Rep. Ron Paul | March 24, 2005
I rise in strong opposition to HR 418, the REAL ID Act. This bill
purports to make us safer from terrorists who may sneak into the United States, and from other
illegal immigrants. While I agree that these issues are of vital importance, this bill will do very
little to make us more secure. It will not address our real vulnerabilities. It will, however, make
us much less free. In reality, this bill is a Trojan horse. It pretends to offer desperately needed
border control in order to stampede Americans into sacrificing what is uniquely American: our
constitutionally protected liberty.
What is wrong with this bill?
The REAL ID Act establishes a national ID card by mandating that
states include certain minimum identification standards on driver's licenses. It contains no limits
on the government's power to impose additional standards. Indeed, it gives authority to the
Secretary of Homeland Security to unilaterally add requirements as he sees fit.
Supporters claim it is not a national ID because it is voluntary.
However, any state that opts out will automatically make non-persons out of its citizens. The
citizens of that state will be unable to have any dealings with the federal government because their
ID will not be accepted. They will not be able to fly or to take a train. In essence, in the eyes of
the federal government they will cease to exist. It is absurd to call this voluntary.
Republican Party talking points on this bill, which claim that this
is not a national ID card, nevertheless endorse the idea that "the federal government should set
standards for the issuance of birth certificates and sources of identification such as driver's
licenses.
So they admit that they want a national ID but at the same time
pretend that this is not a national ID.
This bill 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 and possibly other characteristics. What is even
more disturbing is that, by mandating that states participate in the "Drivers License Agreement,"
this bill creates a massive database of sensitive information on American citizens that will be
shared with Canada and Mexico!
This bill could have a chilling effect on the exercise of our
constitutionally guaranteed rights. It re-defines "terrorism" in broad new terms that could well
include members of firearms rights and anti-abortion groups, or other such groups as determined by
whoever is in power at the time. There are no prohibitions against including such information in the
database as information about a person's exercise of First Amendment rights or about a person's
appearance on a registry of firearms owners.
This legislation gives authority to the Secretary of Homeland
Security to expand required information on driver's licenses, potentially including such biometric
information as retina scans, finger prints, DNA information, and even Radio Frequency Identification
(RFID) radio tracking technology. Including such technology as RFID would mean that the federal
government, as well as the governments of Canada and Mexico, would know where Americans are at all
time of the day and night.
There are no limits on what happens to the database of sensitive
information on Americans once it leaves the United States for Canada and Mexico – or perhaps
other countries. Who is to stop a corrupt foreign government official from selling or giving this
information to human traffickers or even terrorists? Will this uncertainty make us feel safer?
What will all of this mean for us? When this new program is
implemented, every time we are required to show our driver's license we will, in fact, be showing
a national identification card. We will be handing over a card that includes our personal and likely
biometric information, information which is connected to a national and international database.
H.R. 418 does nothing to solve the growing threat to national
security posed by people who are already in the U.S. illegally. Instead, H.R. 418 states what we
already know: that certain people here illegally are "deportable." But it does nothing to mandate
deportation.
Although Congress funded an additional 2,000 border guards last
year, the administration has announced that it will only ask for an additional 210 guards. Why are
we not pursuing these avenues as a way of safeguarding our country? Why are we punishing Americans
by taking away their freedoms instead of making life more difficult for those who would enter our
country illegally?
H.R. 418 does what legislation restricting firearm ownership does.
It punishes law-abiding citizens. Criminals will ignore it. H.R. 418 offers us a false sense of
greater security at the cost of taking a gigantic step toward making America a police state.
I urge my colleagues to vote "NO" on the REAL ID Act of 2005.
Ron Paul represents Texas' 14th Congressional District in the United States Congress.
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