11 MAY, 2005 - 1115 CDT
On the surface, a federal electronic ID card for every citizen looks
like
a good way to combat terrorism. Instead, I believe it puts all
law-abiding
U.S. Citizens in great jeopardy of having our identities easily stolen,
and
when we travel overseas, we can be electronically scanned by terrorists
to
positively identify us for potential kidnapping and/or murder.
(Yes, the
bad guys will very soon have the scanning equipment too.)
This is a very bad idea. It is a gross intrusion on our privacy
as all of
our movements and transactions can be tracked without our knowledge...
and
it will not significantly improve our homeland security. Both
houses of
congress have approved this bill and it now awaits President's
signature.
Send messages to your congressional delegations urging this
legislation
be immediately repealed.
- Dick, W9GIG
=========================================================================
Senate approves electronic ID card bill
By
Declan McCullagh, CNET
News.com
Published on ZDNet
News: May 10, 2005, 8:10 PM PT
Last-minute attempts by online activists to halt an electronic ID card
failed Tuesday when the U.S. Senate unanimously voted to impose a
sweeping set of identification requirements on Americans.
The so-called
Real ID
Act now heads to President Bush, who is expected to sign the bill
into law this month. Its backers, including the Bush administration, say
it's needed to stop illegal immigrants from obtaining drivers' licenses.
If the
act's
mandates take effect in May 2008, as expected, Americans will be required to obtain federally approved ID cards with "machine readable technology" that abides by Department of Homeland Security specifications. Anyone without such an ID card will be effectively prohibited from traveling by air or Amtrak, opening a bank account, or entering federal buildings.
After the Real ID Act's sponsors glued it to an Iraq military spending bill, final passage was all but guaranteed. Yet that didn't stop a dedicated cadre of privacy activists from trying to raise the alarm in the last few days.
UnRealID.com, which calls the legislation a "national ID card," says that more than 10,800 people filled out its online petition to senators.
The Electronic Frontier Foundation hastily created a "Stop The Real ID Act!" campaign last week, and the ACLU denounced the bill as a measure that would create "a system ripe for identity theft." Security guru Bruce Schneier offered his own negative critique.
If the Real ID Act had been a standalone piece of legislation--instead of being embedded in an unrelated military spending bill--its passage in the Senate might have been less certain.
The House approved it in February by a relatively narrow vote of 261-161, and some senators had condemned it. Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., warned last month that the Real ID Act creates "de facto national ID cards" and the National Immigration Law Center said it will make it harder even for legal immigrants and citizens to get drivers' licenses.
Rep. F. James Sensenbrenner, a Wisconsin Republican and Real ID Act sponsor, applauded the Senate vote on Tuesday. "The Real ID is vital to preventing foreign terrorists from hiding in plain sight while conducting their operations and planning attacks," Sensenbrenner said. "By targeting terrorist travel, the Real ID will assist in our war-on-terror efforts to disrupt terrorist operations and help secure our borders."