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used to impose mandatory fingerprinting on criminals and criminal
suspects only. But if the plan for national ID cards being pushed
by the American Association of Motor Vehicle Administrators (AAMVA)
gets traction, soon every American will be "inked," or
tagged by some other biometric identifier (such as a retinal scan)
all in order to make us "safer." Whether we'll
be as free as we used to be is another matter.
The AAMVA wants
$100 million from Congress to erect this country's first-ever national
ID system, complete with a centralized computer database to keep
track of all 270 million of us. The new IDs would supplant existing
state-level and state-issued driver's licenses and we'd all
have to carry one. "Smart" cards could be used to track
our movements, activities, and purchases, with all of the information
dumping into Uncle Sam's very own PC to be used for whatever "informational-purposes-only"
ends the government deems appropriate. The Justice Department thinks
this is a great idea and has been actively pushing it, even though
President Bush has stated that he's against it.
Of course,
the AAMVA and other national-ID boosters offer soothing words about
the precautions against abuse of the system that would be put into
place, and about how much more "secure" we'd all be with
Uncle Sam able to follow our every move. "The whole issue comes
down to improving public safety, and preventing identity fraud,"
said AAMVA spokesman Jason King. "It will take changes in federal
legislation. It will take changes in state legislation, and it will
most certainly require funding."
Of course.
And it will also take changes in attitude. Americans will have to
grow accustomed to the idea of being tagged and catalogued
and, too, to swallow the imbecility that such an electronic dragnet
will never, ever be abused by the government. Somehow, imperfect
human nature has been transformed, and the weakness and potential
for evil that lurk within the human heart (and which the Founders
tried so hard to keep in check, by limiting the power and reach
of the state) no longer threaten us. The lust for power is dead.
Only the purest of motives are at work in the heads of our elected
officials and bureaucrats. Uncle Sam knows best. He will "protect"
us.
Unfortunately
for our civil liberties, the fact is that especially since
September 11 many Americans appear to be entirely ready to
embrace a national ID card and all that it implies. Fear reversed
the inchoate anti-ID sentiment that had prevailed before. And recent
polls consistently show support for this terrible idea an
idea so alien to the American way of life that its adoption would
amount to a rejection, in toto, of all that the Founders believed
in and tried to protect us from.
David L. Sobel
of the Electronic Privacy Information Center is among the lonely
voices urging a thoughtful pause. "This type of system will
be a radical departure for this country," he said. And, flatly:
"It will be abused." Others concerned about civil liberties
agree and they run the gamut from the hard-core liberals
at the ACLU to the conservative Christian Right. What unites them
is a shared belief that government cannot be trusted with such carte
blanche access to our lives and that waging war on terrorists
should not require us to abandon the very things that make us a
target of terrorism.
A crisis can
bring out the best in people, or their worst. We saw the best of
America at Ground Zero in the immediate aftermath of September 11.
The worst we are seeing now, as fear and the herd instinct threaten
to supplant our usually better judgment. Fortunately, there's still
plenty of time to stop the national ID dead in its tracks.
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