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The Case Against ID Cards: A Principled Approach

It is my belief that unless we demonstrate that ID cards are not only complex, unnecessary, difficult to implement and expensive but also above all detrimental to the objective they are trying to achieve e.g. security, we will not capture the imagination of those who can’t think off-hand why Big Blunkett should not have his way with ID cards. After all, we have nothing to hide and we all use driving licenses, credit cards, store and loyalty cards etc, etc.

We need to spell out more often just what kind of danger an ID card and similar attempts by states to hoard and tag its citizens pose to the individual.

Darren Andrews of Freedom-Central.Net does just that in a structured and erudite manner. He looks at the liberties that will be lost if a government ID card system is introduced:

Principle 1: Governments receive their just powers from the governed
Principle 2: The Right to the Presumption of Innocence
Principle 3: The Right to Anonymity and Privacy
Principle 4: The Right to Free Speech

This sentence should resound throughout the debate:

Freedom is not about opinion, it is about principle because there is an unchanging commonality in people that regards neither time nor place, and there are unalterable laws that govern human life and all who are a part of it.

Read the whole thing

1 comment to The Case Against ID Cards: A Principled Approach

  • Guy Herbert

    And this story suggests one more problem. A centralised, electronic, Electoral Register and vote tabulation– SMS voting will demand it, and you’ll presumably prove your eligibility with your ID card–means Mr Blunkett’s Matrix will track your voting record, too. One to point out to the opposition parties, I think.