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Under Real ID, privacy will be nonexistent
The Examiner ^ | 21 Jan 2008 | Melanie Scarborough

Posted on 01/22/2008 12:28:56 PM PST by BGHater

Welcome to Amerika. With its recent issuance of rules for implementing the “Real ID” law - the requirement that states issue driver’s licenses according to federal dictates and link the information to a nationwide database - the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has taken another page from the Soviets’ playbook. Stalin required Russian citizens to carry an internal passport ostensibly because “counterrevolutionaries” posed a threat. Amerikans will be required to show their papers to prove they aren’t terrorists or illegal immigrants.

Because an internal passport is the hallmark of totalitarianism, DHS Secretary Michael Chertoff is trying to play Americans for fools. He insists that Real ID, which must meet federal standards and be used for federal purposes, is not a federal identity card because the states will be the issuing agents. That‘s like your employer trying to convince you he has no control over your salary because the checks come through the payroll department.

Seventeen states have passed legislation or resolutions opposing Real ID, and 19 other states have such actions pending because they recognize what Congress did not: If this law is actually implemented, it will mean the end of privacy and freedom.

That is inevitable because the amount of information required to be imbedded on the card will increase, as will the places where its presentation is required. Congress originally suggested that the card would be necessary to enter federal buildings, board commercial aircraft, open a bank account, or access nuclear power plants - but allowed expansions “for any other purposes that the [DHS[ Secretary shall determine.” Secretary Michael Chertoff already has added entry to national parks to the list.

And don’t forget that Congress foolishly gave the Secret Service authority to control national events such as Super Bowls and presidential inaugurations. Merely to watch a football game, Amerikans will have to show their papers.

Privacy will be non-existent because the DHS dictates that identity cards must have bar codes readable by common technology. So not only will tens of thousands of government employees have access to your Social Security number, date of birth, residential address, etc., but every private facility that requires you to present ID will capture that information as well. Identify theft will be child’s play.

Perhaps the most alarming aspect of Real ID is that it transfers to the government ultimate control over citizens’ movements. The ID card of a citizen not in good standing could have a hold put on it, just like a credit card can. If your ID card is declined, you will be unable to travel, access your money, get a job, enter buildings, or go about the basic routines of life until you have restored favor with your government.

Think that’s hyperbole? Driver’s licenses already are used for such purposes. In Texas, a driver's license can be suspended for failure to provide requested medical information to the government. In Florida, a license can be revoked for "an immoral act in which a motor vehicle was used." Wisconsin residents can lose their driver's licenses for failure to pay library fines, shovel the snow off their sidewalk, or trim a tree overhanging a neighbor's property. Montana residents are not allowed to drive if they default on college loans. Many states punish those who fail to pay child support, taxes, court judgments, or parking fines by revoking their driver's licenses.

Effectively "grounding" adults is cheaper than sending them to jail, and a national ID card linked to a central database would allow the government to be all that more efficient. Want to board a plane in North Carolina? Not until you pay those library fines in Wisconsin.

The real travesty is that it is all for nothing because it won’t make anyone safer. Establishing someone’s identity does not reveal their intent. In a pathetically vapid defense of Real ID, Chertoff asks, “Should banks cash checks from people who cannot prove who they are? Should parents hire baby-sitters they know nothing about? Should airlines let passengers on board without validating their identity?”

Well, knowing that the babysitter is, in fact, Suzy Smith, says nothing about her skill with children. A bank needs to know whether a check is good, not the bearer’s immigration status. Knowing a traveler’s Social Security number doesn’t tell an airport screener whether the individual is carrying a bomb.

National identity cards don’t make anyone safer; they only make citizens less free. Real ID is a real bad law that Congress ought to repeal. Real soon.

Examiner Columnist Melanie Scarborough lives in Alexandria.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Government
KEYWORDS: boogeyman; dhs; endisnear; privacy; realid; security; tinfoilhat
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To: Hemorrhage

I’m sure that the collection of DNA from criminals in the UK was a “reasonable” measure, but then they expanded it from convicted criminals, to anybody who has ever been arrested, even if everything is dropped or you were erroneously arrested, too bad, they’ve got your DNA now and will NOT erase it. Do you really think these people will stop at an ID card??? I have a bridge for sale if your answer is yes.


21 posted on 01/22/2008 1:12:35 PM PST by rednesss (Fred Thompson - 2008)
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To: Jack Black
You have hit the nail on the head. Without some form of ID that is truly effective, attempts to control employment of illegal aliens or to prevent voter fraud are doomed to failure.

Think that’s hyperbole? Driver’s licenses already are used for such purposes.

This part is just silly and is indeed hyperbole. Your right to drive is revoked, not your identification. In every state I'm aware of, if they take your driver's license you can get a state ID card that is equally valid as ID for something like $10.

Not that I've had my DL taken away in all that many states. :)

22 posted on 01/22/2008 1:16:32 PM PST by Sherman Logan
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To: rednesss

What is the ethical difference between fingerprints and a DNA sample?


23 posted on 01/22/2008 1:18:26 PM PST by Sherman Logan
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To: BGHater

Another nonsense article.


24 posted on 01/22/2008 1:18:42 PM PST by verity ("Lord, what fools these mortals be!")
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To: rednesss

>> Do you really think these people will stop at an ID card??? I have a bridge for sale if your answer is yes.

No need to condescend, slick.

>> I’m sure that the collection of DNA from criminals in the UK was a “reasonable” measure, but then they expanded it from convicted criminals, to anybody who has ever been arrested, even if everything is dropped or you were erroneously arrested, too bad, they’ve got your DNA now and will NOT erase it.

I will not seek to scuttle reasonable, and fully Constitutional, security measures because of a hypothetical, entirely fabricated, unreasonable measure that hasn’t even been suggested.

Lets take the good ones, and torpedo the bad ones — torpedoing all security measures, reasonable or otherwise, because of a hypothetical is simply ridicuous.

H


25 posted on 01/22/2008 1:19:59 PM PST by SnakeDoctor
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To: Hemorrhage

When I was a kid, you’d often hear something like:

“May I sit here?”

“Sure, it’s a free country.”

I haven’t heard anyone say “it’s a free country” in a LONG time.

Why do you suppose that is?


26 posted on 01/22/2008 1:24:24 PM PST by null and void (We're tired of being sucked up to once every 4 years and stabbed in the back the rest of the time.)
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To: Hemorrhage
I'm betting that all the people against this are unanimously in favor of proving ID in order to vote.
27 posted on 01/22/2008 1:25:19 PM PST by HawaiianGecko
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To: live+let_live

ping


28 posted on 01/22/2008 1:29:33 PM PST by live+let_live
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To: null and void

>> When I was a kid, you’d often hear something like: “May I sit here?” “Sure, it’s a free country.”

>> I haven’t heard anyone say “it’s a free country” in a LONG time. Why do you suppose that is?

For the same reason people don’t say “Radical!” or “Bodacious” very much. Because that was a cute catch-phrase several decades ago.

Absurd anecdotes don’t particularly help your case. I wouldn’t extrapolate your experience with people not saying “its a free country” as evidence that the nation is less free ... its merely evidence that common vernacular has changed.

You can sit anywhere you want.

H


29 posted on 01/22/2008 1:31:18 PM PST by SnakeDoctor
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To: HawaiianGecko

Probably so.

H


30 posted on 01/22/2008 1:32:18 PM PST by SnakeDoctor
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To: Sherman Logan
"What is the ethical difference between fingerprints and a DNA sample?"

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/06/02/AR2006060201648_pf.html

Such concerns are amplified by fears that, in time, authorities will try to obtain information from stored DNA beyond the unique personal identifiers.

"Genetic material is a very powerful identifier, but it also happens to carry a heck of a lot of information about you," said Jim Harper, director of information policy at the Cato Institute, a libertarian think tank in Washington concerned about DNA database trends.

Law enforcement officials say they have no interest in reading people's genetic secrets. The U.S. profiling system focuses on just 13 small regions of the DNA molecule -- regions that do not code for any known biological or behavioral traits but vary enough to give everyone who is not an identical twin a unique 52-digit number.

"It's like a Social Security number, but not assigned by the government," said Michael Smith, a University of Wisconsin law professor who favors a national database of every American's genetic ID with certain restrictions.

Still, the blood, semen or cheek-swab specimen that yields that DNA, and which authorities almost always save, contains additional genetic information that is sensitive, including disease susceptibilities that could affect employment and health insurance prospects and, in some cases, surprises about who a child's father is.

"We don't know all the potential uses of DNA, but once the state has your sample and there are not limits on how it can be used, then the potential civil liberty violations are as vast as the uses themselves," said Carol Rose, executive director of the ACLU of Massachusetts.

She and others want samples destroyed once the identifying profile has been extracted, but the FBI favors preserving them.

31 posted on 01/22/2008 1:39:14 PM PST by rednesss (Fred Thompson - 2008)
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To: HawaiianGecko
"I'm betting that all the people against this are unanimously in favor of proving ID in order to vote."

Our only difference would be what that "ID" consists of. Biometric data, and RFID chips are troubling to me.

32 posted on 01/22/2008 1:41:37 PM PST by rednesss (Fred Thompson - 2008)
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To: Hemorrhage
"neither unreasonable nor particularly" intrusive"

The author omitted that Real ID will most likely be required for employment. Title 3 of the last immigration bill, which failed to pass, links Real ID with E Verify such that, if the bill had passed, Real ID would have been required for employment beginning in 2013.

And it is not just Real ID that is in play, it is the merging of federal databases. E-Verify has problems that can be solved only by merging the SS and DHS databases, which will ultimately lead to a single database. Real ID linked to E-Verify and E-Verify linked to the merged database.

Obviously there are problems and certain states as well as a growing number of Senators are opposing. This is why Chertoff made his recent pronouncements on changes. Those born before 1964 will not have to have Real ID. Bar Codes and not RFID, tho I'm certain that RFID will eventually be used.

33 posted on 01/22/2008 1:42:31 PM PST by Ben Ficklin
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To: Jack Black
"People who oppose Real I.D. tend to have a not-very-secret open borders agenda. Wihtout some verifyable form of ID attempts to stop illegal invasion will falter."

Simply not true. Regular driver's licenses are perfectly verifiable. All that needs to be done is to require a certified photocopy of a birth certificate in order to obtain one. Repeat as necessary.

There is ZERO need to have an ID that is linkable to a centralized database. "REAL ID" is "your papers please" Nazi Germany all over again, only on steroids.

34 posted on 01/22/2008 1:45:42 PM PST by Wonder Warthog (The Hog of Steel-NRA)
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To: Hemorrhage
"This’ll be no more an intrusion on freedom than a driver’s license is. You’ve got to show it everytime you’re pulled over, and to cash checks or use credit cards."

Your regular driver's license isn't linked by computer to a central database in DC. THAT is the danger. The card itself is a non-problem. The author may over-dramatize somewhat, but she's right.

35 posted on 01/22/2008 1:48:12 PM PST by Wonder Warthog (The Hog of Steel-NRA)
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To: Ben Ficklin
Those born before 1964 will not have to have Real ID. Seems odd. Could you elaborate on this.
36 posted on 01/22/2008 1:48:58 PM PST by Jack Black
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To: Hemorrhage
"OK. So? I have a state ID in my wallet right now (and I’ve had one for well over a decade) ... and nobody in my state is tracking me."

That's because it's a STATE ID, and not linked to a central computer and database in Washington, DC. And it is precisely that abiltity to "track you" that they are adding, and which is the real danger.

37 posted on 01/22/2008 1:51:20 PM PST by Wonder Warthog (The Hog of Steel-NRA)
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To: Jack Black

There were several threads on Chertoff’s anouncement a week ago Friday, and many articles in the media.


38 posted on 01/22/2008 1:51:34 PM PST by Ben Ficklin
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To: Astronaut

More and more, I think you are right. Such measures in the hands of Bush are one thing, but in the hands of a Hillary Clinton, something quite different. Maybe our government would do well to abandon such intrusions on law abiding people and spend some time and effort rounding up and deporting those non citizens who are likely to pose a threat to our security.


39 posted on 01/22/2008 1:55:37 PM PST by Continental Soldier
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To: Wonder Warthog

>> Your regular driver’s license isn’t linked by computer to a central database in DC.

Its currently linked to a more local or statewide database. What do you think the cop is calling up when he types the DL# into that little computer?

I see no difference. I’m not upset if Texas does it ... so why be upset if its integrated federally?

H


40 posted on 01/22/2008 1:59:24 PM PST by SnakeDoctor
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