Costly & Misguided says ACLU Would Cost Taxpayers Billions - Would Not Increase Safety Congressional Subcommittee Hears Legislative Testimony |
Compiled By GayToday
"An identity card is only as good as the information that establishes an individual's identity in the first place. It makes no sense to build a national identification system at a cost of billions of taxpayer dollars on such a faulty foundation, particularly when possession of the ID card would give you a free pass to board an airplane or avoid security checks at federal buildings and other public places." Corrigan testified Friday morning before the House Government Efficiency, Financial Management and Intergovernmental Relations Subcommittee of the House Government Reform Committee. Other witnesses at the hearing included former Rep. Newt Gingrich (R-GA), former Sen. Alan K. Simpson (R-WY) and former Rep. Bill McCollum (R-FL) as well as representatives from the Oracle Corporation and the government of Belgium. Proposed plans for a national ID system fail to meet the test of increasing safety while simultaneously protecting civil liberties, Corrigan said. "It's quite clear that a national ID system would have done very little to prevent the attacks of September 11," she added.
Also of concern to the ACLU is the exponentially greater threat of having damaging private information fall into the wrong hands when data is consolidated into one giant, extraordinarily complex computerized repository. "A Big Brother-like national ID would put the most sensitive information about all of us into one giant clearinghouse with its contents accessible by an accidental keystroke or one bad apple employee," Corrigan said. Corrigan's Testimony: http://www.aclu.org/congress/l111601a.html |