Posted on 09/20/2005 4:55:33 AM PDT by billorites
IF THE REAL ID Act were such a great idea, why did Congress attach it to a military spending bill and pass it without public hearings?
The answer, of course, is that it is not a great idea.
Supporters of REAL ID, including Reps. Charlie Bass and Jeb Bradley and Sen. Judd Gregg, say people should not be able to get drivers licenses without proving they are who they say they are.
Very true. But REAL ID goes further. If the bill simply set a few minimum standards for the issuance of state identification cards such as drivers licenses, it would raise few eyebrows. Some states had dangerously lax standards before 9/11. For instance, seven of the 9/11 hijackers got Virginia drivers licenses because that state gave licenses to undocumented immigrants.
REAL ID, however, nationalizes the drivers license, turning it into an electronic national ID card, and creates a de facto nationwide database for personal information. It is a hackers dream come true. Personal data on virtually every adult in the United States will become highly vulnerable when this law is fully implemented.
The law requires common machine-readable technology for verifying the identity of each license holder. The Department of Homeland Security is reportedly leaning toward Radio Frequency Identifier tags to accomplish this goal. Small tags in the cards would transmit data via radio signals.
This past May the Government Accountability Office wrote of RFID, Without effective security controls, data on the tag can be read by any compliant reader; data transmitted through the air can be intercepted and read by unauthorized devices; and data stored in the databases can be accessed by unauthorized users.
RFID tags also can be used to track peoples movements without their knowledge, according to experts.
All of this is superfluous to ensuring that people are who they say they are. That could be done at the DMV simply by requiring proof of ID.
Kudos to Sen. John Sununu for having the guts to oppose this overreaching law under pressure from the administration and his own party. The act goes too far, and he has been one of the few Republicans to say so.
I have no problem with a National ID card.
I do have a big problem with a National Data Base System. As we have seen, large data base systems are not only vulnerable to hackers, but to employees willing to sell info for chump change.
The Real ID is over kill in that direction though.
Republicans, Democrats... With a few exceptions, who can tell the difference anymore? Case in point: our President, who leads the charge for utterly unsecure borders, rapidly-growing government, out-of-control spending, billions in federal handouts, and the fallacy of a smaller military being somehow better for the defense of the country...
All things that are classically liberal in both theory and practice. It's time to call a spade a spade.
In the 1940's a large segment of the European population had a real ID tattooed on their forearms ...
A national ID is worthless with out a national database.
Everytime it gets hacked will generate another patch or fix
and each time increasingly more intrusion will be required..
Good plan...
Sounds like they'll use a Windows program?
A national ID is worthless with out a national database.
True it creates a data base for hackers, but I'm sure technology should be able to address that. Any law-abiding citizen should have no problem with a national id. It will restrict illegals from voting, collecting benefits etc. It will also deter crime and terrorists.
http://today.reuters.com/investing/financeArticle.aspx?type=newIssuesNews&storyID=URI:urn:newsml:reuters.com:20050919:MTFH10181_2005-09-19_17-07-55_N19252722:1
Mastercard to use RFID
"top executive with Mastercard Inc. (MA.N: Quote, Profile, Research) said on Monday the company, the world's No. 2 credit-card association, expected to have 4 million so-called "pay pass" cards in circulation by year's end.
"Speaking at an industry conference here, Ruth Ann Marshall, Americas president for MasterCard, said that Citibank, HSBC and Key Bank had all begun offering the cards, which are equipped with a radio-frequency chip that allows customers to pay for purchases by simply waving their cards at readers posted near cash registers or gas pumps."
I agree.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.