www.newsandletters.org












NEWS & LETTERS, March 2002 

Column: Voices from the Inside Out by Robert Taliaferro

Bias of national I.D. cards

Who are you? Do you consider yourself as Black, African American, Hispanic, Costa Rican? Have you ever received a ticket, been arrested, been in prison? Has anyone in your family been arrested? Do you have a drinking problem—or problems with drugs? Have you ever been treated for depression, or does anyone in your family have psychological or other medical problems?

Most times we are asked questions like this in an innocuous fashion on job applications, medical and insurance queries, or through the normal conduct of our lives.

After September 11, however, those questions have taken on an entirely new context in a rather old debate. In fact if the conservative Right has their way, those questions could be answered by an electronic scan of a data chip on a national identity card, thus removing the last vestige of privacy that Americans still have.

OLD DEBATE MADE NEW

The debate on national identity cards is not new in this country—or in others. It is a question that, for the most part, has been rejected because of the inherent abuses that it might cause regarding civil liberties.

Many supporters of a national identity card argue that we already have the basis in many of the cards and forms of identification that we currently carry.

Social Security cards, drivers licenses, Medicare and other insurance cards, even an application for a common library card disseminates information to a variety of databases in the public and private sectors. In fact, the private sector manages an alarming amount of information on practically every person in the country, something that the federal and state governments tap into in order to get around legislated privacy laws.

As a result, many supporters of the national identity card question arguments that are designed to derail the concept, relying on fueling the paranoia present in the country after September 11, by end-running the civil libertarians.

The national ID card has some powerful lobbyists. Larry Ellison, CEO of Oracle, has offered to donate the database software that would logistically support the national ID system, and Alan Dershowitz, a law professor at Harvard, noted that national IDs would reduce the need for racial and ethnic stereotyping.

Ellison, of course, is looking towards the financial windfall that would benefit his company if it were chosen as the "donating entity" for software. Though the software would be donated, the advertising and management of such extensive software would require many years of government contracts with his company.

We live in a country where racial, ethnic, cultural, and religious stereotyping is at the very core of its existence, despite the "constitutional imperatives" that are in place. This is a simple fact of life in the U.S. and it is time that we dealt with this in the open, rather than hidden in the closet like some embarrassing family secret.

We live in a country where abuses of whole cultures is a part of the national psyche, and where paranoia often ignites the ever-present embers of ignorance that underlines American idealism, especially in light of some "national" tragedy.

U.S.'S HISTORY OF ABUSES

Sixty years ago that paranoia and bigotry embraced the loss of liberty and property for Japanese-Americans in World War II, setting a tone of Asia-bashing that resulted in more wars in the hemisphere.

Sixty years later the same paranoia embraces similar attacks on civil liberties with Arab-speaking-appearing-thinking-supporting peoples, using tactics that have been tried and tested on American Blacks, Indians, Asians, and Hispanics.

It is about time that we stop mixing apples with oranges and simply call certain practices what they really are. With national ID's, the argument is not merely about privacy.  The argument should be about how easily such a card can further discrimination, in all its forms: age, race, culture, gender, health, religious, sexual, or a combination of all of the above.

National ID's are used by governments as a culling out process subject to historically documented abuses with ethnocentrism as the guiding doctrine.  Nowhere is this more true than in the United States, especially in times of war.

Who are you? Is it anyone's business, but your own?!

Return to top


Home l News & Letters Newspaper l Back issues l News and Letters Committees l Dialogues l Raya Dunayevskaya l Contact us l Search

Subscribe to News & Letters

Published by News and Letters Committees
Designed and maintained by  Internet Horizons