FC: Washington Times editorial opposes mandatory fingerprinting

From: Declan McCullagh (declanat_private)
Date: Tue Jan 22 2002 - 14:20:53 PST

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    (I'm catching up on email now but expect to have only intermittent access
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    there are Internet cafes, but not all allow you to install ssh...
    --Declan)
    
    ---------- Forwarded message ----------
    Date: Mon, 21 Jan 2002 15:21:24 -0500
    From: Marc Rotenberg <rotenbergat_private>
    To: Declan McCullagh <declanat_private>
    Subject: Washington Times on ID Cards
    
    Declan -
    
    I sent this on to a few lists. Politech readers
    might also be interested.
    
    Regards,
    
    Marc Rotenberg
    
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    http://www.washingtontimes.com/op-ed/20020121-166867.htm
    
    EDITORIAL * January 21, 2002
    
    Your papers please
    
    Mandatory fingerprinting used to be something we imposed on military
    personnel, criminals and criminal suspects. But if the idea of
    national ID cards being pushed by the American Association of Motor
    Vehicle Administrators (AAMVA) gets traction, every American will
    soon be inked - or tagged by another 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, of course. The AAMVA wants
    $100 million from Congress to erect the U.S. government's first-ever
    national ID system - complete with a centralized database to keep
    track of all of us. It would supplant existing state-level and
    state-issued driver's licenses, and we'd all have to carry one.
    These so-called smart cards could be used to track our movements,
    activities and purchases, and all the information would be dumped
    into Uncle Sam's very own PC to be used for whatever "informational
    purposes only" the government deems appropriate.      
    
    Of course, the AAMVA and other boosters of this bad idea try to
    offer soothing words about the precautions against abuse, and 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," enthused 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."
    It will take changes in attitude, too. Americans will have to grow
    accustomed to the idea of being tagged and catalogued like cattle -
    and to swallow the imbecilic argument that such an electronic
    dragnet will never, ever be abused.      
    
    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 he
    warned flatly: "It will be abused." Others agree, and they run the
    gamut from the hard-core liberals at the American Civil Liberties
    Union to the conservative Christian right - united in the belief
    that government cannot be entrusted with such power, and that waging
    war on terrorists should not require us to abandon the very freedoms
    that make us a target. It's worth noting that nations such as
    communist China keep close track of each citizen and require that
    IDs be carried at all times and produced on demand. "Your papers,
    please." - a phrase heretofore unknown to Americans - could
    eventually become common currency. A crisis can bring out the best
    and worst in people. The best we saw at Ground Zero in the aftermath
    of September 11. The worst we're seeing now, as fear and the herd
    instinct threaten to supplant our usually good judgment. There's
    still plenty of time, however, to stop the national ID dead in its
    tracks.
    -- 
    
    
    
    
    
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