1994-07-13 - New National ID Card Proposal

Header Data

From: David Banisar <Banisar@epic.org>
To: Cypherpunks@toad.com
Message Hash: 1aaa46d19a4a98bf6076f29c01d737fc28295e87d2b336063d7a1a8f67cc5dd2
Message ID: <9407122011.AA46671@Hacker2.cpsr.digex.net>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1994-07-13 00:15:12 UTC
Raw Date: Tue, 12 Jul 94 17:15:12 PDT

Raw message

From: David Banisar <Banisar@epic.org>
Date: Tue, 12 Jul 94 17:15:12 PDT
To: Cypherpunks@toad.com
Subject: New National ID Card Proposal
Message-ID: <9407122011.AA46671@Hacker2.cpsr.digex.net>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain


CBS Evening News just reported that Clinton has "tenatively signed off"
on a National ID card recommended to him by a commission on immigration 
reform. The obstensive reason for the card is for employment and immigration. 
Each card will contain a name, photo, mag stripe with info and a "verified 
SSN." It was supported by Senator Alan Simpson of Wyoming, a long-time 
supporter of id cards. Gov. Pete Wilson of California has apparently offered 
to make California a test-bed for the proposal.  The proposal was opposed by 
Xavier Beccera, a Congressman from California.  A previous effort to impose a 
national id card was rejected by Congress in 1986.

EPIC is working with Privacy International to investigate this report. PI has 
led successful campaigns aginst national id cards in Australia, New Zealand, 
and the Phillipines. 
  
In Australia, the PI-led campaign led to the dissolution of both houses of 
the federal Parliament in 1987 after hundrends of thousands marched in 
protest. The Australian campaign brought together groups from all parts of 
the political spectrum from the Communist Party to the Libertarian Alliance, 
farmers and conservation groups, rock stars, academics, large businesses such 
as banks and mining corporations, but the overwhelming support came from the 
public who created the biggest civil protest in Australian history.


David Banisar (banisar@epic.org)
Electronic Privacy Information Center
666 Penn. Ave, SE #301, Washington, DC 20003
202-544-9240 (v) 202-547-5482 (f)







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