Beware
the IDs of March
by
Michael Tennant
by Michael Tennant
DIGG THIS
"Father
Abraham" Lincoln
may be the patron saint of today’s federal officials, but his descendants
have come a long way from sending the U.S. military to suppress
brutally any thoughts of independence on the part of the states.
Within the
last month or so we here at LRC have celebrated
the fact that Maine
has flatly refused to comply with Washington’s dictates in the REAL
ID Act, which mandates that state driver’s licenses comply with
federal standards, the effect of which would be to create a de
facto national identification card. Several other states are
threatening to follow suit. Thomas
Andrew Olson even posited that state rebellions against REAL
ID could portend a revival of genuine federalism.
The recalcitrant
states have argued that, in addition to violating citizens’ and
states’ rights, the cost of implementing the REAL ID requirements
is prohibitive, and the federal government is not providing the
money to accomplish this. Of course, the only way for the feds to
do this is to steal money from the citizens of the states and then
turn around and give it back to the states, minus a hefty cut for
D.C.
Uncle Sam,
having since the days of Lincoln perfected the art of enveloping
the iron fist in velvet, has responded
to these upstart states (Who do they think they are, anyway?) by
extending the deadline for implementing REAL ID until 2009 and permitting
states to use up to 20 percent of their federal homeland security
grants to cover the cost of implementation. This will surely quell
most of the restiveness among Washington’s vassals in the state
capitals. The rest can be brought into line with the next phase,
which will probably be a threat to withhold homeland security funds
from states that refuse to comply.
Thus, by 2009
we will all be forced to obtain federally mandated identification
cards, "so that no one [can] buy or sell unless he [has] the
mark" (Revelation 13:17), i.e., the national ID card. Think
about it. Is there any commercial transaction you can undertake
even today without at some point having to show some identification?
Try opening a bank account, applying for a job, buying a house,
going to the doctor, or flying commercial airlines without being
asked to show your ID.
It’s bad enough
having state identification cards. However, under REAL ID, your
personal information will be kept in a nationwide database,
and you will not be able to enter a federal building (no great loss
there) or travel by air without the card – and that’s just the beginning.
Over time expect greater and greater restrictions on those who refuse
to show their papers and more and more requirements, such as biometric
identifiers. Congressman Ron Paul has pointed
out that there are essentially no restrictions on what the Secretary
of Homeland Security can require states to include in driver’s licenses
and on what information may be stored in the database. The threat
to our freedoms from REAL ID vastly outweighs the threat to our
lives from terrorism.
It will surprise
no regular LRC reader to learn that the allegedly conservative editors
of National Review are entirely in
favor of REAL ID and entirely in disdain of its opponents, to
whom they refer as the "ACLU and its fellow-travelers on the
right [who] have denounced the law as creating a national identification
card, with the usual sophomoric references to the Gestapo."
They applaud the mild compromise outlined above despite the fact
that "[a]ny delay in improving the integrity of identification
documents is potentially dangerous."
How do the
NR editors answer the charge that REAL ID creates a national
ID card? Simply put, they don’t. They merely declare that "[t]he
act simply does not create a national ID card," quote Phyllis
Schlafly’s absurd statement that REAL ID actually prevents
the establishment of a national ID card, and move on to their next
point in defense of the government. Well, I guess that’s settled.
How could anyone have thought otherwise?
As to the fiscal
issues, the supposedly limited-government, budget-cutting conservatives
at NR say that if the states need more money to implement
REAL ID, well, then, the feds should just dish it out to them. "This
would be somewhat unfair to taxpayers in states such as Colorado,
New York, and Virginia, which have already come into nearly full
compliance," they aver. "But the government’s interest
in protecting national security is compelling enough to justify
further federal assistance."
Ah, yes. As
long as it’s for "protecting national security," any power
aggrandizement by the feds is justified, and anyone who raises even
the most reasonable of concerns about it is "unpatriotic."
As the editors tell us, since the 9/11 hijackers had numerous state
ID cards, some of them obtained fraudulently, one of the best ways
to prevent future terrorism is to implement a national – er, REAL
– ID card. You see, it’s all about protecting us from terrorists!
How dare anyone suggest otherwise?
As usual, one
prominent individual does suggest otherwise. Here’s
Ron Paul on the notion that REAL ID will protect us from terrorists:
One overriding
point has been forgotten: Criminals don’t obey laws! As with gun
control, national ID cards will only affect law-abiding citizens.
Do we really believe a terrorist bent on murder is going to dutifully
obtain a federal ID card? Do we believe that people who openly
flout our immigration laws will nonetheless respect our ID requirements?
Any ID card can be forged; any federal agency or state DMV is
susceptible to corruption. Criminals can and will obtain national
ID cards, or operate without them. National ID cards will be used
to track the law-abiding masses, not criminals.
It would be
falsifying history to suggest that today’s editors of National
Review are in any way betraying the vision of the magazine’s
founder, for it was William F. Buckley, Jr., who called for "a
totalitarian bureaucracy within our shores" to protect us from
the last bogeyman, the Soviet Union. It would, however, be a welcome
change if they would stop referring to themselves as conservatives.
Real conservatives, who worry about constantly encroaching federal
power, are to be found at such publications as Chronicles
and The American Conservative.
Meanwhile,
all those of us who value liberty, whether we call ourselves conservatives,
classical liberals, or libertarians, need to continue to sound the
alarm about REAL ID and other assorted infringements on our freedom
under the guise of national security. Let us not be concerned that
we may at times sound alarmist, for those on the forefront of defending
against encroaching tyranny are usually considered extreme. As Dr.
Clyde Wilson, a genuine conservative, put it, "[Tyranny]
should always be guarded against and opposed at the threshold. If
our forefathers had not observed this rule, there would have been
no American War of Independence."
Don’t
tread on me, Uncle Sam.
March
5, 2007
Michael
Tennant [send
him mail] is a software developer in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
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