Real ID: A Real Warning on the Danger of Government
by
James Bovard
by James Bovard
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The REAL ID
Act may be on the verge of receiving its final coffin nails. Unfortunately,
the Obama administration is pushing a replacement bill that poses
many of the same threats as REAL ID. The history of REAL ID should
inspire friends of freedom to once again vigorously oppose any and
every federal grab for their personal information.
The feds had
sought legislation to create national ID cards in the 1990s but
were rebuffed by a Republican Congress. But, after 9/11, everything
changed at least in Washington. Regardless of the reasons
why the CIA and FBI failed to stop the hijackers, the solution was
far more snooping and the potential creation of hundreds of millions
of dossiers on American citizens. Almost overnight, it became widely
accepted that the government must have unlimited powers to search
anywhere and everywhere for enemies of freedom. The worse the governments
failure to protect Americans, the further it permitted itself to
intrude.
There was scant
opposition when the House of Representatives initially considered
REAL ID in early 2005. The Senate unanimously approved the bill,
attached as a rider to an appropriations bill for military spending.
Rep. Ron Paul was practically the lone Republican sounding the alarm.
At the time the bill passed, he warned, This REAL ID Act establishes
a massive, centrally-coordinated database of highly personal information
about American citizens: at a minimum their name, date of birth,
place of residence, Social Security number, and physical characteristics.
REAL ID provided
a blank check for the feds to demand more information at any time
in the future. The new law granted open-ended authority to
the Secretary of Homeland Security to require biometric information
on IDs in the future. This means your harmless looking drivers
license could contain a retina scan, fingerprints, DNA information,
or radio frequency technology, as congressman Paul warned.
Back
in 2005, it was not fashionable in Washington to be afraid of federal
surveillance. Luckily, in the subsequent years, civil liberties
activists have raised Cain around the nation. More than half of
all the state legislatures have passed resolutions or laws restricting
REAL IDs bite in their state. But in order to understand what
the feds may try next, it is important to consider how REAL ID was
sold, how it was expanded, and why it remains a threat.
At the time
REAL ID was being promoted, advocates of federal surveillance claimed
that national identification cards were necessary to make Americans
safe. In reality, national ID cards would do far more to control
than to protect Americans. Savvy foreign terrorists could find ways
to evade the requirements for such cards the same way that
they easily evaded ludicrous airport security systems on September
11, 2001.
REAL ID was
intended to greatly increase federal levers over the movement and
lives of Americans. In 2008, Homeland Security czar Michael Chertoff
announced that Americans who lived in states who had not revised
their drivers licenses to meet REAL ID mandates could be banned
from boarding an airplane within the United States. Since the Transportation
Security Administration was part of Chertoffs fiefdom, he
could snap his fingers and the TSA would block anyone who did not
present the proper papers from catching a flight. (Chertoffs
attempt to bludgeon state legislatures into submission backfired).
Read
the rest of the article
July
9, 2009
James Bovard
[send him mail] is the author
of the just-released Attention
Deficit Democracy, The
Bush Betrayal, and Terrorism
& Tyranny: Trampling Freedom, Justice, and Peace to Rid the
World of Evil. He serves as a policy advisor for The
Future of Freedom Foundation. Visit his
website.
Copyright
© 2009 Tenth Amendment
Center
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