| EDITORIAL • October 5, 2002
Big Brother's
national ID card
A national Identification card — complete with biometic
identifiers, such as fingerprints or retinal scans — is coming. Only
it's not being called that. House Resolution 4633 — the Driver's License
Modernization Act of 2002 — would effectively create a national ID if
it's passed. The bill would require each state to adopt a uniform
standard for driver's licenses and link their motor vehicle databases to
a central computer registry. H.R. 4633 would "amend title 23, United
States Code, to establish standards for state programs for the issuance
of drivers' licenses and identification cards, and for other purposes."
It would make use of "encoded biometric data matching the holder of the
license or card." In other words, American citizens who have never
committed any crime would be subject to fingerprinting (or something
similar, such as a retinal scan) and compelled to carry a card with an
embedded computer chip containing reams of personal information.
What the legislation calls for is, in fact, a national ID card that
every adult American would effectively be forced to carry. The only way
to opt out would be to give up one's driver's license — something that
is not practical in an era when, outside of major cities, being able to
drive is a necessity without which one cannot secure or maintain
employment. And like the now-ubiquitous Social Security number — which,
recall, was "never to be used for identification purposes," but which is
now almost impossible to conduct any business without — the coming
national ID/driver's license will almost certainly become an item
without which one cannot open a bank account, obtain a credit card,
purchase a car or home, and so on.
As Eric Skrum of the National Motorists Association put it
recently: "Ultimately, anybody in any state with a card reader would be
able to look up your personal driving record, credit rating, Social
Security number, health information, personal address, and anything else
the government would force you to divulge in order to 'voluntarily'
obtain a driver's license."
They can call it whatever they want, but the end result will be the
same. This bill should be rejected as being incompatible with a free
society. |