mean that you are collecting the right (and useful) data.

      • They also didn't have big fat data warehouses and NLP programs to sort through them. By the time the law enforcement community is actively capturing data on you, they have a really good idea of who you are. They are tagging the data correctly and probably doing so with the intention of bringing a court case against you. Even if the case never comes, as might be the case when they are observing "persons of interest", they are still applying the same processes as if they were going to eventually prosecute
      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        Verry interesting!

        Even with advanced computer technology, data collection as undertaken by the Stasi, would require a big bureaucracy. Acting on any information mined from that data collection would require an even greater bureaucracy. I doubt that any half-aware political society would tolerate that kind of expense--especially when it results in significant annoyance.

        On the other hand, the US has been putting up with the obnoxious TSA for a long time. . .. Hopefully that officious bureaucracy will be me

      • by cpghost (719344) on Thursday December 25 2008, @03:18PM (#26231335) Homepage

        The lesson here is that if you are collecting a lot of data, that doesn't necessarily mean that you are collecting the right (and useful) data.

        It's like the NSA drinking from a fire hose: they are collecting so much more data than they can analyze in real time! Such data is only useful post factum, to retrace what happened (cf. 9/11). The chance to catch something useful in time and react proactively is extremely slim.

        So the question is: is it worth it to undermine informational freedom of citizens (and here non-citizens) and give Government a huge database that could be used to silence opposition by blackmailing or that could leak data to third parties like, say, private investigators, just to facilitate forensic investigations? Some may say yes, others would say no.

  • these all are the eggs laid by the top management republicans staffed those organizations with. leave aside creating them in the first place.

    unbelievable isnt it ? they are 1 month from being fired, yet still try to force their agenda.

    actually not. self centered, extremist right groups tend to lose perception of reality after a point. nazis at the closing stages of the war, or nixon still saying he is an honest man, are examples of that.
  • ...but could somebody explain to me how capturing these data enhances "National Security."

    It might be a waste of time because folks who harm this country's citizens are more oftem willing to die. That is after harming the country anyway.

    Secondly, our borders are porous to the extent that we've failed to stem the flow of drugs despite spending close to a trillion dollars on "border security."

    I just do not understand.

    • by dave562 (969951) on Thursday December 25 2008, @01:47PM (#26230969) Journal

      Bad guy A drives a car to target B and leaves his finger prints all over the place. Target B gets destroyed but the biometric evidence is left behind. Law enforcement collects the biometric data from Bad Guy A and runs it through the big data warehouse in the sky. They then presumably know all that there is to know about him. At the very least, they know where he came into the country, where he has been living and from there, perhaps who has been associating with.

      I know a guy who works with the Secret Service and very well might be one of the primary agents protecting Obama once he gets into the White House. We've had long conversations about what the government does and what their capabilities are with regards to intelligence gathering. Despite all of the rhetoric about big brother and loss of privacy, I'm quite comfortable knowing that unless I'm actively trying to destablize the government, they don't care about what I am up to.

        • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

          The founders did not attempt to destabilize the monarchy, despite their ill will towards- and actions against the crown. They chose to declare independence from the empire and found a just society which avoided the possibility of tyranny. There's a big difference.

          The right they fought for was a constitution, ensuring a democratically elected government which worked for the people and did not abuse them. Despite Republican claims they did not chant the "small government" mantra- they sought States' rights

  • for obvious reasons
  • I entered US as a refugee in 91 and got green card in 94. I was photographed and fingerprinted on both occassions. What is big deal?
  • by Zarhan (415465) on Thursday December 25 2008, @01:16PM (#26230839)

    I've been to the US numerous times, all on business trips (I get paid to travel there). Anyway, back in 2003, Dallas, on first trip ever, I was basically waved through...not so bad even coming with an completely empty, unstamped passport.

    Unfortunately, ever since then, on multiple trips (Immigration checks at NYC, Chicago, Philadelphia, Boston) the fingerprints have been the least annoying part.

    When the US-VISIT scheme was introduced, I went through the DHS website and looked into the privacy and data storage implications. Basically the PDF docs on the site showed such a horrendous architecture that I was pretty confident that my fingerprints will be safe in bowels of a system that probably won't ever really work (and I'm not a US taxpayer so I don't care that much where their money goes).

    This was confirmed on my arrival to PHL - I thought that since I've been on multiple visits before that the officer probably has all my info on her screen the moment she wipes my (machine-readeable, not yet biometric) passport.

    Guess what? I have scandinavian letters in my name (ääääööö). The officer asked me under what name I'd like to enter the US - should she type in my name with ä => ae or ä => a conversion. I gave the ä => a version since that's what everyone is in reality using... but kinda felt a bit let down of the awesome border security procedures...I'm starting to realize where all the Usama/Osama problems stem from. I thought that they'd at least use, say, the passport number if not the "code" field as primary key...At least if on some trip I land in trouble I can just claim "No, it's just a misspelled name, I'm really that other guy..."

    Point I'm getting here: Fingerprints are minor piece of annoyance that add a bit to the travelers problems. For me, the privacy implications were pretty well addressed by DHS docs. The guy that interviews you at the border is the first person who you meet in foreign country - it's his behavior that gives the first impression.

    The annoying part has been the attitude of almost all occasions I've basically felt that arrogance of "YOU ARE NOTHING, WHY THE HELL SHOULD I LET YOU IN, you pitiful European". Some vindication came on the last time in:

    I was recently in Minneapolis IETF, and went through Chicago again (to change planes to Minneapolis). I don't know whether it was "economy is down, this foreign guy might bring in some serious money" or the fact that it was Obama's home town and everyone was still in great post-election mood and they forgot to be jackasses - but the guy at the desk was really nice. He ofc asked all the same questions as every other time - where I'm going and why - but the attitude made me actually feel welcome to the US. He basically apologized that they have to these days take the whole hand (prints from all fingers) but also said how much better the reader is compared to old one, told me that if I'm planning to spend any time in Chicago he could name a couple of good steakhouses - before stamping my passport and sending me on to the baggage carousel.

    Now, timewise it wasn't any faster than any previous visits - same 5 minutes to process me - but I actually felt a bit happy after 16-hour flight (with transfers).

    Mind you, I've gotten the "I'm welcome" feeling in EVERY other country I've visited, ever. At all borders they've acquired the same information - why I'm there, when I'm leaving and what I'm planning to do - but I'll be glad to visit Canada, UK, Thailand, Japan, Australia, NZ, and even Russia again - as a tourist, spending my own money.

    If I'll get the same experience on my subsequent US business trips as I got on my latest one, I might actually come in again as a tourist, bring friends, and spend some of my own money, too.

    • Part of the problem is that there's little to no accountability in the DHS so assholes get to stay. Another part of the problem is it doesn't pay all that well so they don't get the best and brightest, as it were. So you get a real mixed bag. I've had people who were extremely polite, I've had assholes that were looking for a way to keep me out (I'm a US citizen so they can't).

      On the Canadian side of the border (where I usually travel) I've found they are usually politer, but not always and generally not mu

  • They're doing this because they have caught oh-so-many terrorists using that fingerprint and face data so far, right?

  • by matchlight (609707) * on Thursday December 25 2008, @02:18PM (#26231093)
    Every time I read about this kind of thing... more surveillance, finger printing, suspicionless checkpoints, etc, etc...

    I think two things:

    1. WTF. I'm not a crimial, and the majority of people aren't either and yet we're all subjected to this kind of BS.

    2. Does it even work? Why are countries making all of these efforts and the citizens are the last to hear about it.

    Will biometrics really make a difference at the borders? The first thing I think of are ways that a person could get around this .. and you know the US border is still pretty open.

    By water or land people cross the borders all the time.

    This all started with 9/11 by people who were in the country legally... so ya, this just doesn't make any sense to me and makes me more frustrated with our governments.
  • Already done (Score:4, Informative)

    by Rene S. Hollan (1943) on Thursday December 25 2008, @03:32PM (#26231377)

    When I applied for (and subsequently received, in 2006) my green card, a photo and fingerprints were taken.

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      Yeah, when I got my my green card like 15 years ago, they required all 10 fingerprints, as well as a photo. And as someone has already mentioned, your picture and fingerprint are prominently displayed on it.
  • Dude... (Score:4, Funny)

    by lxs (131946) on Thursday December 25 2008, @04:37PM (#26231673)
    Reader MirrororriM points out other DHS news that they're thinking about monitoring blogs for information on terrorists.

    Dude, I totally saw Bin Laden at the local supermarket yesterday.
    • Re:Well (Score:4, Insightful)

      by BeerCat (685972) on Thursday December 25 2008, @12:38PM (#26230625) Homepage

      but I'm saying tracking non-citizens is just common sense.

      Of course, if it really was "common sense", then it's the kind of thing that would have been in place for decades. Ergo, it is not "common sense", but yet another "security theatre" response.

      • The technology wasn't in place decades ago. The technology is here now, and so it is happening. The internet grew out of a military communications network. It was initially used between RESEARCH institutes. The entire foundation of the network has this kind of thing built into its DNA. Hell, when the system was first built you could "finger" pretty much any box out there and see who is logged in and doing what. That was a big fat privacy invasion right there.
    • Hell, as a non-citizen considering trying to move to the US (to be with a US citizen), I don't have a serious problem with this. Moving country is an exceptional event, and even before the whole terrorism scare it would be quite reasonable to check things like you're not letting in foreign spies.

      I would look for them to say they'll get rid of the data if you become a citizen, but beyond that this isn't any more unreasonable than anything else you're asked to do to get a green card.

    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      Might have something to do with we sell you more oil then opec, more forestry products then you farm, more unrefined and in some cases refined goods you produce, more bulk raw minerals including diamonds. That if you want to keep oil flowing from alaska, you play nice, and if you like using our ports you do the same.

      We also export people in the winter to the sunny southern US to keep it alive down there. On top of that we don't take anything, we have our own industry that lives on it's own. You decided y

      • ...and if you like using our ports you do the same.

        Actually, we don't give a shit about your ports, we have plenty of ports of our own and many of them don't get buried in snow five months a year.

        Generally you don't go pissing in the guy's cereal when they're the ones supplying you with the goods and providing you with most of your base wealth, along with an entire new generation of brains because your edumucation system is in slow decline.

        It's a two way street there. Don't get too smug, Canada needs the US

        • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

          Actually, we don't give a shit about your ports, we have plenty of ports of our own and many of them don't get buried in snow five months a year.

          Actually you do. Our ports don't, vancouver never freezes and halifax is open 10+mo a year. The only ports that freeze are in the great lakes, you know the ones that ship out the majority of the grain to the rest of the world.

          It's a two way street there. Don't get too smug, Canada needs the US more than the US needs Canada. And no, you don't provide the US with wealth, goods are only imported because it's cheaper to do so than to manufacture them internally. If ever the dollar returns to parity with the looney for an extended period of time, Canada will start hurting.

          We don't need you, as much as you need us. That's the current reality of the world economy. We're a net exporter of finished and unfinished goods. Not a net importer. If you don't understand that, I'll explain. It means that if you throw a hissy fit, we simply say 'our market is