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Reject
the National ID Card
by
Rep. Ron Paul,
MD
by Rep. Ron Paul, MD
Washington
politicians are once again seriously considering imposing a national
identification card and it may well become law before the end
of the 108th Congress. The much-hailed 9/11 Commission report released
in July recommends a federal identification card and, worse, a "larger
network of screening points" inside the United States.
Does this mean we are to have "screening points" inside
our country where American citizens will be required to "show
their papers" to government officials? It certainly sounds
that way!
As
I have written recently, the 9/11 Commission is nothing more than
ex-government officials and lobbyists advising current government
officials that we need more government for America to be safe. Yet
it was that same government that failed so miserably on September
11, 2001.
Congress
has embraced the 9/11 Commission report uncritically since its release
in July. Now Congress is rushing to write each 9/11 Commission recommendation
into law before the November election. In the same way Congress
rushed to pass the PATRIOT Act after the September 11 attacks to
be seen "doing something," it looks like Congress is about
to make the same mistake again of rushing to pass liberty-destroying
legislation without stopping to consider the consequences. Because
it is so controversial, we may see legislation mandating a national
identification card with biometric identifiers hidden in bills implementing
9/11 Commission recommendations. We have seen this technique used
in the past on controversial measures.
A
national identification card, in whatever form it may take, will
allow the federal government to inappropriately monitor the movements
and transactions of every American. History shows that governments
inevitably use the power to monitor the actions of people in harmful
ways. Claims that the government will protect the privacy of Americans
when implementing a national identification card ring hollow. We
would do well to remember what happened with the Social Security
number. It was introduced with solemn restrictions on how it could
be used, but it has become a de facto national identifier.
Those
who are willing to allow the government to establish a Soviet-style
internal passport system because they think it will make us safer
are terribly mistaken. Subjecting every citizen to surveillance
and "screening points" will actually make us less safe,
not in the least because it will divert resources away from tracking
and apprehending terrorists and deploy them against innocent Americans!
The
federal government has no constitutional authority to require law-abiding
Americans to present any form of identification before they engage
in private transactions. Instead of forcing all Americans to prove
to law enforcement that they are not terrorists, we should be focusing
our resources on measures that really will make us safer. For starters,
we should take a look at our dangerously porous and unguarded borders.
We have seen already this summer how easy it is for individuals
possibly seeking to do us harm to sneak across the border into our
country. In July, Pakistani citizen Farida Goolam Mahomed Ahmed,
who is on the federal watch list, reportedly crossed illegally into
Texas from Mexico. She was later arrested when she tried to board
a plane in New York, but she should have never been able to cross
our border in the first place!
We
must take effective measures to protect ourselves from a terrorist
attack. That does not mean rushing to embrace legislation that in
the long run will do little to stop terrorism, but will do a great
deal to undermine the very way of life we should be protecting.
Just as we must not allow terrorists to threaten our lives, we must
not allow government to threaten our liberties. We should reject
the notion of a national identification card.
September
7, 2004
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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