From: "Singleton, Norman" - Aide to Congressman Ron Paul
On Wednesday Congressman Paul introduced the Freedom and Privacy
Restoration Act of 1999. This act:
1. Forbids the use of the Social Security number for purposes
unrelated to Social Security.
2. Forbids any two government agencies from using the same numeric
identifier
3. Forbids any government agency from issuing any standards for
identification that would have to be followed by any other government
agency, a private party, a state government, state agency or political
subdivision of a state (government agencies could use IDs only to carry
out their congressionally assigned purpose.)
4. Forbids the federal government from conditioning the receipt of federal
funds on a state, state agency or subdivision of a state's adoption of a
uniform identifier.
5. Forbids the federal government from assigning ID numbers to
investigate, monitor, oversee, or regulate a transaction between private
parties not involving the government. It also forbids the government from
using ID numbers for purposes of administrative simplification.
Here is Congressman Paul's statement on this bill from the Congressional
Record:
FREEDOM AND PRIVACY RESTORATION ACT -- HON. RON PAUL (Extension of
Remarks - January 06, 1999)
[Page: E3]
---
HON. RON PAUL
in the House of Representatives
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 6, 1999
Mr. PAUL. Mr. Speaker, I rise to introduce the Freedom and Privacy
Restoration Act of 1999. This act forbids the federal government from
establishing any national ID cards or establishing any identifiers for the
purpose of investigating, monitoring, overseeing, or regulating private
transactions between American citizens. This legislation also explicitly
repeals those sections of the 1996 Immigration Act that established federal
standards for state drivers' licenses and those sections of the Health
Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 that require the
Department of Health and Human Services to establish a uniform standard
health identifier.
The Freedom and Privacy Restoration Act halts the greatest threat to
liberty today: the growth of the surveillance state. Unless Congress stops
authorizing the federal bureaucracy to stamp and number the American people
federal officials will soon have the power to arbitrarily prevent citizens
from opening a bank account, getting a job, traveling, or even seeking
medical treatment unless their `papers are in order!'
In addition to forbidding the federal government from creating
national identifiers, this legislation forbids the federal government from
blackmailing states into adopting uniform standard identifiers by
withholding federal funds. One of the most onerous practices of Congress is
the use of federal funds illegitimately taken from the American people to
bribe states into obeying federal dictates.
Perhaps the most important part of the Freedom and Privacy Restoration
Act is the section prohibiting the use of the Social Security number as an
identifier. Although it has not received as much attention as some of the
other abuses this legislation addresses, the abuse of the Social Security
number may pose an even more immediate threat to American liberty. For all
intents and purposes, the Social Security number is already a national
identification number.
Today, in the majority of states, no American can get a job, open a
bank account, get a drivers' license, or even receive a birth certificate
for one's child without presenting their Social Security number. So
widespread has the use of the Social Security number become that a member
of my staff had to produce a Social Security number in order to get a
fishing license! Even members of Congress must produce a Social Security
number in order to vote on legislation.
One of the most disturbing abuses of the Social Security number is the
congressionally-authorized rule forcing parents to get a Social Security
number for their newborn children in order to claim them as dependents.
Forcing parents to register their children with the state is more like
something out of the nightmares of George Orwell than the dreams of a free
republic which inspired this nation's founders.
Since the creation of the Social Security number in 1935, there have
been almost 40 congressionally-authorized uses of the Social Security
number as an identification number for non-Social Security programs! Many
of these uses, such as the requirement that employers report the Social
Security number of new employees to the `new hires data base,' have been
enacted in the past few years. In fact, just last year, 210 members of
Congress voted to allow states to force citizens to produce a Social
Security number before they could exercise their right to vote.
Mr. Speaker, the section of this bill prohibiting the federal
government from using identifiers to monitor private transactions is
necessary to stop schemes such as the attempt to assign every American a
`unique health identifier' for every American--an identifier which could be
used to create a national database containing the medical history of all
Americans. As an OB/GYN with more than 30 years in private practice, I know
well the importance of preserving the sanctity of the physician-patient
relationship. Oftentimes, effective treatment depends on a patient's
ability to place absolute trust in his or her doctor. What will happen to
that trust when patients know that any and all information given to their
doctor will be placed in a government accessible data base?
A more recent assault on privacy is a regulation proposed jointly by
the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, the Office of the Comptroller of
the Currency, the Office of Thrift Supervision, and the Federal Reserve,
known as `Know Your Customer.' If this regulation takes effect in April
2000, financial institutions will be required not only to identify their
customers but also their source of funds for all transactions, establish a
`profile' and determine if the transaction is `normal and expected.' If a
transaction does not fit the profile, banks would have to report the
transaction to government regulators as `suspicious.' The unfunded mandate
on financial institutions will be passed on to customers who would have to
pay higher ATM and other fees and higher interest rates on loans for the
privilege of being spied on by government-inspired tellers.
Many of my colleagues will claim that the federal government needs
these powers to protect against fraud or some other criminal activities.
However, monitoring the transactions of every American in order to catch
those few who are involved in some sort of illegal activity turns one of
the great bulwarks of our liberty, the presumption of innocence, on its
head. The federal government has no right to treat all Americans as
criminals by spying on their relationship with their doctors, employers, or
bankers. In fact, criminal law enforcement is reserved to the state and
local governments by the Constitution's Tenth Amendment.
Other members of Congress will claim that the federal government needs
the power to monitor Americans in order to allow the government to operate
more efficiently. I would remind my colleagues that in a constitutional
republic the people are never asked to sacrifice their liberties to make
the job of government officials a little bit easier. We are here to protect
the freedom of the American people, not to make privacy invasion more
efficient.
Mr. Speaker, while I do not question the sincerity of those members
who suggest that Congress can ensure citizens' rights are protected through
legislation restricting access to personal information, the fact is the only
solution is to forbid the federal government from using national
identifiers. Legislative `privacy protections' are inadequate to protect
the liberty of Americans for several reasons. First, federal laws have not
stopped unscrupulous government officials from accessing personal
information. Did laws stop the permanent violation of privacy by the IRS,
or the FBI abuses by the Clinton and Nixon administrations?
Secondly, the federal government has been creating property interests
in private information for certain state-favored third parties. For
example, a little-noticed provision in the Patient Protection Act
established a property right for insurance companies to access personal
health care information. Congress also authorized private individuals to
receive personal information from government data bases in last year's
copyright bill. The Clinton Administration has even endorsed allowing law
enforcement officials' access to health care information, in complete
disregard of the fifth amendment. Obviously, `private protection' laws have
proven greatly inadequate to protect personal information when the
government is the one providing or seeking the information!
The primary reason why any action short of the repeal of laws
authorizing privacy violation is insufficient is because the federal
government lacks constitutional authority to force citizens to adopt a
universal identifier for health care, employment, or any other reason. Any
federal action that oversteps constitutional limitations violates liberty
because it ratifies the principle that the federal government, not the
Constitution, is the ultimate judge of its own jurisdiction over the
people. The only effective protection of the rights of citizens is for
Congress to follow Thomas Jefferson's advice and `bind (the federal
government) down with the chains of the Constitution.'
Mr. Speaker, those members who are unpersuaded by the moral and
constitutional reasons for embracing the Freedom and Privacy Restoration
Act should consider the overwhelming opposition of the American people
toward national identifiers. My office has been inundated with calls from
around the country protesting the movement toward a national ID card and
encouraging my efforts to thwart this scheme. I have also received numerous
complaints from Texans upset that they have to produce a Social Security
number in order to receive a state drivers' license. Clearly, the American
people want Congress to stop invading their privacy. Congress risks
provoking a voter backlash if we fail to halt the growth of the
surveillance state.
In conclusion, Mr. Speaker, I once again call on my colleagues to join
me in putting an end to the federal government's unconstitutional use of
national identifiers to monitor the actions of private citizens. National
identifiers are incompatible with a limited, constitutional government.
I therefore, hope my colleagues will join my efforts to protect the
freedom of their constituents by supporting the Freedom and Privacy
Restoration Act of 1999.
END
INDEX
Subject: FW: Freedom and Privacy Restoration Act
Date: Fri, 8 Jan 1999 17:17:36 -0500