Ron Paul's Texas Straight Talk 7/1/13: If You Like The Surveillance State, You'll Love E-Verify
If You Like The Surveillance State, You'll Love E-Verify
by Ron Paul
From
massive NSA spying, to IRS targeting of the administration's political
opponents, to collection and sharing of our health care information as
part of Obamacare, it seems every day we learn of another assault on our
privacy. Sadly, this week the Senate took another significant, if
little-noticed, step toward creating an authoritarian surveillance
state. Buried in the immigration bill is a national identification
system called mandatory E-Verify.
The Senate did not spend much
time discussing E-Verify, and what little discussion took place was
mostly bipartisan praise for its effectiveness as a tool for preventing
illegal immigrants from obtaining employment. It is a tragedy that
mandatory E-Verify is not receiving more attention, as it will impact
nearly every American's privacy and liberty.
The mandatory
E-Verify system requires Americans to carry a "tamper-proof" social
security card. Before they can legally begin a job, American citizens
will have to show the card to their prospective employer, who will then
have to verify their identity and eligibility to hold a job in the US by
running the information through the newly-created federal E-Verify
database. The database will contain photographs taken from passport
files and state driver's licenses. The law gives federal bureaucrats
broad discretion in adding other "biometric" identifiers to the
database. It also gives the bureaucracy broad authority to determine
what features the "tamper proof" card should contain.
Regardless
of one's views on immigration, the idea that we should have to ask
permission from the federal government before taking a job ought to be
offensive to all Americans. Under this system, many Americans will be
denied the opportunity for work. The E-Verify database will falsely
identify thousands as "ineligible," forcing many to lose job
opportunities while challenging government computer inaccuracies.
E-Verify will also impose additional compliance costs on American
businesses, at a time when they are struggling with Obamacare
implementation and other regulations.
According to David Bier of
Competitive Enterprise Institute, there is nothing stopping the use of
E-Verify for purposes unrelated to work verification, and these expanded
uses could be authorized by agency rule-making or executive order. So
it is not inconceivable that, should this bill pass, the day may come
when you are not be able to board an airplane or exercise your second
amendment rights without being run through the E-Verify database. It is
not outside the realm of possibility that the personal health care
information that will soon be collected by the IRS and shared with other
federal agencies as part of Obamacare will also be linked to the
E-Verify system.
Those who dismiss these concerns as paranoid
should consider that the same charges were leveled at those who warned
that the PATRIOT Act could lead to the government collecting our phone
records and spying on our Internet usage. Just as the PATRIOT Act was
only supposed to be used against terrorists but is now used to bypass
constitutional protections in matters having noting to do with terrorism
or national security, the national ID/mandatory E-Verify database will
not only be used to prevent illegal immigrants from gaining employment.
Instead, it will eventually be used as another tool to monitor and
control the American people.
The recent revelations of the extent
of National Security Agency (NSA) spying on Americans, plus recent
stories of IRS targeting Tea Party and similar groups for special
scrutiny, demonstrates the dangers of trusting government with this type
of power. Creation of a federal database with photos and possibly other
"biometric" information about American citizens is a great leap forward
for the surveillance state. All Americans who still care about limited
government and individual liberty should strongly oppose E-Verify.
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