Religious headwear is part of how millions of people present themselves every day — banning it in passports is disrespectful and unnecessary when faces are still fully visible.
Security comes first, but banning faith is overkill. Allow religious headwear as long as the full face is clearly visible.
A passport's whole job is proving who you are. If your full face is visible for security scanners, wearing religious headwear is totally fine.
Passports exist for ID checks, so allow religious headwear only when the full face stays clearly visible. Anything else risks fake identities.
Religious headwear should be allowed in passport photos. Security can rely on facial recognition and other checks, not on banning faith in IDs.
Religious headwear reflects faith and should be allowed, with face visibility ensured for reliable identity checks.
Headwear should be allowed if it doesn’t hide the face or block verification. Let ritual respect meet security in balance, so identity stays clear.
Headwear is acceptable if the face stays fully visible for identity checks. Like sketching a portrait, verification must be as strict as with bare heads, honoring faith without weakening security.
Liberty must give room to religious dress, yet a passport is a badge of security. Allow head coverings, but require the face to be clearly seen for ID.
Faith is a core part of who we are; let the photo reveal the face clearly. Head coverings that don't obscure identity honor belief and keep security intact.
Identity is the key; religious headwear stays only if the face is fully visible. If visibility is compromised, use backup verification.
Religious liberty ain't negotiable; passport photos should reflect who we are, not hide it.
Let love lead; allow religious headwear in passport pics, but keep the face clearly visible for ID.
Let faith be visible. Identity stays airtight with strict face-framing and robust verification.