Quote:Quote:- Going strong’s current signature
People willing to trade their freedom for temporary security deserve neither and will lose both
Fifteen years ago, nobody would get fingerprinted except criminals. But after 9/11 2001, governments went apeshit on security issues, which lead to mass surveillance and biometric passports.
It seems to me that the more security measurements are imposed on people, the more terrorist attacks we encounter. But that’s not the point in this thread. The point is a disturbing trend – governments fingerprinting all arriving or departing passengers.
Nothing says “we’re a declining society and we suspect everyone being a terrorist” in a better way than mass-collecting biometric data.
I was always fascinated by Japan and its culture, sports cars, and language. I always wanted to go there, eat Sushi and bang the local women. But then I read Japan is introducing mandatory fingerprinting for everyone, and it died. My wish to go there is at zero now. I visited Hong Kong instead and had a blast.
I’m not going to commit crimes in a country. I won’t organise a coup d’etat. And sure as hell I won’t live off their welfare, so why do some countries treat their visitors that bad?
It's not easy to find reliable information on the internet on which countries do collect biometric data and which don't, so I start this thread. Did you find incorrect or missing data? Report it here.
![[Image: 0w5Po0Y.png]](http://i.imgur.com/0w5Po0Y.png)
Asia: Afghanistan, Cambodia, Japan, Malaysia, Saudi Arabia, South Korea
Africa: Burundi, Ethiopia, Kenya, Rwanda, Senegal, Uganda
Americas: Argentina, United States
Disclaimer: This map shows which countries do fingerprint all arriving or departing passengers from the west. It does not apply to most African and Asian citizens who need a biometric visa for entering Schengen zone.
Much more people die because of police brutality or road fatalities than terrorist attacks. But with every assault, more and more countries introduce bad habits such as collecting biometric data. I predict that this becomes the norm in 10 or 20 years, but for now everyone has the possibility not to visit countries that violate ones privacy.
- Selembao