3909 lines
175 KiB
Plaintext
3909 lines
175 KiB
Plaintext
A CONSERVATIVE CASE AGAINST IDENTITY CARDS
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(in the United Kingdom)
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by Sean Gabb - cea01sig@gold.ac.uk
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(Internet version 3)
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THIS E-TEXT IS THE COPYRIGHT
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SEAN GABB (1994)
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IT MAY BE PASSED FREELY ROUND THE INTERNET
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BUT MAY NOT BE REPUBLISHED IN HARD COPY
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WITHOUT THE EXPRESS CONSENT OF THE AUTHOR
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CONSENT WILL USUALLY BE GIVEN
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AND THE AUTHOR WILL AT THE SAME TIME
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SEND AN UPDATED VERSION OF THE TEXT
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FORMATTED IN WP51
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Right, all the above being said, I'll say that
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I want this text distributed as widely as possible.
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I don't think anyone else has written about privacy
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and identity cards from a British angle.
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Being a first effort, however,
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it suffers from a number of defects
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that I will ask my Internet readers
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to help me supply.
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I ask:
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1. In what ways is my discussion of the potential
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for electronic surveillance inadequate?
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2. Are there any facts, primary or illustrative,
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that I ought to consider for any longer version
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of this pamphlet?
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3. What other defects are apparent?
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Despite its outwardly impenetrable wall of secrecy,
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my own Government is in many respects
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more open than your Federal Government.
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This pamphlet in hard copy has been read
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by various Ministers and Members of Parliament,
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and a debate is starting about the costs and benefits
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of electronic identification systems.
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I do not pretend that we can win this debate;
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but it would be at least useful
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if hostility to the designs of authority
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were to spread to the second centre
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of the English-speaking world.
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Therefore, I'd be grateful for wide distribution,
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and for the fullest and most penetrating criticism
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of what I've written here.
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Sean Gabb, 30th November 1994
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cea01sig@gold.ac.uk
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A CONSERVATIVE CASE AGAINST IDENTITY CARDS
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by Sean Gabb
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CONTENTS:
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INTRODUCTION
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1. "PAPIEREN BITTE..."
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2. NOTHING TO FEAR, NOTHING TO HIDE
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3. IT CAN'T HAPPEN HERE
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4. OTHER COUNTRIES
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5. LOOKING AHEAD
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6. THE NEW DESPOTISM
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7. POSSIBLE RESTRAINTS
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8. THE FIGHT AGAINST CRIME
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CONCLUSION
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NOTES
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APPENDICES
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I The British Eugenics Movement
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II The Regulation of Childbirth
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III Memorandum of Peter Tatchell
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IV Privacy in the United States
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A CONSERVATIVE CASE AGAINST IDENTITY CARDS
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Sean Gabb
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INTRODUCTION
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On the 13th October last, addressing the Conservative Party
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Conference at Bournemouth, the Home Secretary, Michael Howard,
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spoke thus:
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I've always made it clear that I am determined to
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give the police every possible help.
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I know many of you believe - as do the police - that
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identity cards could be useful to them.
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Brian Mawhinney [Secretary of State for Transport]
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has already proposed that new driving licences
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should contain photographs. And Peter Lilley
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[Secretary of State for Social Security] is bringing
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forward proposals for a new card to help stop the
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dole cheats.
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Today, I can tell you that the Government will
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publish next Spring a Green Paper setting out
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proposals on how a new identity card might work and
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inviting views.[1]
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His own suggestion was that identity cards would in the first
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instance be voluntary. "It could be used" he said,
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both as a driving licence and as a benefit card.
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This would mean that three quarters of the
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population had the new card. No one else would be
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forced to get one but I believe that in time the
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vast majority would.
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It would help publicans to stop underage drinking.
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Tobacconists would spot teenage smokers. And video
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shops to stop young children getting hold of adult
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videos.
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The new technology could also make it possible to
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replace a wallet full of cards with just a single
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bit of plastic. Bank card. Driving licence.
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Social security card. Kidney donor card. All in
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one.
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In time, carrying your ID card would seem as natural
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as carrying a credit card is at the moment.
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I know there are lots of views about identity cards.
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We need to hear them. There should be - and will be
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- a full national debate before any decision is
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taken. And I hope you will all join in.[2]
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I offer this paper as a contribution to that debate. I do so
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as a libertarian conservative. I have voted Conservative ever
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since I came of age in 1979. I stood as a Conservative
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candidate in the 1986 local elections. I have consistently
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supported the Government's policy of privatisation and
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deregulation; and I am aware that, of our three main parties,
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only the Conservatives oppose the presently corporatist
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tendency of the European Union.
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I believe, however, that there is more to "rolling back the
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frontiers of the State" than paying regard to economic
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indicators alone. It is not enough to control the money
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supply and deregulate the unemployed back into work. It is
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necessary to roll back the frontiers in social and political
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matters as well. My ideal England - the England that largely
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existed before 1914 - is one in which individuals and groups
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of individuals are free to pursue their ends, constrained only
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by a minimal framework of laws.
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I have no doubt that an identity card scheme would be
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absolutely fatal to the realising of this ideal - even the
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"voluntary" scheme that Mr Howard proposes for the moment.[3]
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It would undermine the half-open society in which we now live.
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Given the technology that will soon be available, it would
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allow the erection of the most complete despotism that ever
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existed in these islands. I am astonished that such a scheme
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could be put forward by a government that dares call itself
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Conservative. It is a betrayal not merely of the libertarian
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and classical liberal wings of the Party, but also of the most
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reactionary High Toryism. I will not argue whether this is
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socialism by other means. But it is undoubtedly collectivist.
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This is my opinion. It is also the opinion of many others
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within the Party - and not only of those on my own wing.[4]
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Even if identity cards really were likely to produce the
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benefits announced by Mr Howard, without any of the costs that
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I predict, I suggest that they would remain a politically
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unwise innovation. Their attempted introduction would bring
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about a split in a Party that is already split on Europe and
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economic policy. They are also deeply unpopular in the
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country as a whole.[5] So far as the protest against them
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would involve people from all backgrounds, and so far as the
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protest need involve just a single act of defiance - namely a
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refusal to carry them - it would be comparable not so much to
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the recent Criminal Justice Bill disorders, as to the campaign
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against the Poll Tax. I cannot imagine that any member of the
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Government, or any of its supporters, can want this. I cannot
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imagine that a Government that started so fair in 1979, and
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has achieved so much of good since then, is willing now to
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discredit itself over anything so vile and absurd as identity
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cards.
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This being said, I will proceed with a more detailed
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discussion of why they are so vile and absurd.
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ONE: "PAPIEREN BITTE..."
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Those of us who watched the film Schindler's List will have
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been struck by the efficiency with which the Germans committed
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their great crimes. There were moments of passion, when
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individuals were shot or beaten to death. But the main
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impression was one of bureaucratic purpose. Every edict would
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produce long queues in the open behind trestle tables. Every
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sentence - of death or momentary reprieve - would so far as
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possible be carried out by the authorities. There is a list
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in the film's title. The posters advertising it showed a
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blurred list of names.
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Now, it is worth asking - how these lists were compiled. How
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was it that the Jews of Poland, and of Central Europe in
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general, found themselves on a list of those to be robbed and
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deported, and in many cases killed? Not all of them looked
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like extras from Fiddler on the Roof. Most of them were
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indistinguishable from their Gentile neighbours, in dress, in
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speech, in occupation. Many had become Christians. Some did
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not look "Jewish". A few even looked "aryan", with their blue
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eyes and blonde hair. Yet onto the lists the overwhelming
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majority went. How?
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The answer is that every Central European had an identity card
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which carried details of name, address, age, and religion.
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Since these cards had to be shown on all official and many
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other occasions, it was quite easy to catch any Jew who failed
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to register as demanded by the Germans. Weeding out the
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converts and their children was more difficult, but not
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greatly so. Though identity cards here would have classed
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their bearers as Catholics or whatever, they referred back to
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central or local archives where further details were
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available.
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I could immensely elaborate this point, showing the ubiquity
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of identity cards in these societies, how no one could be said
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to exist without one. But I have made the point. I can say
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that without identity cards, there could have been no full
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persecution of the Jews. I will turn this to a more general
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proposition - That identity cards make such things possible,
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and even encourage the kind of people who want to make them
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happen. By abolishing anonymity, identity cards enable the
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authorities to find their victims among populations of
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millions or hundreds of millions.
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It was identity cards that enabled the massacres in Rwanda.
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Here, as in Central Europe, there was no immediately obvious
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distinction between persecutors and persecuted.[6] Though
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claiming an infallible eye for who was Hutu and who Tutsi, the
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killers notoriously relied on checking identity cards. These
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stated tribal origin, and determined the fate of their
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bearers.[7] What little hope the region has of a return to
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peace may rest on reforms to the identity card system, so that
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members of both tribes can go anonymously about their business
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in public.[8]
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It is identity cards that enable the Turkish authorities to
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persecute Kurdish pagans and separatists. Everyone in Turkey
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must by law carry a card at all times in public; and cards
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bear details of religion. Moreover, the cards of "political"
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offenders are said to be routinely punched with holes to make
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their bearers visible to the authorities, and so more easy to
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persecute outside the criminal justice system.[9]
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It is identity cards, together with residence and work
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permits, that allow the Chinese Government to maintain one of
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the most quietly bestial forms of rule that ever existed.
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Without the right documents, no one is allowed into the towns
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from the growing violence and stagnation of village life.
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Those who move illegally are called "the three withouts" -
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without a valid identity card, without a residence permit, and
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without a work permit - and are subject to immediate
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deportation if caught, and sometimes also to savage
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beatings.[10]
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There are, of course, two common objections to my case. First
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- the Nazis were beasts: black Africa is often a terrible
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place; Turkey and Red China are scarcely better. The argument
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is about whether we should have identity cards in this
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country, where we have courts of law and a vigilant press and
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public opinion. I hear the mantras endlessly chanted against
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me - "It can't happen here" and "Those with nothing to hide
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have nothing to fear". I am paranoid. I am a fanatic. I
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look at PC Plod, and see the Gestapo. I think of identity
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cards, and hear the telescreen calling me to order.[11]
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Second, identity cards do not exist only in despotic
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countries. With the exception of Ireland and ourselves, every
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other member state of the European Union has them in one form
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or another. Are these countries any less free than we
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are?[12] Indeed, comparing our various laws on pornography,
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drugs and consensual sex, many of are significantly more free.
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The French and Germans may need to carry identity cards; but
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their courts do not send men to prison for being caught in bed
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together in a hotel or some other "public place": nor can a
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sado-masochist be convicted of "aiding and abetting others to
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cause injury to himself".[13]
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We all know that identity cards can be made into an engine of
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oppression; but we are also facing a crisis of law and order.
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Should we not be looking at how, to quote Mr Howard, we can
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"give the police every possible help", while ensuring that we
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may avoid the potential disadvantages of identity cards? If I
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insist on denouncing them, am I not indicating that I have
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something shameful to hide?[14]
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If simply because they are so often made, these are
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substantial objections; and they must be properly answered.
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It is a weakness at the moment, I feel, of libertarians that
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we have not answered them as we might. We can easily have the
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best of any economic argument. If someone speaks up for
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tariffs, or a minimum wage, or public enterprise monopolies,
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we have a body of economic argument that cannot be answered.
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The "economic calculation debate" of the past 70 years, for
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example, has not actually been a debate. It has been a
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history of a case put on one side with increasing loudness and
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clarity, until the other side could no longer ignore it, but
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could only concede. There has been a similar history of
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arguments over social matters such as drugs and so forth.
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While the authoritarians have power on their side, that -
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given reasonably free debate - is not in the long term enough
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to win the argument.
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Nevertheless, in defending the indirect supports of freedom,
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we remain weak as a movement. In this country, we have
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entirely failed to prevent a government, with which we have
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been closely associated, from putting the Common Law through
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the legislative equivalent of a shredding machine. The right
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to silence under police questioning has just been abolished.
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The burden of proof in criminal cases is being rapidly
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reversed. The right to trial by jury has been limited to
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about 15 per cent of criminal cases. The right to peremptory
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challenge to Jurors has been abolished. There are calls to
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give the prosecution a right of appeal from "perverse" jury
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verdicts.
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Similarly, in the argument over identity cards, we are weak in
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putting arguments that answer the specific points made in
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their favour. I do not suppose that I can by myself supply
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that defect. But I do hope that I can state a case that
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others more able and diligent than I can improve. This said,
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I will try to answer the common objections to my case:
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1. That we have nothing to fear if we have nothing to hide;
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2. That "it" can't happen here;
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3. That "it" doesn't happen in other Western countries that
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have identity cards;
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4. That we can effectively restrain potential abuses of
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identity cards; and
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5. That identity cards can help in the fight against crime.
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Let me begin with the first of these.
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TWO: NOTHING TO HIDE, NOTHING TO FEAR
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I say that, though more civilised than other peoples, we are
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still human beings. We are swayed by the same basic passions.
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We need a smoother presentation of the lies; but we are not
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deaf to the voice of persecution. We are certainly better
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than the Nazis, but perhaps not much better than the German
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people, who in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries
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accounted themselves - and with very good cause were accounted
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- the most civilised people in Europe.
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Let us return to the Jews of Central Europe. They were so
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easy to find because their papers made it so plain who they
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were. Yet words like Jude, ~id, ~yd, or whatever, had not
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always been a badge of shame. According to Hans Momsen,
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There was no inner logic of any kind determining
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that German historical development should lead from
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Weimar to Auschwitz.[15]
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This is hard to contest. By 1933, the Jews could look back on
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at least 80 years of emancipation and assimilation. It is
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difficult to cross the gulf of the intervening catastrophe and
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realise how completely secure the Jews had felt during this
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period. But, with the opening of the ghettos around the
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middle of the last century, they had emerged into a German-
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speaking world which they embraced, and which on the whole
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embraced them.[16]
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In this country, emancipation came later than elsewhere; and
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without conversion, Jews found it difficult to rise in society
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and the professions. In France, despite formal emancipation
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in 1790, they were still subject to many discriminations. In
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Germany and the Habsburg Empire, there were few checks to
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Jewish ability. In law, in medicine, in business and the
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arts, the Jews were freely able to make their way.[17] The
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names of the preeminent are in every civilised mind -
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Mendelssohn, Mahler, Shoenberg, Klemperer, Kafka,
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Hoffmansthal, Kokoshka, Freud, Popper, Mises, and many more -
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all Jewish or part-Jewish. And these were just the
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preeminent. Those of middling or lesser ability were
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everywhere. They set the tone for bourgeois Vienna. With the
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Czechs, they created everything that is wonderful about
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Prague. They helped make Berlin into a centre of the arts.
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And it must be emphasised, that these people did not think of
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themselves primarily as Jews. They were Germans of the Jewish
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faith, or of no faith at all; and they were often morbidly
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proud of their German culture.[18] If some, like Rosa
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Luxemburg, were revolutionary socialists, they were German
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revolutionary socialists. Many more were German nationalists.
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They fought loyally in the Great War; and no one was surprised
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when the invading Axis armies proclaimed the liberation of the
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oppressed Polish and Russian Jews.[19] The Allies worried
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about the loyalties of their own Jewish citizens. "Scratch a
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Jew, and you'll find a German" was a common cry in England.
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It was only the Balfour Declaration of 1916 that persuaded
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American Jews to declare against the Axis - and then not all
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of them.
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The Jews of Central Europe felt safe, as perhaps Jews never
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have before or since.[20] The religious classification on
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their own or their parents' documents was a little thing.
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Indeed, the later Habsburg authorities had for a while been
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inclined to discontinue it. The Germans and Hungarians,
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fearing the higher birthrates of their subject Slavs,
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preferred to classify Jews in the census reports not by
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ethnicity but by language. Its retention owed much to Zionist
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lobbying. Among the assimilated Jews, their propaganda was a
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total failure until after the Great War. Their electoral
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following was tiny: even in the main Jewish centres of Germany
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and Austria, it seems that more Jews voted for the German
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nationalist parties than for the Zionists.[21] It was feared
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that without some official recognition, the assimilated would
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eventually cease in all but the vaguest sense to be Jewish.
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Here is no criticism. Had anyone told the Zionists that there
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might later be problems, they would have laughed. They had
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nothing to fear, and therefore nothing to hide. This was
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Central Europe in the nineteenth century - the most civilised
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of times and places.[22] Pogrom was a Russian word; and even
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that semi-asiatic despotism was coming within the European
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orbit.
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Unfortunately, they had rather a lot to fear. German policy
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turned as suddenly anti-semitic as day turns to night in the
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tropics; and if we can now study the whole sequence of events,
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their precise connection remains a mystery. And by the time
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the Jews could be brought to realise they had anything to
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fear, it was too late to hide.
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I am not claiming that the British Jews will suffer from the
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introduction of identity cards. All considered, that is most
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unlikely.[23] But, while history is not like a needle stuck
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in a gramophone record, it is like a theme with limited
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variation. There are many other minority groups beside the
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Jews. There are black and brown people. There are Moslems.
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There are the followers of new and strange religions. There
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are homosexuals and sado-masochists. There are socialists and
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fascists. There are libertarians and Tories. There are
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pacifists and war-mongers. There are anti-Darwinists and
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holocaust revisionists. There are smokers and carnivores and
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vegans. There are those suffering from or carrying congenital
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disorders. There are the rich and there are the poor, and
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there are those in between. We are all members of some
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minority: and there is nothing that we are and nothing that
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we do that is not unpopular with someone who is, or may one
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day be, in authority.
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"Those with nothing to hide have nothing to fear"? Well, this
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is fine enough for those who can believe that something about
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them presently innocuous will not one day be used against
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them, or their children or grandchildren. But who can
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||
infallibly believe this? - especially since "it" not only can
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happen here, but may already be happening.
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THREE: IT CAN'T HAPPEN HERE
|
||
|
||
No one expected, or could reasonably have expected, the
|
||
assimilation to end so badly. But the collectivist ascendency
|
||
over the German mind was plain before 1914. If liberals could
|
||
not describe the terminus, they knew which way the line was
|
||
going. They knew that something horrible lay ahead. We, with
|
||
our benefit of hindsight, can see much more. I have said
|
||
enough about the potential danger of collecting data on
|
||
religion or nationality. But there was the same potential in
|
||
the development of German medical theory.
|
||
|
||
>From about 1860, the role of the doctor in Germany was seen
|
||
decreasingly in terms of treating sick individuals. The new
|
||
ideal was the improvement of the race as a whole. Modern
|
||
science had apparently shown the value - for healthy and
|
||
unhealthy alike - of prescribing lifestyle; and, as a means of
|
||
enforcing these prescriptions, politics came increasingly to
|
||
be seen by medical writers as an adjunct of medicine.
|
||
|
||
Certainly, there were eugenicists and social Darwinists and
|
||
"racial hygienists" in other countries - the word "eugenics"
|
||
is even of British coining.[24] But only in Germany did they
|
||
ever get a government that wholeheartedly agreed with them.
|
||
For Hitler, coming to power was "the final step in the
|
||
overcoming of historicism and the recognition of purely
|
||
biological values".[25] For one of his colleagues, National
|
||
Socialism was nothing but "applied biology".[26]. It seemed
|
||
natural for the doctors to join the Party in large numbers,
|
||
and to give their enthusiastic support to policies of racial
|
||
health and purity that they had long taken as self-evident
|
||
propositions.
|
||
|
||
At last, they were free to prescribe lifestyles. Health being
|
||
integral to the German national interest, they argued, it
|
||
could no longer be possible to tolerate lifestyles damaging to
|
||
society as a whole, whatever individual preference might be.
|
||
They openly attacked the "liberal perversion" that the
|
||
individual should have the right to dispose of his body as he
|
||
saw fit - the "Recht auf den eigenen Krper". They spoke
|
||
instead of the obligation to be healthy - the "Pflicht zur
|
||
Gezundheit".[27]
|
||
|
||
The corollary of this was the elimination of "lives not worth
|
||
living" - these being defined as mental and physical
|
||
defectives, homosexuals, Gypsies, Jews, and anyone else who
|
||
seemed to stand in the way of a pure and healthy German Volk.
|
||
Dr Joseph Mengele, the Chief Medical Officer at Auschwitz, was
|
||
not a lone maniac: he and many others like him just applied
|
||
more radically a doctrine that was the consensus of German
|
||
medical opinion. In 1895, the medical writer Ernest Ploetz
|
||
had observed that the achievement of national health might
|
||
often require harshness towards "weak" individuals.[28]
|
||
|
||
We have yet no Mengeles in this country. But the notion of
|
||
preventive medicine is becoming hardly less dominant.
|
||
According to The Nation's Health, which is the most honest
|
||
official statement so far of our own lifestyle activists,
|
||
doctors are fast coming to
|
||
|
||
believe that the health of its citizens is one of
|
||
the most important resources needed by a nation for
|
||
the pursuit of most other legitimate national
|
||
objectives.[29]
|
||
|
||
It is becoming legitimate here as well for patients to be seen
|
||
not as individual clients to be treated as ends in themselves,
|
||
but as State property, to be frightened or harassed into
|
||
behaving as current medical fashion deems good for them.
|
||
|
||
Look at smoking. When I was a boy this was almost a virtue.
|
||
Harold Wilson took up pipe-smoking as part of his effort to
|
||
look reliable. One of my aunts used to spend hours in front
|
||
of a mirror training herself into the most elegant way of
|
||
blowing smoke. One of my uncles blew smoke rings as a party
|
||
trick. Today, smoking is deemed a thoroughly bad thing by the
|
||
doctors. Smokers are burdened with oppressive taxes and
|
||
frequently absurd propaganda.[30] They are forbidden by law
|
||
to smoke on most public transport, and may soon be forbidden
|
||
to smoke anywhere in public. Smoking is already restricted,
|
||
where not forbidden, by most employers.[31] It is considered
|
||
by some adoption agencies when assessing where to place
|
||
children.[32]
|
||
|
||
But these are indirect means. So far as they have not
|
||
entirely stamped out the horrid vice of smoking, there is a
|
||
more direct prescription of lifestyle. Consider:
|
||
|
||
In February 1993, Harry Elphick had a heart attack. It seemed
|
||
that he needed immediate tests and perhaps a by-pass
|
||
operation.
|
||
|
||
The consultant at the Wythenshawe Hospital in Manchester, to
|
||
whom Mr Elphick was referred, refused to see him, and wrote:
|
||
|
||
I have emphasised that we would not normally perform
|
||
these tests on people who smoke cigarettes.[33]
|
||
|
||
The justification here was that, with a stretched National
|
||
Health budget, resources should be devoted to the treatment of
|
||
those patients whose lifestyles had not so obviously
|
||
contributed to their illness.
|
||
|
||
After Mr Elphick had stopped smoking, a new appointment was
|
||
made for him on the 19th August 1993. On the 13th August,
|
||
however, he died suddenly of a second heart attack.
|
||
|
||
Commenting on these events, Dr Keith Ball, an anti-smoking
|
||
activist, wrote that
|
||
|
||
[h]opefully, the publicity aroused by Mr Elphick's
|
||
unfortunate case will bring home to smokers the
|
||
enormous benefits of stopping smoking.[34]
|
||
|
||
This has not been an isolated case. There is the case of John
|
||
Gibson, of Robert Stewart, of Roy Towler, of Mike Sale, of
|
||
Brian Ashmore, of Gareth Williams, of Mrs Linda Wright, of Ms
|
||
Denise Bannister, and of Anthony Munday - all refused
|
||
treatment under the National Health Service on the grounds of
|
||
smoking.
|
||
|
||
This final case is particularly significant. The person
|
||
refused treatment here was a boy of four years - a non-smoker.
|
||
|
||
In September 1993, he went to Thanet General Hospital to have
|
||
two of his front teeth removed under anaesthetic. On learning
|
||
that the mother smoked, the anaesthetist cancelled the
|
||
operation, and told her that there would be no operation for
|
||
her son until she had stopped smoking.[35]
|
||
|
||
What next? We are told that smoking produces disorders in the
|
||
children of smokers. There are calls for the licensing of
|
||
child-bearing. It is not a big step to demanding the
|
||
sterilisation of smokers - and perhaps of any existing
|
||
children of smokers who might be carrying congenital disorders
|
||
linked to smoking.[36]
|
||
|
||
Now from all this, we can derive a principle which,
|
||
consistently applied, would lead to a general persecution of
|
||
"deviant" lifestyles. If we can say that illnesses related to
|
||
smoking should not be treated at public expense, why should
|
||
money be spent on treating AIDS? Certainly, those who
|
||
contracted HIV before about 1985 did not understand the full
|
||
risks of needle-sharing or unprotected anal sex. But it can
|
||
be argued that anyone who has contracted it since then is at
|
||
least as negligent as a heavy smoker with lung cancer. Why
|
||
punish one and not the other?
|
||
|
||
The answer at the moment is merely political. During the past
|
||
generation, homosexuals have enjoyed a gradual emancipation.
|
||
The criminal law against homosexual acts has been greatly
|
||
softened. There has been an immense growth of private
|
||
toleration; and bigots like Stephen Green MA of the
|
||
Conservative Family Campaign are objects of middle class
|
||
derision.
|
||
|
||
Yet have we not seen this before? If the Jews, with all their
|
||
strong family traditions of how to behave when the Gentiles
|
||
turn nasty, could not see and avoid what happened to them
|
||
after 1933, how securely can homosexuals look into the
|
||
future?[37]
|
||
|
||
But the principle applies to more than homosexuals. Why
|
||
should dentists "waste their time" on people who eat lots of
|
||
sweets or do not brush their teeth properly? Why should the
|
||
very fat - or just the fat - stand in the same line as the
|
||
athletic for heart by-pass operations? These questions are
|
||
even now being asked by the lifestyle activists.[38]
|
||
|
||
Disturbingly, many of these people know in which tradition
|
||
they stand. While we have our own history of eugenic
|
||
campaigning, there is also a long history in this country of
|
||
praise for the - at least theoretical - basing of Soviet
|
||
medicine on the doctrine of prevention rather than cure.[39]
|
||
And take the quotation that heads Chapter Eight of The
|
||
Nation's Health:
|
||
|
||
Medicine is a social science, and politics nothing
|
||
but medicine on a grand scale.[40]
|
||
|
||
The author of this, the German medical reformer Rudolf
|
||
Virchow, died long before Hitler came to power. But note the
|
||
similarities of wording. It is far from silly to claim that
|
||
Virchow stands in a line that leads straight to Mengele.
|
||
|
||
We have not abandoned liberalism to the same extent as the
|
||
Germans had by 1933. For all that has happened this century,
|
||
it remains our distinguishing national characteristic. But
|
||
the parallels are obvious. The State is not naturally a
|
||
benign institution. Within my own relatively short lifetime,
|
||
states have murdered people by countless millions. I repeat
|
||
my question - Are we prepared to gamble on the future? Are we
|
||
happy to assume that our own State, in spite of repeated
|
||
experience elsewhere, and in spite of the specific parallels
|
||
drawn above, will always be the relatively mild thing that it
|
||
is today? Can we rest assured that who or what we are at the
|
||
moment will not one day work to our disadvantage, or that of
|
||
our children or their children?
|
||
|
||
|
||
FOUR: OTHER COUNTRIES
|
||
|
||
Here I face another objection. Unless the times should alter
|
||
quite beyond recognition, identity cards are unlikely to have
|
||
stamped on them words like "smoker" or "homosexual" or
|
||
"rubber-fetishist" or "lover of boiled sweets".[41] These
|
||
things might be recorded somewhere - as, doubtless, they are
|
||
now - but there is a limit to how much checking anyone can do,
|
||
or will want to do. By combing through the archives in the
|
||
occupied territories, the Germans were often able to trace the
|
||
children and grandchildren of converted Jews. But they did
|
||
everything with a diligence unknown to our own slothful
|
||
bureaucrats. And none of this happens in those other Western
|
||
countries that have identity cards. Again, am I not paranoid?
|
||
|
||
Am I not making a fool of myself?
|
||
|
||
I am not. Let us look at the experience of these other
|
||
countries. I start with Germany. Its experience in these
|
||
matters is unique. Since 1948, first West Germany and then
|
||
all Germany has been a state based on law. Unlike with us,
|
||
its rulers cannot with an airy wave of the hand dismiss
|
||
arguments about the potential of police state machinery. They
|
||
know what can happen as no other civilised people can. In
|
||
addition, they know they are on probation in the eyes of the
|
||
world. The least illiberality there can be seized on by their
|
||
own liberals and broadcast by morbidly - though not
|
||
unnaturally - sensitive Jewish groups. Yet, for all this,
|
||
identity cards have been used for illiberal purposes.
|
||
|
||
At the moment in Germany, the law requires every person above
|
||
the age of 16 to carry an official form of identification with
|
||
a photograph. This can be a passport, or a driving licence -
|
||
which in Germany, as in the rest of Europe, includes a
|
||
photograph - or an identity card issued by one of the Lnder.
|
||
It is required for all official transactions, and to open a
|
||
bank account, among much else. It is also used by the Police
|
||
to harass unpopular minorities. Take, for example, a case
|
||
involving nudists from 1951 - just after the restoration of
|
||
constitutional government. The arresting Officer, Paul
|
||
Birkenfeld, wrote in his report:
|
||
|
||
I was so excited, when I suddenly saw the Defendant
|
||
and his wife walk about naked in the meadows by the
|
||
river, that it had never occurred to me, that I
|
||
could stand in the discreetly tolerated bathing
|
||
grounds of the Naturist Federation and immediately
|
||
demand to see their identity cards - which both were
|
||
unable to produce.[42]
|
||
|
||
I saw a similar incident in a Munich park in the summer of
|
||
1992. Several young men stripped off to their underpants and
|
||
began dancing under a grass sprinkler. After a few minutes,
|
||
they were accosted by two Police Officers and ordered to
|
||
produce their identification. On this occasion, they were
|
||
allowed to go back to their clothes and dig out their cards.
|
||
But I saw their details copied into a notebook; and they were
|
||
ordered out of the park - despite there having been no
|
||
complaint from me or the few other people eating their
|
||
sandwiches there.
|
||
|
||
Again, it is common for the Police to check identification in
|
||
public houses and cinemas and gay clubs, to make sure that
|
||
young people there are not just below the legal age at which
|
||
they are permitted to be there. These details also are
|
||
recorded, irrespective of whether any law is being broken.
|
||
|
||
It is also necessary for hotel guests to produce
|
||
identification when checking into hotels. The registers are
|
||
routinely inspected by the Police, to see who has been using a
|
||
prostitute, or if any known homosexuals have stayed there -
|
||
this though homosexual acts in hotel rooms are not illegal
|
||
under German law.
|
||
|
||
There are other abuses. In 1988, a Sigrid Wolf from Wuppertal
|
||
in Westphalia won about DM700 at a casino in Dortmund. She
|
||
left with an unknown man, and was found robbed and murdered
|
||
later that evening. The Police confiscated the casino
|
||
register, and obtained search warrants from a Judge to arrest
|
||
and search all 1,037 men who had been in the casino at the
|
||
same time as the deceased. Each warrant stated that the man
|
||
was suspected of murder and that a search of his person and
|
||
home might lead to the discovery of stolen property. No
|
||
charges were laid as a result of this operation.[43]
|
||
|
||
In France, where a voluntary scheme has become effectively
|
||
compulsory, the Police routinely demand the identity cards of
|
||
black and brown people - ostensibly to establish immigration
|
||
status, but in reality to harass them.[44] Also, K.
|
||
Cowmeadow, writing to The Sunday Telegraph, gives an
|
||
interesting anecdote:
|
||
|
||
A young mother [in Paris] was called away
|
||
unexpectedly to go to her parents, one of whom had
|
||
been taken seriously ill. She left her husband to
|
||
look after their baby at home. He popped out in his
|
||
shirtsleeves and slippers to get some food from the
|
||
corner shop - yards away. Unfortunately he was
|
||
stopped by police outside who asked for his ID and
|
||
wouldn't let him go back up to his flat to get it.
|
||
They took him to the police station, despite
|
||
protests that there was a baby left alone, saying
|
||
that as soon as they had checked, he could go back
|
||
home.
|
||
|
||
He was put in a cell and was not allowed to phone a
|
||
friend or neighbour to keep an eye on the baby. As
|
||
far as he knows, they didn't make any check on his
|
||
identity. They merely, in the early hours of the
|
||
morning, said: 'OK, you can go.' No lift home. The
|
||
baby luckily was fine, only needing a bit of
|
||
attention at both ends. Innocent? No. The father
|
||
should have been carrying his ID card.[45]
|
||
|
||
In Greece, the authorities are deeply suspicious of any
|
||
religion but Orthodoxy. It has long been a criminal offence
|
||
to try converting any Orthodox communicant; and the law is
|
||
strictly enforced. During the past 10 years, around 2,000
|
||
Baptist, Pentecostalist and Jehovah's Witness missionaries
|
||
have been arrested there.[46] Non-Orthodox religions are
|
||
restricted in where they may open their places of worship, and
|
||
must even petition the Orthodox hierarchy for permission
|
||
before they can open.
|
||
|
||
In 1993, the Greek Parliament passed a law requiring citizens
|
||
and resident aliens to have details of religion put on their
|
||
identity cards. This has made religious persecution much
|
||
easier. For many years, the National Intelligence Service has
|
||
been keeping files on non-Orthodox Greeks and classifying them
|
||
by religion. In a confidential report leaked to the press in
|
||
1993, it proposed using the new identity card entries to
|
||
divide the population into two categories. There would be the
|
||
Orthodox, or "genuine, pure, incorruptible Greeks" and the
|
||
heterodox, or "non-genuine, impure, corruptible Greeks" -
|
||
against which "traitors" "repressive and preventive measures"
|
||
should be taken.[47] This report was officially denied, but
|
||
the penal laws remain in force.
|
||
|
||
In this country, we had an identity card scheme between 1939
|
||
and 1952. Introduced as a means of restraining the black
|
||
market sale of rationing coupons, it quickly became a general
|
||
nuisance. Production of a card was demanded by the Police on
|
||
almost every occasion.[48] On the 7th December 1950, Clarence
|
||
Henry Willcock, a middle aged manager of a dry cleaning
|
||
company, was stopped while driving his car in Finchley by PC
|
||
Harold Muckle. No evidence was ever produced to show that Mr
|
||
Willcock had been committing an offence, but he was ordered to
|
||
show his identity card. When he refused, PC Muckle gave him a
|
||
notice requiring him to produce his card at a Police Station
|
||
within 48 hours. Mr Willcock threw the notice onto the
|
||
pavement with the words "I will not accept this form".
|
||
|
||
When he was convicted by the Magistrates, he appealed into the
|
||
Court of Criminal Appeal; and his case was considered so
|
||
important that it was attended by Lord Chief Justice Goddard
|
||
and six other Judges. The Court upheld his conviction and the
|
||
sentence - an absolute discharge - but the Lord Chief Justice
|
||
denounced the identity card scheme with the words:
|
||
|
||
Because the police may have powers, it does not
|
||
follow that they ought to exercise them on all
|
||
occasions.... [I]t is obvious that the police now,
|
||
as a matter of routine, demand the production of
|
||
national registration cards whenever they stop or
|
||
interrogate a motorist for whatever cause.
|
||
|
||
To demand production of the card from all and
|
||
sundry, for instance from a woman who has left her
|
||
car outside a shop longer than she should... is
|
||
wholly unreasonable. To use Acts of Parliament
|
||
passed for particular purposes in wartime when the
|
||
war is a thing of the past tends to turn law-abiding
|
||
citizens into lawbreakers, which is a most
|
||
undesirable state of affairs.[49]
|
||
|
||
In 1952, as part of its general "bonfire of controls", the
|
||
second Churchill Government abolished the identity card scheme
|
||
to general approval. "There was" says Anthony Sheldon, the
|
||
chronicler of this Government, "a great feeling that we needed
|
||
to get away from the war and austerity."[50] For the next 40
|
||
years, there was little pressure to introduce a new scheme -
|
||
little pressure, that is, until this year.
|
||
|
||
FIVE: LOOKING AHEAD
|
||
|
||
It is true that the experience of identity card schemes in
|
||
this and other civilised countries has shown so far only that
|
||
they are vexatious. But this is unlikely to remain the case.
|
||
Without a really exceptional effort - and then for a single
|
||
purpose - there are natural limits to what can be done with
|
||
the relating of paper identity cards to paper records. But,
|
||
increasingly nowadays, information is recorded on computer
|
||
databases. Once there, it is wonderfully easy to access. If
|
||
I take the version of the Oxford English Dictionary recently
|
||
published on compact disc, I can in seconds gather information
|
||
that would once have required months of patient scholarship.
|
||
I can find how many words of Arabic derivation came into
|
||
English between 1660 and 1715. I can find how many words
|
||
containing the letter C that Shakespeare borrowed from French.
|
||
|
||
I can find every philosophical word first used by Thomas
|
||
Hobbes. I found much of the information for this pamphlet in
|
||
an electronic database called FT Profile, which holds the
|
||
complete text of most articles published this decade in the
|
||
British press. In half an hour, I downloaded 96,189 words,
|
||
being the text of 274 articles containing the words "identity
|
||
card". Exactly the same kind of search is possible of a
|
||
database containing personal details - and these are in
|
||
computers far larger and more powerful than anything that I
|
||
have.
|
||
|
||
Moreover, the knowledge that information, once gathered, can
|
||
be stored at almost zero cost, and retrieved at once in any
|
||
permutation, is proving an incentive to gather the sort of
|
||
information that it has not so far been convenient to keep on
|
||
any but a small minority of the population.
|
||
|
||
We can see this most plainly in the United States, where the
|
||
education system is fast acquiring a national network of
|
||
electronic student records. Its purpose is to allow the
|
||
exchange of information between various agencies, both public
|
||
and private, and the continuous tracking of individuals
|
||
through school and higher education, through the armed forces,
|
||
through the criminal justice system, through their civilian
|
||
careers, and through their use of the medical services. At
|
||
the moment, these databases are being fed "only" the following
|
||
information:
|
||
|
||
* An "electronic portfolio" for every student, containing
|
||
personal essays and other completed work that has been
|
||
submitted on computer disk;
|
||
|
||
* Assessments by teachers of every student's work and work-
|
||
related behaviour;
|
||
|
||
* Every student's Social Security Number, to allow later
|
||
additions from other databases.[51]
|
||
|
||
The National Education Goals Panel, a Federal committee set up
|
||
under the Goals 2000 Act 1993 to coordinate the national
|
||
reform of education, has recommended as "essential" the adding
|
||
of further information to these portfolios, this to include:
|
||
month and extent of first prenatal care; birthweight; name,
|
||
type, and number of years in a pre-school programme; poverty
|
||
status; physical, emotional and other development at ages five
|
||
and six; date of last routine health and dental care;
|
||
activities away from school; type and hours per week of
|
||
community service; name of post-secondary institution
|
||
attended; post-secondary degree or credential; employment
|
||
status; type of employment and employer's name; whether
|
||
registered to vote.
|
||
|
||
It also notes other "data elements useful for research and
|
||
school management purposes": names of persons living in
|
||
student household; relationship of those persons to student;
|
||
highest level of education for "primary care-givers"; total
|
||
family income; public assistance status and years of benefits;
|
||
number of moves in the last five years; nature and ownership
|
||
of dwelling.[52]
|
||
|
||
Though intended mainly for the authorities, access to these
|
||
records is available also to private agencies. This is
|
||
intended. In Together We Can, a book published jointly by the
|
||
U.S. Department of Education and the U.S. Department of Health
|
||
and Human Services, there is talk of "overcoming the
|
||
confidentiality barrier". The purpose of the new databases is
|
||
to give all agencies "ready access to each other's data".[53]
|
||
|
||
Already, the databases are being used. In Kennewick, in the
|
||
State of Washington, more than 4,000 school students were
|
||
assessed by their teachers on how often they lied, cheated,
|
||
stole, showed a "negative attitude", acted aggressively, and
|
||
were rejected by their peers. The completed assessments, with
|
||
names still attached, were sent to a private psychiatric
|
||
centre under contract to help "at risk" students. "All this
|
||
was done without the knowledge and consent of the children or
|
||
their parents."[54]
|
||
|
||
The argument is not simply about identity cards. It is about
|
||
the nature and use of the information to which they now can
|
||
give immediate access. There is no need to mark on an
|
||
identity card that its holder is a smoker or a homosexual. It
|
||
is enough that it give anyone inspecting it easy access to a
|
||
central database where these details are stored or can be
|
||
accessed.[55] In his Bournemouth speech, Mr Howard spoke not
|
||
about a piece of card with a photograph and a few typed words.
|
||
|
||
He spoke about a smart card:
|
||
|
||
The new technology could also make it possible to
|
||
replace a wallet full of cards with just a single
|
||
bit of plastic. Bank card. Driving licence.
|
||
Social security card. Kidney donor card. All in
|
||
one.[56]
|
||
|
||
Exactly so. Even something as cheap as a bar code could give
|
||
access to a central database of information. But far more
|
||
sophisticated means are available. The smart card is a piece
|
||
of plastic with an embedded microprocessor carrying a personal
|
||
identification number giving access to the database - just as
|
||
our bank cards give access to our accounts. Or there is
|
||
something called a "PCMCIA card", which can contain megabytes
|
||
of personal information, and which can be made to communicate
|
||
with the database. In this new scheme, an identity card is
|
||
nothing less than a key that, carried about, gives the
|
||
authorities - and, in all probability, many others besides -
|
||
the means to unlock a filing cabinet filled with information
|
||
on the holder.
|
||
|
||
Let us consider what sort of information we can expect to be
|
||
in this filing cabinet. If we are somewhat behind the
|
||
Americans in the use of digital technology, I have no doubt
|
||
that we shall soon follow their example, and start opening
|
||
electronic portfolios on everyone in the country. Even now,
|
||
MI5 is connecting all the government databases that already
|
||
exist, to give access, "for reasons other than national
|
||
security" to "personal information held on tens of millions of
|
||
people, from tax files to criminal convictions".[57]
|
||
|
||
Mr Howard himself has made one proposal. Earlier in his
|
||
speech, he announced that
|
||
|
||
I am giving the police extensive powers to take DNA
|
||
samples from suspected criminals. That will enable
|
||
us to create the first national DNA base in the
|
||
world. When I told the Attorney General of the
|
||
United States about it, her jaw dropped. A DNA
|
||
database is one of the most powerful new weapons in
|
||
the fight against crime. The police must have it.
|
||
And I want it working by early next year. From then
|
||
anyone on that database will know that he is a
|
||
marked man.[58]
|
||
|
||
Note the adjective "suspected". Note also what is really
|
||
meant by "criminal". It is an offence to smoke in an empty
|
||
railway carriage, to import spirits above a certain potency,
|
||
to have a screwdriver in one's car "without reasonable cause
|
||
or lawful authority", for one man to kiss another in public,
|
||
and for having one's name left off the Electoral Register. On
|
||
present trends, we shall soon live in a country like old
|
||
Germany, where everything that is not compulsory is
|
||
prohibited. Already, millions of people in this country have
|
||
criminal records for acts that by no stretch of the
|
||
imagination might be described as attacks on life or property.
|
||
|
||
I have no idea how many people have been arrested for such
|
||
acts, only to be released later without charge. But all will
|
||
have their individual genetic codes fed into Mr Howard's
|
||
database.[59]
|
||
|
||
And I see no reason why this database should omit information
|
||
gathered and held by private organisations. Indeed, where
|
||
serious crimes are concerned, banking and other financial
|
||
confidentiality is already dead in this country - and the
|
||
death has happened within the last ten years. Before then, a
|
||
bank had an implied contractual obligation not to disclose
|
||
information concerning the affairs of a customer. This
|
||
obligation extended to all facts about a customer known to or
|
||
discovered by the bank, and not merely to the state of his
|
||
account.
|
||
|
||
The obligation was qualified in various ways, the most
|
||
important of which for this discussion was compulsion of law.
|
||
By s.7 of the Bankers' Books Evidence Act 1879 - amended by
|
||
the Banking Act 1979 - a party could by court order inspect
|
||
and copy entries in a banker's books. This allowed the Police
|
||
to gain access to a suspected person's records, but only after
|
||
charges had been laid. If other disclosures were made to the
|
||
Police, they were not strictly lawful; and they were very
|
||
seldom made.
|
||
|
||
By s.17 of the Taxes Management Act 1972, a bank was further
|
||
obliged to inform the Inland Revenue of interest paid to a
|
||
customer above a certain level.
|
||
|
||
However, the Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984, the Drug
|
||
Trafficking Offences Act 1986, the Criminal Justice Act 1987,
|
||
the Criminal Justice Act 1988, The Companies Act 1989, and the
|
||
Prevention of Terrorism (Temporary Provisions) Act 1989,
|
||
together with the Criminal Justice Act 1993 and the Money
|
||
Laundering Regulations 1993[60] - which both give effect to
|
||
the European Union's Money Laundering Directive - and numerous
|
||
statutory instruments and "voluntary" codes imposed by the
|
||
Bank of England, have entirely altered this state of affairs.
|
||
A bank today is obliged to disclose information virtually on
|
||
demand to the Police, the Revenue, the Department of Trade and
|
||
Industry, and the Serious Fraud Office, to name only the most
|
||
frequent applicants.
|
||
|
||
Further, the banks and other financial institutions must
|
||
report all "suspicious transactions". These include the
|
||
making of unusually large cash deposits - that is, deposits
|
||
larger than 10,000 - numerous deposits and withdrawals of
|
||
cash, using night safes to make large deposits of cash.
|
||
Failure to report is a criminal offence, and on conviction, a
|
||
bank or other financial official can be jailed for a maximum
|
||
of five years. In many cases, usually connected with drugs or
|
||
terrorism, it is for an accused official to prove he had no
|
||
reason to suspect that a transaction was irregular. If it can
|
||
be proved that he actively assisted to hide a transaction, he
|
||
faces a maximum of 14 years' imprisonment.
|
||
|
||
Still further, even if no suspicious transactions can be
|
||
proved, a senior manager can face a fine or two years'
|
||
imprisonment, or both, for failing to put adequate safeguards
|
||
in place.[61] This requires every financial institution to
|
||
appoint a "money laundering reporting officer", to make and
|
||
maintain regular contact with the authorities. Apart from
|
||
this, financial staff are encouraged to make anonymous reports
|
||
to the National Criminal Intelligence Service.[62]
|
||
|
||
In addition, "financial institution" is defined not merely as
|
||
bank, building society, insurance company, and so forth, but
|
||
also as solicitor, accountant, estate agent, auctioneer,
|
||
antique dealer and general shopkeeper, and casino. Anyone who
|
||
receives large sums of money from the public is covered.[63]
|
||
|
||
These provisions breach the previously fundamental rule of
|
||
Common Law - that every accused person is innocent until
|
||
proven guilty. They also turn just about every member of
|
||
staff in every financial institution into a part-time
|
||
policeman.
|
||
|
||
Therefore the sudden mass of paperwork required to open a bank
|
||
account in this country. The traditional two references are
|
||
no longer enough. It is necessary to produce passports,
|
||
driving licences, and so forth, to establish full proof of
|
||
identity. Identity numbers from these documents are kept on
|
||
file for future inspection.
|
||
|
||
Such safeguards as exist in the modern legislation are to
|
||
protect the banks, not their customers - therefore the
|
||
relieving of banks from civil liability to their customers for
|
||
any disclosure of information to the authorities, or for not
|
||
informing their customers of any such disclosure.[64]
|
||
|
||
All these regulations are intended for the detection and
|
||
prevention of serious crimes - few of which, terrorism aside,
|
||
are connected with attacks on life or property. But their
|
||
extension, to allow an inspection and supervision of everyone,
|
||
can be expected to follow as a matter of course. This is the
|
||
opinion of Dr Michael Levi, Reader in Criminology at the
|
||
University of Wales. He says:
|
||
|
||
It appears... as if the foundations of the
|
||
international finance-police state are being laid.
|
||
In six years [to 1989], the UK has moved from a
|
||
legal position in which bank account details could
|
||
be revealed only after the account holders had been
|
||
charged, to one in which routine interchanges -
|
||
court-authorised or not - take place between banks
|
||
and a plethora of police and regulatory
|
||
agencies.[65]
|
||
|
||
Turning to the shops, the gathering and storing of information
|
||
here also is far advanced. At the moment, this is for purely
|
||
commercial reasons. Competition is driving retailers to learn
|
||
as much as possible about their customers. Age, income,
|
||
credit rating, marital status, location of address, known
|
||
propensity to buy certain goods or classes of goods, likely
|
||
propensity to buy others - these details and many more are
|
||
routinely collected and often sold or traded. So far as it
|
||
minimises our costs of search for the things we want or may
|
||
want to buy, this is a beneficial activity. But it too will
|
||
go into the central database, for inspection by the
|
||
authorities - or it may be there now.
|
||
|
||
Then there are our shopping receipts. My weekly receipt from
|
||
Asda gives an itemised breakdown of all that I buy there. It
|
||
also carries my credit card account number. I have receipts
|
||
from other shops that do the same. These records are all
|
||
still outside the database. So far as I can tell, they are
|
||
regarded as unimportant, and are quickly deleted. It is too
|
||
expensive for the shops to keep them and make them available
|
||
to the authorities. But this is a problem of time, not
|
||
possibility. A few years more of falling hardware prices, and
|
||
someone need only find a plausible justification, and our
|
||
shopping details will no longer be a secret. Some of us, no
|
||
doubt, will turn to paying in cash - especially for more
|
||
personal items. But this will not long remain an alternative.
|
||
The panic about money laundering is too strong: and there is
|
||
too much talk about the smart card "e-purses" now being tested
|
||
in America.
|
||
|
||
The same can be said for the records of books borrowed from
|
||
public libraries. I have never asked if anyone at my local or
|
||
university libraries can find out yet what I borrow. But, as
|
||
soon as money and technology allow, this information surely
|
||
belongs with everything else. It plainly shows the sort of
|
||
person I am, and indicates what I may be inclined to do.
|
||
|
||
Nor do I see why our e-mail records should not be available.
|
||
For many years, postal surveillance has been almost impossible
|
||
in this country. There is the huge volume of letters passing
|
||
through every day through the Post Office. There is the
|
||
possibility of slightly misaddressing a letter, or changing
|
||
the addressee's name, to evade inspection at the sorting
|
||
office while relying on the local experience of the Postman to
|
||
ensure delivery. The creation of the Post Office in the
|
||
1660s, and the protection of its monopoly since then, has owed
|
||
at least as much to a desire to intercept our post at will as
|
||
to the huge revenue that has usually been derived. Its
|
||
suggested privatisation may be in part a recognition that its
|
||
use as a means of surveillance is over.
|
||
|
||
The redirection of our post through the Internet allows this
|
||
control to be reimposed. If I send an e-mail message, it can
|
||
be read by the administrator of the site to which I am
|
||
connected, or of the recipient's site. It can also be
|
||
intercepted at any convenient point on the vast web of
|
||
telephone lines which contain the Internet. The cost in human
|
||
labour of steaming open and reading or copying every letter
|
||
sent in this country is too high for serious consideration.
|
||
Ordering us to send our post in unsealed envelopes would cause
|
||
a general uproar, and would, again, be too expensive. But to
|
||
monitor e-mail for certain words or combinations of words is
|
||
quite simple, and is now within many surveillance budgets.[66]
|
||
|
||
Then there are future developments that can now only be
|
||
imagined. At the moment, many of us must wear identity cards
|
||
in our places of work. This saves the security staff from the
|
||
effort and intrusion of demanding identification whenever we
|
||
enter the building or a restricted place in the building. I
|
||
have no doubt that someone will think of an advantage to
|
||
requiring the same in public with general identity cards.[67]
|
||
|
||
On the Tuesday following his Bournemouth Speech, Mr Howard
|
||
promised to spend money on installing more video cameras in
|
||
public places. Speaking in London at the eighth International
|
||
Police Exhibition and Conference, he said:
|
||
|
||
We know that CCTV has great potential to help in
|
||
detecting and preventing crime. The new scheme will
|
||
provide funding, to a total of 2 million in this
|
||
financial year, to bidders from local partnerships
|
||
with imaginative applications for closed circuit
|
||
television.
|
||
|
||
Given the success of CCTV in many parts of the
|
||
country in preventing crime and increasing arrests
|
||
for crimes committed, this is an important
|
||
development. It will help to reduce the fear of
|
||
crime and will make our communities safer places in
|
||
which to live and work.[68]
|
||
|
||
It may today be possible - if not, it will be no later than
|
||
the end of this century - for digital cameras to monitor and
|
||
record identities from the wearers of interactive identity
|
||
cards. Moving somewhat further ahead, it will eventually be
|
||
possible to match the faces of customers or people in the
|
||
street to digital images stored centrally - thereby dispensing
|
||
with much of the need for identity cards. This again is a
|
||
matter of no more than storage space and processing speed.[69]
|
||
|
||
I am not alleging some evil conspiracy here. The people who
|
||
are gathering all this information on us, and those who are
|
||
calling for it to be made accessible at will through an
|
||
identity card scheme, simply want what is best for us. They
|
||
see only benefits in the growing structure of surveillance.
|
||
They will ask me:
|
||
|
||
* If I fall under a bus and am rushed to hospital, to
|
||
imagine the value of a card that will give instant access
|
||
to my blood group, my allergies, any other medical
|
||
conditions that I may have, and my next of kin;
|
||
|
||
* If some non-invasive way is discovered of verifying DNA
|
||
against details centrally recorded, how it will save
|
||
billions in credit card and social security fraud;
|
||
|
||
* If a bomb explodes at a railway station, to think how the
|
||
police computers might scan the station videos for the
|
||
past six months, identify everyone there and check for
|
||
previous convictions, or anything suspicious in any other
|
||
records - the purchase, perhaps, of garden fertiliser;
|
||
|
||
* If a woman is raped and left for dead in a park, how it
|
||
will be possible, even if the rapist wore a condom and
|
||
left no other body fluids, to profile the population - to
|
||
see who has a taste for violent images, as recorded by
|
||
the book and video shops, who is shown by evidence from
|
||
other sources to have a tendency to violence, and who
|
||
lives within easy distance of the park, or whose
|
||
movements took him close to there; and who, therefore, is
|
||
likely to have committed the crime, and should be pulled
|
||
in for questioning.
|
||
|
||
The problem is that I can imagine rather more.
|
||
|
||
I think of someone like the consultant who refused to see Mr
|
||
Elphick, standing over a patient and waving a print out of all
|
||
the cakes and ale bought during the previous ten years.
|
||
|
||
I think of social workers breaking into a house at three in
|
||
the morning, and removing children from people whose recent
|
||
purchase of a vibrator, or conversion to Buddhism, clearly
|
||
disqualifies them from being parents.
|
||
|
||
I think of somebody sacked from his job, because his son
|
||
downloaded a file from a deep green bulletin board in Finland,
|
||
or wrote an essay at school in which he gave some received
|
||
opinion less than its proper respect.
|
||
|
||
I think of a woman whose DNA code shows a high probability of
|
||
her bearing a deformed child, forced into sterilisation.
|
||
|
||
In short, I really do think of the most complete despotism
|
||
that ever existed. Here I am thinking of a state of affairs
|
||
that my reading of the dystopian science fiction has been
|
||
inadequate for me fully to imagine. Yet, by following through
|
||
those things that are now happening to their natural
|
||
conclusion, it is possible to see its general outlines.
|
||
|
||
|
||
SIX: THE NEW DESPOTISM
|
||
|
||
I repeat and must stress, that this despotism will not overtly
|
||
be a "boot stamping on a human face - for ever".[70] It will
|
||
in its outward appearance be gentle and reasonable. It will
|
||
remain democratic, in the sense of allowing elections to
|
||
office and the discussion of authorised topics. Its uses of
|
||
power will be more or less in accord with public opinion. It
|
||
will be wholly unlike the great despotic empires of our
|
||
century.
|
||
|
||
In those empires, surveillance and control could never be
|
||
total. Minorities like the Jews or the old middle class could
|
||
be singled out. Known dissidents could be followed round and
|
||
watched. Informers and secret police could frighten everyone
|
||
else to some extent. But while whole populations could feel a
|
||
certain pressure to conform to the wishes of those in
|
||
authority, it was impossible to enforce conformity in all
|
||
cases. It would have generated a mountain of paper.
|
||
Economies, already weakened by socialism, would have been made
|
||
still weaker by the diversion of labour to accumulating and
|
||
using this mountain.
|
||
|
||
Moreover, the propaganda was too crude to be wholly effective.
|
||
|
||
It contained too many lies that were contradicted by what
|
||
people actually saw around them, or heard or saw on foreign
|
||
broadcasts. And, except in the Soviet Union, the despotism
|
||
did not last beyond a single lifetime. Always, there was at
|
||
least an older generation able to remember the freedoms of the
|
||
preceding bourgeois state, and able to pass on to the young
|
||
the belief that these freedoms were normal and desirable and
|
||
might one day be recovered.
|
||
|
||
But this future despotism will not face such problems. The
|
||
system that I can dimly see will not collapse under the weight
|
||
of its own folly. It will not be socialist in the old sense,
|
||
of central economic planning, but will keep enough of a free
|
||
market to ensure some coordination of activity. This will not
|
||
be enough, I suspect, to lift the economy from permanent
|
||
recession, with high unemployment and periodic bursts of
|
||
inflation. It will serve, though, to reinforce the pressure
|
||
of public and other opinion.
|
||
|
||
As a proportion, there are perhaps today fewer people of
|
||
independent means than at any time in our history. Until the
|
||
Great War, and for a while after, it was possible for many
|
||
people to do more or less as they pleased, free from any need
|
||
to court or keep the good opinion of others. In a society
|
||
still deeply religious, it was possible for someone to bring
|
||
religion into disrepute. Charles Darwin, with his fortune
|
||
safely in the bank, could overturn the foundations of
|
||
conventional religion. Edward Gibbon could outrage the whole
|
||
religious establishment with his account of the early Church.
|
||
During the American war, the Whig aristocracy could denounce
|
||
every British victory. During the wars of the French
|
||
Revolution, it could first praise the Jacobins and then
|
||
worship Napoleon. There were transvestites, and open
|
||
adulterers, and believers in every hated doctrine - from
|
||
socialism, to female suffrage, to the dismantling of the
|
||
Empire. I am not saying that poor radicals were not
|
||
persecuted; but those with independent means could be punished
|
||
with nothing worse than the obloquy of those whose good
|
||
opinion they generally despised.
|
||
|
||
Today, most incomes are earned, and all are heavily taxed.
|
||
Few even in the middle classes have time for any dissenting
|
||
speculation; and then we must take care not to upset our
|
||
employers or customers beyond an often narrow limit. I think
|
||
of Colin Jordan, sacked from his teaching post for his -
|
||
admittedly absurd - opinion about the Jews. I think of other
|
||
national socialists, sacked from local authority jobs. I
|
||
think of smokers, told to give up or face dismissal.
|
||
|
||
The surveillance state, to which we are fast advancing, will
|
||
make it easier than ever before to know what people are
|
||
thinking and doing. And a moderate but firm pressure of this
|
||
sort to conform, imposed over several generations, not impeded
|
||
by the existence of other free countries, and not compromised
|
||
by the sort of overt tyranny that provokes internal where not
|
||
other resistance, will at last produce a new humanity. The
|
||
difference between people in this and in earlier despotisms
|
||
will be as the difference between an animal chained and an
|
||
animal tamed.
|
||
|
||
Most of us, after all, are quite timid. We do not pick our
|
||
noses in public, or scratch our bottoms, for fear of how we
|
||
shall be regarded by the world. For myself, I remember how,
|
||
when I was 19, I trembled for what seemed an age at the
|
||
entrance to a sex shop in Soho, terrified to go in, thinking
|
||
that every passer-by was watching me and would laugh if I
|
||
entered this temple of masturbation. Today, I will not smoke
|
||
in front of my mother, though she smokes more in a day than I
|
||
do in a month. There are many other trivial things that I
|
||
still prefer others - or just a few others - not to know that
|
||
I like or do.
|
||
|
||
Nearly everyone else is the same. To be ashamed, even of
|
||
nothing very serious, is a natural, indeed a necessary
|
||
feeling. I have a homosexual friend who would never go to a
|
||
gay bookshop or club or any other gathering place if he
|
||
thought he might be recognised there by his relatives or his
|
||
colleagues at work. I have another friend who drives a
|
||
minicab in a part of London far from home, who lets his
|
||
neighbours think that he is still a solicitor. But we are now
|
||
facing a return to the conformity of village life from which
|
||
our ancestors so gladly escaped. We are looking at a future
|
||
world in which there will be no privacy, no anonymity, no
|
||
harmless deception, in which we shall all live as if on a
|
||
stage under the watchful eye of authority.
|
||
|
||
The effect will an invisible but effective control. The
|
||
knowledge or prospect of being watched will for most of us be
|
||
a greater deterrent from whatever may then be classed as sin
|
||
than a whole mass of legal prohibitions. There will be no
|
||
definite formulation of what we must not do, nor any Act or
|
||
article in a code against which protest might be made. People
|
||
will come to realise that safety lies in trying to behave and
|
||
to think exactly alike. The exposure consequent on doing
|
||
otherwise will be too awful if vague to contemplate. There
|
||
will, of course, be some exhibitionists, willing - and perhaps
|
||
happy - to expose their lives to the interested scrutiny of
|
||
others. I read somewhere once of a man in Leningrad, who in
|
||
1968 protested against the invasion of Czechoslovakia.[71]
|
||
There were flamboyant homosexuals in this country all through
|
||
the grim persecution of the 1940s and 50s. There are people
|
||
now who stand up and announce that the world is flat, or that
|
||
the Moon landings were a fake. But I will not think much of a
|
||
world in which such people have become the only individuals.
|
||
|
||
Nor do I think much of that world's chances of further
|
||
progress. During the past 300 years, we have fallen into the
|
||
habit of believing progress to happen automatically. We
|
||
complain about the rapacity and waste of big government; but
|
||
we still assume that private effort will somehow accumulate
|
||
wealth faster than most governments can destroy it. There is
|
||
nothing automatic in this. For the human race as a whole,
|
||
improvement has come in irregular jumps - with ages of
|
||
progress here and there. But the normal state has been
|
||
stability; and for the majority of past civilisations,
|
||
progress in one age has been followed by decline or even
|
||
collapse in the next. Despite all the triumphs of our science
|
||
and technology, we have no reason to believe that these must
|
||
continue indefinitely.
|
||
|
||
Margaret Thatcher's less reflective supporters have always
|
||
surprised me with their assumption that economic success is no
|
||
more than a matter of economic incentive. Certainly, a free
|
||
market is the greatest forcing house of individuality so far
|
||
discovered. But the Thatcher and Major Governments have not
|
||
managed to deliver anything approaching a free market. Their
|
||
market is regulated and taxed at every point. It enables a
|
||
certain economic rationality, but does not shelter individual
|
||
achievement against the disapproval of those whom it will or
|
||
might disturb.
|
||
|
||
And here is the death of progress as we have come to
|
||
understand it. The achievements of our civilisation have in
|
||
almost all cases been the fruits of individual excellence:
|
||
and, whether in the arts or the sciences or in commerce, the
|
||
rate of improvement has been proportionate to the toleration
|
||
of individuality. Think of the steam engine, the telephone,
|
||
the aeroplane - even the computer: these have been much
|
||
improved and cheapened by common ingenuity; but they all came
|
||
in the first instance from the mind of some inspired
|
||
individual or sequence of individuals who were often denounced
|
||
in their own time as cranks or monsters, where not physically
|
||
attacked.[72] Cut down that tree of individuality - or, as I
|
||
am now discussing, merely strangle its roots - and there will
|
||
be no more fruit.
|
||
|
||
The Soviet socialists came closer than any other modern state
|
||
to reversing the direction of progress. But that needed a
|
||
continual vigilance, a readiness to step in and smother all
|
||
private initiative with punishment and frustration. In this
|
||
world of the future, there will need be nothing so crude.
|
||
There will be no prohibitions of initiative, because none will
|
||
exist. With an economy less formally hampered than the one in
|
||
which the Internet has emerged, our descendants may sit as
|
||
stagnant and self-satisfied as the Chinese were when the
|
||
Jesuit missionaries first arrived.[73]
|
||
|
||
|
||
SEVEN: POSSIBLE RESTRAINTS
|
||
|
||
It is argued that no such results will follow from the system
|
||
now being constructed. Either the authorities can somehow be
|
||
persuaded not to use all the powers that it puts into their
|
||
hands, or it will be circumvented by incompetence or evasion.
|
||
|
||
Roy Hattersley, for example, claims to be "an avowed civil
|
||
libertarian" who yet believes that "the case for identity
|
||
cards in Britain is irresistible".[74] The sole objection he
|
||
sees is a "lack of confidence in the integrity, indeed the
|
||
honesty, of the police". But, he answers,
|
||
|
||
[i]t is easy enough to deal with the officious or
|
||
over-aggressive policeman who helps the hours to
|
||
pass by challenging innocent pedestrians.
|
||
Challenged in court, the officer would be obliged to
|
||
show that he had 'good cause' for demanding to see
|
||
an identity card - a theft in the neighbourhood or
|
||
merchandise obtained by fraud from a local shop.
|
||
|
||
Then there is the problem of the man or woman who,
|
||
although innocent of any crime, is caught doing
|
||
something of which they are ashamed - out to dinner
|
||
with someone else's spouse or reading a dirty
|
||
magazine. Using information - who was where, when -
|
||
obtained from examination of an identity card would
|
||
be made a criminal offence.[75]
|
||
|
||
Colin Darracott, who is the Organiser of Charter 88 and
|
||
another "libertarian" believes that a "minimal" identity card
|
||
would be a good thing - but only after his scheme of a Bill of
|
||
Rights and Freedom of Information Act has restored faith in
|
||
the authorities.[76]
|
||
|
||
It is, however, wishful thinking to suppose that the sinister
|
||
potential of identity cards can be abolished by a few changes
|
||
in the law. It is possible to establish a scheme in which
|
||
information collected for one purpose cannot be used for
|
||
another - so that a doctor could have access to medical but
|
||
not shopping or tax records, and a Policeman access to details
|
||
of criminal convictions but not of a sex-change operation. It
|
||
is possible to make laws against the passing of information,
|
||
or the means of obtaining information, to unauthorised
|
||
persons. But no law yet made on the sharing of information
|
||
has ever covered the ability of the security services to dip
|
||
into whatever file takes their fancy. Nor have our strict
|
||
official secrecy laws prevented unauthorised persons from
|
||
gaining access to data stored on the Police National Computer
|
||
- to which, in any case, numerous organisations, both public
|
||
and private, including the BBC and the National Gallery, have
|
||
open access.[77]
|
||
|
||
Also, the value of a unified database is that the information
|
||
on it can be shared very widely. That is the main purpose in
|
||
the American case given above. We can start with all manner
|
||
of good intentions about limiting access. In practice, these
|
||
will soon become a dead letter - at the insistence of those
|
||
now calling for identity cards, and perhaps of those who now
|
||
talk about restraints. Why should a hospital not have access
|
||
to a patient's immigration status? Why not to his sexual
|
||
inclinations? Why should the Police not be able to check what
|
||
books a suspect has borrowed from the library, or what bus
|
||
journeys he makes? Why should a Social Security official not
|
||
have access to a claimant's tax and banking records, and
|
||
details of spouse and children? Why should an insurance
|
||
company not have access to a customer's medical records, to
|
||
see what predisposition he may have to an expensive illness or
|
||
early death? Why not to his shopping records, to see if he
|
||
has filled out his lifestyle questionnaire truthfully? Why
|
||
should a senior manager, in a "national champion" company not
|
||
have access to the full range of a subordinate's private life
|
||
-
|
||
to see if he is drinking too much, or smoking, or taking
|
||
bribes from a foreign rival, or putting on a wig to pick up
|
||
sailors on a Friday night? I do not need to ask what pretence
|
||
will be made for each specific knocking down of the original
|
||
barriers. But, once the principle of identity cards has been
|
||
conceded, it is a matter of time alone before everyone with a
|
||
right to inspect part of the information to which they give
|
||
access will have claimed and obtained a right to inspect the
|
||
rest.
|
||
|
||
A variation on this argument is to call for a law to protect
|
||
privacy. We should, that is, have a right enforceable by the
|
||
courts to say "no" to many demands for information, and to
|
||
compel the deletion of much else; and we should have a remedy
|
||
for uses of information that expose us to ridicule or other
|
||
embarrassment. A tort of breach of privacy has existed in
|
||
American law for the better part of a century. Following the
|
||
example set, privacy is a legal right recognised in Canada,
|
||
Australia, France, Germany, and many other jurisdictions. It
|
||
has been repeatedly proposed that the right should also be
|
||
recognised in this country.
|
||
|
||
But, while this seems a reasonable notion, experience has
|
||
shown it to be objectionable on two grounds.
|
||
|
||
First, it has been found impossible to give the word "privacy"
|
||
a clear and distinct legal meaning. Reviewing the American
|
||
cases and the literature that surrounds them, Raymond Wacks
|
||
concludes that it "has grown into a large and unwieldy
|
||
concept"[78] Is it a condition, or a state, or an "area of
|
||
life"? Or is it synonymous with "human dignity"? Is it an
|
||
end desirable in itself, or a means of achieving some other,
|
||
such as creativity, love, or emotional release? In the
|
||
absence of any satisfactory or commonly agreed definition,
|
||
privacy has come to mean anything that a judge and jury can be
|
||
persuaded to accept. Breach of it has meant anything from the
|
||
denying of a woman's right to an abortion, to the compelling
|
||
of someone to cut his hair.[79]
|
||
|
||
Second, actions for breach of privacy have tended insensibly
|
||
to obscure, and thereby to weaken, other protections under
|
||
American law. They are taking over from defences under the
|
||
First Amendment in freedom of speech cases; and bearing in
|
||
mind the clarity of the one and the obscurity of the other as
|
||
legal concepts, this is to be regretted.[80]
|
||
|
||
Our own law of torts is less chaotic than the American, and a
|
||
privacy law might not to the same extent disorder the other
|
||
protections of life liberty and property under the law - or
|
||
such as may soon be left to us. Nevertheless, the ambiguity
|
||
of the notion will surely render it useless against the
|
||
gathering and use of embarrassing information. Look at the
|
||
recent agonising over the "outing" of the new Bishop of
|
||
Durham. Ought a privacy law have given him redress against
|
||
The News of the World? Or was there a public interest in the
|
||
revealing of his old conviction for indecency? Look, for that
|
||
matter, at the electronic portfolios being assembled in
|
||
America: in the most litigious nation on earth, did a privacy
|
||
law keep the parents of Kennewick from having the
|
||
psychiatrists knock on their doors? The same can be asked
|
||
regarding any of the other uses of information discussed
|
||
above.
|
||
|
||
Nor can anything better be expected from the privacy directive
|
||
now under discussion in Brussels: the talk there is all of
|
||
"balance". Whatever finally emerges will be as feeble as the
|
||
European Convention on Human Rights, which gives us all an
|
||
absolute right to freedom of speech, except where the
|
||
authorities decide to allow otherwise.[81]
|
||
|
||
Like dignity and happiness, privacy is a very good thing. In
|
||
legal terms, however, it should perhaps be regarded as a
|
||
secondary quality, contingent on the upholding of other rights
|
||
and a strict limitation of the size and role of government.
|
||
It is the absence of these that must be addressed, not the
|
||
specific effects that flow from their absence.
|
||
|
||
I move now to the argument from incompetence - that the
|
||
databases are and will remain so full of mistakes, that no one
|
||
will dare trust them. According to Dr Edgar Whitley, writing
|
||
to The Daily Telegraph, this is a "fundamental flaw". He
|
||
cites a National Audit Office report in which it was claimed
|
||
that 35 per cent of the 12.2 million driver records, and 25
|
||
per cent of the nine million vehicle records, held by the
|
||
Drivers and Vehicles Licensing Authority contain at least one
|
||
error. "With this level of inaccuracy" he concludes,
|
||
|
||
one cannot hope to implement a successful smart card
|
||
system for driving licences. It is likely that any
|
||
other form of computer-based national identification
|
||
system will suffer similar flaws.[82]
|
||
|
||
It may be that a catalogue of errors, more or less serious,
|
||
would soon bring identity cards into disrepute. Something
|
||
like this has recently happened in Sweden. While there is no
|
||
identity card scheme there, all Swedes are given a personal
|
||
identity number at birth. These have by gradual extension
|
||
become required for every public transaction, from health and
|
||
tax to banking and nursery school waiting lists. According to
|
||
Anitha Bondestam, Director of the Data Inspection Board in
|
||
Sweden, "you need them for everything, and to change your
|
||
number you need a sex change."[83] They are also used as a
|
||
common identifier for information held in different databases.
|
||
|
||
Not surprisingly, there are frequent mistakes due to
|
||
incompetence and fraud. Ms Bondestam cites the case of a
|
||
young woman who had her son taken away on the grounds that she
|
||
was a drug abuser. It finally turned out that somebody else
|
||
had been using her number in dealings with hospitals and the
|
||
Police. Her case became a national scandal; and the law is
|
||
being reformed, to limit the use of personal identity
|
||
numbers.[84]
|
||
|
||
Some writers have made fun of the ruin that such levels of
|
||
inaccuracy would soon bring to an identity card scheme. There
|
||
would be wrong names on them, and wrong photographs. People
|
||
would suffer immense inconvenience from the use of incorrect
|
||
data. No two officials or other persons would demand or
|
||
accept them in the same way. The central computers would be
|
||
forever "down".[85]
|
||
|
||
Otherwise, much is said about the costs of an identity card
|
||
scheme: The Home Office has estimated that a compulsory
|
||
scheme using a plastic card, with photograph, fingerprints,
|
||
date of birth and signature, would cost 500 million to
|
||
establish, plus 100 million per year to maintain
|
||
thereafter.[86] These costs are based on the assumption that
|
||
the scheme can be made to work properly from the first, and
|
||
that no further unexpected costs will occur. Bearing in mind
|
||
that the Home Office civil servants will almost certainly buy
|
||
the wrong computers, and that about five per cent of people
|
||
each year will lose or damage their cards, the final cost - as
|
||
with Concorde, and the Humber Bridge, and many other public
|
||
works - is anyone's guess.[87]
|
||
|
||
There is also the certainty of malicious hacking. Recently in
|
||
south London, for example, someone broke into the local Health
|
||
Authority computer, and altered a standard letter that was
|
||
sent out to 5,000 women before anyone noticed that a request
|
||
to attend for a cervical smear had been altered to an
|
||
invitation to drop in and "have your fanny examined".[88]
|
||
|
||
This brings me to the argument from evasion. There is good
|
||
reason at the moment to believe that governments are losing
|
||
the battle to impose a total electronic surveillance. Look at
|
||
the current protections available for e-mail and other
|
||
electronic data. In the past few years, various kinds of
|
||
strong public key encryption software have become widely
|
||
available. Of these, PGP - or "Pretty Good Privacy" - is
|
||
currently the most popular. This does things that I do not
|
||
fully understand to an electronic document, and allows it to
|
||
be sent through the Internet so that only its intended
|
||
recipient can decrypt it, or allows it to be securely
|
||
encrypted for storing on a floppy disk.
|
||
|
||
The algorithm on which the programme is based is said to be
|
||
proof against any known method of cryptanalysis. It is
|
||
possible to decrypt a text by brute force - by setting a huge
|
||
computer to try every combination of characters. But this is
|
||
presently so slow and expensive, that we need not regard it as
|
||
a serious threat. Again, the algorithm may have been broken
|
||
without our knowing it. But to keep that a secret from us,
|
||
the fact would have to be so securely classified, that the
|
||
authorities themselves would be mostly ignorant of it.
|
||
Certainly, in a case from 1993, given wide publicity on the
|
||
Internet, a Californian paedophile had to be released after
|
||
arrest, because all his private records were encrypted with
|
||
PGP, and the Police were unable to read them.[89]
|
||
|
||
There is a huge "techno-optimist" literature, showing how the
|
||
future world that I have tried to describe will not and cannot
|
||
ever exist, because the development of computers has made it
|
||
more impossible than possible. But while the forces of
|
||
privacy and anarchy may now be ahead in the race, I do not
|
||
believe that this will always be so. Governments have fallen
|
||
behind because the people who run them are mostly in late
|
||
middle age, and have still not learned how to programme a
|
||
video recorder, let alone how to encrypt and send an e-mail
|
||
message. As soon as they do find out what is happening, they
|
||
will have the money and the moral authority to catch up and
|
||
overtake in the race.
|
||
|
||
This has begun in America, where the first steps are being
|
||
taken to nullify the benefits of strong encryption. That is
|
||
almost certainly the purpose of the Clinton Administration's
|
||
"Clipper Initiative". For the past year or so, it has been
|
||
urging the incorporation of its own e-mail encryption
|
||
standard. This offers all the security of PGP encryption -
|
||
for anyone who is not worried about the authorities. The
|
||
standard allows "properly authorized persons" access to the
|
||
means of decrypting suspicious documents. There are no
|
||
proposals yet to prohibit other, more secure standards. But
|
||
by imposing its own standard on most public agencies - though
|
||
not including the armed forces and security services - and
|
||
encouraging its adoption as the industry standard, the
|
||
Administration may be trying to minimise the use of other
|
||
standards in advance of prohibiting them. Even if it cannot
|
||
entirely prohibit the use of stronger standards, it will be
|
||
able to discredit and therefore limit their use to a small
|
||
minority.[90]
|
||
|
||
Apart from this, there is ordinary "traffic analysis". At the
|
||
moment, much can be gathered about someone's activities just
|
||
by looking at his telephone bill, to see whom he calls, how
|
||
often and for how long. This is a cheap means of checking to
|
||
see if it is worth tapping the line. Exactly the same
|
||
monitoring is possible of an e-mail account. Let the messages
|
||
be all strongly encrypted - it will be possible to see where
|
||
they are going and where coming from.
|
||
|
||
Against this, there are anonymous remailers, which are the
|
||
electronic equivalents of dead letter boxes. I have no faith
|
||
in these; and no one with the smallest common sense would ever
|
||
use one - or half a dozen in sequence - to subscribe to a
|
||
newsgroup like alt.sex.pedophile, or perhaps one day to
|
||
alt.politics.libertarian.
|
||
|
||
Or there is a programme called Steganography, which allows an
|
||
encrypted document to be broken up and hidden in the eighth
|
||
bits of a picture file.[91] It is not easy to check a picture
|
||
file, to see if it contains an encrypted file - which, of
|
||
course, cannot then be read. To check all the picture files
|
||
that are sent through the Internet, or may be seized on floppy
|
||
disk, is wholly impossible. But this again is a matter of no
|
||
more than time and money. It means bigger and faster
|
||
computers, plus a few moral panics about the data being
|
||
encrypted.
|
||
|
||
Equally, hacking is a simple thing to detect and prevent.
|
||
That it happens so often is due far more to the ignorance of
|
||
those in charge of computers than to the genius of the
|
||
hackers. At the worst, it can be made so expensive and
|
||
legally dangerous, that only other large organisations will be
|
||
able to consider breaking into government databases.
|
||
|
||
Nor will financial cost be any preventive. The Thatcher and
|
||
Major Governments have been the best in generations at saying
|
||
"no" to people with clever ideas for spending money -
|
||
something for which praise is due. Even so, 500 million is
|
||
just outside the bounds of petty cash. It may be a statistic
|
||
worth throwing at ministers who dislike the thought of
|
||
identity cards on other grounds. But it is not in itself an
|
||
argument against having them. It is surprising how much money
|
||
even a relatively frugal government can throw away when it
|
||
decides to.
|
||
|
||
As for bureaucratic incompetence, this too will eventually be
|
||
overcome. It is strictly analogous to the typographical
|
||
errors that plagued the first three centuries of printing.
|
||
For all his devoted pedantry, John Locke could never ensure
|
||
that his works were printed as he had written them.[92] But
|
||
the development of proofreading since his death has given us
|
||
rather more than a 99 per cent confidence in the textual
|
||
accuracy of books published by printers of even modest
|
||
competence. It is the same with electronic data held by the
|
||
authorities. Improvements of software will compensate for, or
|
||
replace, the humans who must for now feed in the data.
|
||
|
||
I am not optimistic about any of the means proposed for
|
||
restraining the future use of identity cards even to the
|
||
merely vexatious. Institutional barriers will be permeable
|
||
from the start, and will soon be overthrown. The informal
|
||
barriers that we ourselves erect may appear solid, but will
|
||
not long stand the pressure that must come against them as
|
||
soon as the authorities notice their existence and find them
|
||
inconvenient.
|
||
|
||
EIGHT: THE FIGHT AGAINST CRIME
|
||
|
||
At last, I come to the stated purpose of identity cards, which
|
||
is to help in the fight against crime. Having considered
|
||
their potential and actual costs, I do not need to argue in
|
||
support of the assertion - that their benefits must be so
|
||
obvious and immense, that all objections fall away before
|
||
them. What, then, are these benefits?
|
||
|
||
Roy Hattersley gives several examples:
|
||
|
||
It would be more difficult for conmen to talk their
|
||
way into pensioners' bungalows, harder for bogus
|
||
garage mechanics to drive away cars and less likely
|
||
that shopkeepers could be persuaded to give credit
|
||
on false guarantees backed up by stolen bankers'
|
||
cards....
|
||
|
||
I have watched the West Midlands Police make
|
||
methodical door-to-door enquiries as they pursue the
|
||
brutal murderer of a young girl. Hours of police
|
||
time were wasted confirming that visitors, lodgers
|
||
and live-in boyfriends were who they claimed to be.
|
||
And the men - not the sort to possess driving
|
||
licences and credit cards - deeply resented being
|
||
told that they could not leave the house until they
|
||
proved who they were and where they lived.
|
||
|
||
Fortunately, on that occasion the murderer was
|
||
caught. But identity cards would have speeded up his
|
||
capture - and avoided the horror that the victim's
|
||
neighbours felt during the couple of hours when they
|
||
believed that they were suspected of battering a
|
||
child to death with a house brick....
|
||
|
||
Time after time, day after day, we are asked to
|
||
prove who we are. 'Have you any identification on
|
||
you?' is one of the most frequent questions asked in
|
||
modern society.
|
||
|
||
A single card - complete with photograph - that
|
||
gives name and age will help pensioners to receive
|
||
their concessions and baby-faced 20-year-olds to
|
||
drink in public houses without risking humiliation
|
||
at the hands of over-zealous landlords. It will also
|
||
prevent teenagers renting pornographic videos, at
|
||
least without first committing an act of fraud.[93]
|
||
|
||
Other benefits alleged are that identity cards will reduce
|
||
fraud of all kind. It is estimated that Social Security fraud
|
||
costs the taxpayers 500 million per year - or enough to cover
|
||
the initial costs of an identification scheme, with a saving
|
||
of 400 million thereafter.[94] The car magazine Auto Express
|
||
estimates that 1,000 people every week have someone else pass
|
||
their driving tests for them.[95] There is the concern,
|
||
voiced by Mr Howard and Mr Hattersley, about confidence
|
||
tricksters who, claiming to be telephone engineers or
|
||
whatever, get into the homes of old people and rob them of
|
||
their treasures. There are the persistent worries about
|
||
illegal immigration.
|
||
|
||
There is also the claim that to have an identity card is to
|
||
confer a sense of belonging to the community. Douglas
|
||
Cousins, writing to The Herald, was proud of his wartime card:
|
||
|
||
it gave him a sense of identity, told him who he was.[96] The
|
||
Labour politician Jeff Rooker agrees:
|
||
|
||
There is a socialist case, as well as a democratic
|
||
case, for insuring the right of a citizen to be able
|
||
to assert their own identity.[97]
|
||
|
||
It is even said that identity cards will diminish the amount
|
||
of police harassment of black motorists. Stopped by the
|
||
Police, they will at once be able to identity themselves, and
|
||
will not, as now, be forced to collect a pile of forms
|
||
requiring them to produce their driving documents at a Police
|
||
Station within 48 hours.[98]
|
||
|
||
These are the alleged benefits. For these, we are to have
|
||
identity cards and all that will naturally follow from them.
|
||
Yet it is a short and almost brutal work to dismiss them - to
|
||
show that the benefits advanced either are minimal or do not
|
||
exist.
|
||
|
||
Peter Lilley, the Secretary of State for Social Security, has
|
||
said that identity cards would do little to curb benefit
|
||
fraud, which at the moment is far more a matter of hidden
|
||
earnings from the black economy than of impersonation.[99]
|
||
Nothing short of total surveillance might prevent this -
|
||
something that almost no one is yet suggesting.[100]
|
||
|
||
It is also worth asking where all these estimates of fraud
|
||
losses come from. How do we know what is being defrauded from
|
||
the social security budget? How can anyone know how many
|
||
people fraudulently obtain their driving licences? The answer
|
||
is that nobody does know. Like the figures quoted about
|
||
illnesses related to smoking, they are plucked out of thin air
|
||
to support a case for which no other hard evidence exists.
|
||
This is admitted with regard to money laundering: there are
|
||
no reliable figures on how much money is laundered, because if
|
||
there were, it would not have been laundered effectively.[101]
|
||
|
||
As for confidence tricksters, their whole advantage rests on
|
||
the fact that they are so persuasive, that the old do not
|
||
bother to ask for the identification with which real workers
|
||
for the utilities are already provided. And, as for black
|
||
motorists, these are stopped by the Police because they have
|
||
black faces. A piece of plastic would simply require the
|
||
Police to find a new excuse for harassment.
|
||
|
||
Mr Hattersley's point about the murder investigation is a good
|
||
one. He has, however, fallen into a standard trap of bad
|
||
reasoners. He wishes to prove a specific conclusion - that
|
||
identity cards will help in the fight against crime. He has
|
||
then assumed a major premise of vast extent; and having found
|
||
it to contain his desired conclusion, gives little
|
||
consideration to what else it contains.[102] I have not
|
||
bothered to check how many children are murdered each year in
|
||
this country; but, though a horrible crime, I do not think it
|
||
happens on a scale so large and regular as to justify giving
|
||
everyone an identity card. If Mr Hattersley's argument were
|
||
to be allowed, I do not see where any line could logically be
|
||
drawn. Torture in police custody would, no doubt, lead to
|
||
faster confessions of guilt, and the apprehension of
|
||
accomplices. Equally, giving the Police duplicates of our
|
||
house keys would make it easier for them to search for stolen
|
||
property[103]. The point here, though, is one of cost and
|
||
benefit. There are no utopias. We are instead permanently
|
||
faced with the need to accept large evils for the sake of a
|
||
greater good - or at least, for the avoidance of greater
|
||
evils.
|
||
|
||
The same is true with regard to the general supervision of
|
||
children. I will not discuss whether it is so bad for them to
|
||
watch adult videos, or drink, or even smoke. But again,
|
||
either we trust parents to bring up their children as best
|
||
they can - and this best will often be less than others would
|
||
like, or, more often, different - or we turn everyone into a
|
||
child, fussed about or tyrannised over by an omnicompetent
|
||
state.
|
||
|
||
Mr Hattersley also assumes - as do most of the other advocates
|
||
- that people will carry the right identification. This is a
|
||
most dubious assumption. It should be plain to anyone with a
|
||
little experience of the world, that any document a state
|
||
cares to produce can be falsified by criminals. This has long
|
||
been the case with banknotes, passports and paper identity
|
||
cards; and a while ago, there was an exhibition at the British
|
||
Museum of forged banknotes, many produced with nothing but pen
|
||
and ink. To suppose that digital technology has changed
|
||
anything here is to know nothing of computers, and nothing of
|
||
the criminal classes. One should never underestimate their
|
||
abilities. They can get heroin into high security prisons,
|
||
and steal paintings from the best protected galleries. We can
|
||
have a photograph, a thumbprint, a retina pattern, and a
|
||
direct line to the central database, all built into our cards
|
||
- and forgeries would be on the streets within a month. In
|
||
Singapore, a country not famous for high levels of crime,
|
||
perfect copies of the most elaborately protected bank cards
|
||
presently issued are available as blanks for a few
|
||
pounds.[104] The Loompanics Main Catalog is full of books on
|
||
the art of making or altering real identification.[105]
|
||
|
||
In a sense, computers are - and will for a long time remain -
|
||
easier to trick than human beings. In many cases, we have a
|
||
basic common sense, that makes us suspicious in circumstances
|
||
that cannot always be justified on rational grounds. Give a
|
||
computer what it is programmed to ask for, and it will give
|
||
whatever it is asked for, and with no questions asked. Short
|
||
of total surveillance - and perhaps not even then -
|
||
professional criminals, and terrorists, will be inconvenienced
|
||
by an identity card scheme only to the extent that it will
|
||
impose slightly higher operating costs.
|
||
|
||
This has been the experience in France, where electronic
|
||
identity cards are now being introduced. They have not
|
||
reduced the French crime level to any noticeable degree; and,
|
||
according to Peter Lloyd, a former Home Office minister, "the
|
||
main problem faced by the immigration officers at Dover is
|
||
fake French ID cards".[106]
|
||
|
||
Fred Broughton, the Chairman of the Police Federation,
|
||
believes that
|
||
|
||
[i]n relation to crime, terrorism and any
|
||
investigation, [an identity card scheme] would be a
|
||
great advantage. It would make the police more
|
||
efficient because sometimes people lie about their
|
||
identification, which can be very time
|
||
consuming.[107]
|
||
|
||
Dr Michael Levi disagrees. Speaking In Birmingham, the day
|
||
after Mr Howard's speech, he told the Council of Mortgage
|
||
Lenders that
|
||
|
||
In ordinary policing terms, the value of ID cards is
|
||
hard to discern.
|
||
|
||
Many police officers to whom I speak tell me that
|
||
they know, or believe they know, who the offenders
|
||
are in their neighbourhood. The problem is proving
|
||
it, given that they don't have the resources to
|
||
conduct surveillance. In this situation, identity
|
||
cards are an irrelevance, a tough soundbite that has
|
||
no practical effect.
|
||
|
||
I cannot imagine how the chances of detection or
|
||
conviction will be improved significantly by this
|
||
measure in any form....
|
||
|
||
[While an ID card would have a modest effect in
|
||
helping to reduce some types of fraud,] whether,
|
||
even at a pragmatic rather than rights-based level,
|
||
their benefits outweigh the cost to civil liberties
|
||
is an open question.[108]
|
||
|
||
It is not, I suggest, an open question. Nevertheless - and I
|
||
will say this yet again - people like Mr Broughton cannot
|
||
simply be dismissed as liars with a hidden agenda of total
|
||
control. Crime is a serious problem. I understand very well
|
||
that the statistics often produced here in support are open to
|
||
question. We can ask precisely how many crimes are actually
|
||
being committed, as opposed to increases in reporting.
|
||
Alternatively, we can ask how the present rates of crime
|
||
against property might compare with those of the 1950s, if we
|
||
allow for the huge growth in the ownership of portable
|
||
electronic and other goods. But it still seems reasonable to
|
||
say that crime of all kinds has increased in this country, and
|
||
is continuing to increase; and people are right to worry, and
|
||
to look round for some easy means of bringing it under
|
||
control. Here, though, is the paradox.
|
||
|
||
Introducing Mr Howard's speech to the 1993 Conference, Lord
|
||
Archer voiced a common fear:
|
||
|
||
Michael, I am sick and tired of being told by old
|
||
people that they are frightened to open the door,
|
||
they're frightened to go out at night, frightened to
|
||
use the parks and byways where their parents and
|
||
grandparents walked with freedom.... We say to you:
|
||
stand and deliver![109]
|
||
|
||
What Mr Howard delivered was a promise to abolish the right to
|
||
silence under police questioning; and people like me are still
|
||
shaking with the horror of it. But, while undeniably tough on
|
||
the Constitution, he - like all other Home Secretaries during
|
||
the past 30 years - was being thoroughly tender on crime.
|
||
|
||
There are, broadly speaking, two ways of fighting crime. The
|
||
first is to wait until somebody breaks the law, and then catch
|
||
and punish him very severely. The purpose of this is prevent
|
||
him from repeating his offence, and to make the example of his
|
||
punishment a warning to others. The second is to make people
|
||
obey the law by limiting their means of breaking it. The
|
||
first, though usually harsh, involves a known use of power - a
|
||
collection and focussing of it over a small area, much as a
|
||
burning glass does to the sun's rays. Only criminals are to
|
||
be in fear of that power: the rest of us are to be left to go
|
||
undisturbed about our business. The second, though apparently
|
||
more humane, requires the most constant state supervision of
|
||
everyone and everything. This is because, with no death
|
||
penalty or flogging, or other punishments considered barbarous
|
||
by those whose opinions count, there is no effective
|
||
deterrence. And so, when mildness and attempts at the
|
||
reformation of character fail - as they inevitably must as
|
||
tried so far - the only alternative to giving up and calling
|
||
for the hangman is to treat everyone as a potential criminal;
|
||
and to treat civil liberties as a hindrance to the smooth
|
||
functioning of the criminal justice system, rather than its
|
||
highest glory. Therefore video cameras in public places.
|
||
Therefore the Money Laundering Directive. Therefore, perhaps
|
||
soon, identity cards. Therefore the wholesale destruction of
|
||
the Common Law, when the most likely result is to turn the
|
||
country into a police state.
|
||
|
||
It is no reply to say that the prisons are already full, and
|
||
that we have a higher percentage of the population locked away
|
||
than any other European country, not excepting Turkey. The
|
||
problem here is that the lifestyle activists have been allowed
|
||
to corrupt the definition of crime. When the Police are
|
||
diverted from the protection of life and property, to
|
||
arresting people for the unlikely crime of having their
|
||
nipples pierced, or to sniffing their cigarettes to see if it
|
||
is tobacco inside or something else, there will naturally be
|
||
more burglaries and muggings - especially if all the sniffing
|
||
of cigarettes is effective enough to drive up the price of
|
||
recreational drugs.
|
||
|
||
Mr Howard has been told by the Police Federation that he
|
||
"should... have nothing to be ashamed of in being a
|
||
reactionary".[110] But, for all the name-calling of the past
|
||
year, he is not a reactionary. If he were, he would have
|
||
stood up at Bournemouth and quoted the High Tories on the need
|
||
for more than Green Papers when presented with apparently
|
||
bright ideas. He would have lectured his audience on the
|
||
value of a spontaneous, self-sustaining order, and explained
|
||
how this can so easily be ruined by clumsy legislation. He
|
||
would have taken his stand on the traditional safeguards
|
||
contained in the Constitution, and suggested that the real way
|
||
to fight crime was to punish the criminals - always, of
|
||
course, after a fair trial. In his desire "to give the police
|
||
every possible help", Mr Howard has instead proposed a
|
||
transformation of British society more radical than anything
|
||
proposed by a Libertarian Alliance pamphleteer - a
|
||
transformation that should be far more shocking to those who,
|
||
in their need for a sense of identity, are now doing
|
||
everything but hold up their arms for the tattooist's needle.
|
||
|
||
|
||
CONCLUSION
|
||
|
||
I have tried in this pamphlet to make the following points:
|
||
|
||
* That identity cards give the authorities actual, and
|
||
still greater potential, powers of oppression;
|
||
|
||
* That this has been the regular experience in every time
|
||
and place that they have been established;
|
||
|
||
* That we have good reason to suppose these powers will be
|
||
used no less oppressively in this country;
|
||
|
||
* That identity cards will contribute nothing to the fight
|
||
against real crime, or that they will contribute
|
||
something only at the most terrible cost.
|
||
|
||
I will end by asking, what we can do to stop their imposition.
|
||
|
||
Here again, I am pessimistic. It may be that the current
|
||
plans will come to nothing. Perhaps the financial costs will
|
||
be thought too high - especially since the Ministers will be
|
||
aware of the potential costs, both financial and political.
|
||
To people who still cannot think of the poll tax without
|
||
shuddering, cost may be a safe excuse for backing down.
|
||
|
||
But only for the moment - not in the long term. Though
|
||
identity cards may be hated, on present trends they will come.
|
||
|
||
That we do not yet have them is an aberration. It is like an
|
||
area of the beach still dry long after the incoming tide has
|
||
soaked all around it. The central database exists, and it is
|
||
rapidly filling with new information. The full evil of
|
||
surveillance will require identity cards, so that we and the
|
||
information held on us can be conveniently matched. But there
|
||
is evil enough now without them; and more will inevitably
|
||
follow.
|
||
|
||
The only real salvation lies in recognising this fact. The
|
||
great majority of those who are currently against an identity
|
||
card scheme take it for granted that a government large enough
|
||
to impose and use one is a good thing. They like the welfare
|
||
state, and do not object to a large bureaucracy. But this
|
||
consensus must change. The one sure means of emptying the
|
||
database is to bring about a permanent reduction in the size
|
||
and power of the State. The welfare state must go. The war
|
||
against drugs must be conceded. The snoops and regulators
|
||
must be sent looking elsewhere for jobs.
|
||
|
||
Of course, the technology of electronic surveillance cannot be
|
||
uninvented; and it will continue to be used by private
|
||
enterprise. Even without the prompting of government, a
|
||
central database of sorts would exist. Banks and insurance
|
||
companies would still want to minimise their risk; employers
|
||
and landlords to know with whom they were dealing. The new
|
||
technology cannot be trusted in the hands of a big government.
|
||
|
||
But neither is it entirely benign in the hands of big
|
||
business. There is large potential here also for abuse.
|
||
|
||
Yet, this being said, the ordinary legal foundations of
|
||
privacy that existed even into the 1980s would be enough to
|
||
prevent the growth of an enormous central database. Breach of
|
||
contract and breach of confidence would check the routine
|
||
sharing of information. Doctors would not lightly expose
|
||
their records to an insurance company; nor banks their records
|
||
to each other and the mail-order companies. To these
|
||
protections must be added market pressures: who would
|
||
download adult videos from an Internet supplier known to open
|
||
its subscriber list to private investigators?
|
||
|
||
Moreover, without the crushing weight of taxes and regulation
|
||
that now stops up many of the avenues to independence, fewer
|
||
of us would stand to the world as impoverished wage slaves,
|
||
unable to laugh in the face of public disapproval. With less
|
||
to fear, we might have less to hide.
|
||
|
||
The problem, however, lies in getting any of this onto the
|
||
political agenda. And this is why, in spite of all else, I
|
||
continue to support the Conservative Party. I have said that
|
||
economic liberalism is not enough; but no other Party is
|
||
offering even that. Elsewhere, the argument is not about the
|
||
size of government, but only about what it is to do. The
|
||
Conservatives may now be considering identity cards; but only
|
||
they are open to the full argument against. I am not
|
||
optimistic that this argument will prevail. But here is the
|
||
only place where it can be made with the slightest chance of
|
||
prevailing.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
NOTES
|
||
|
||
|
||
1 The Right Honourable Michael Howard QC MP, Home
|
||
Secretary, "Speech to the 111th Conservative Party Conference,
|
||
Thursday 13th October 1994", Conservative Party News Release
|
||
759/94, p.15.
|
||
|
||
2 Ibid..
|
||
|
||
3 I will say now in parenthesis - A government that invites
|
||
cooperation of this kind soon slides insensibly into demanding
|
||
it. In France, there is no legal requirement to carry
|
||
identification; but it has become so essential for carrying
|
||
out any public - and most private - business, that it is
|
||
compulsory in all but name: see Simon Davies, "Please my I
|
||
see your identity card, Sir", The Daily Telegraph, London,
|
||
13th October 1994.
|
||
|
||
See also Richard Ford, "Fears voiced over voluntary ID card",
|
||
The Times, London, 15th October 1994:
|
||
|
||
A voluntary identity card scheme could become
|
||
compulsory and lack safeguards for the public, the
|
||
Data Protection Registrar said yesterday. Elizabeth
|
||
France suggested that those without a card would be
|
||
at a disadvantage.
|
||
|
||
Her fears were confirmed when Detective
|
||
Superintendent Mike Shorter, of the Metropolitan
|
||
Police, said: 'The public with an identity card will
|
||
be treated more favourably than those without in
|
||
terms of finance and jobs and in the way the rest of
|
||
society reacts to them.' Mr Shorter said that
|
||
identity cards would help to reduce crime,
|
||
especially credit card and cheque fraud, and help
|
||
police to combat drug smuggling and illegal
|
||
immigration. 'I look on their introduction as merely
|
||
the first step. Identity cards will creep in. There
|
||
will be concerns but the police will begin to accept
|
||
those cards as a form of identity and they will be
|
||
accepted by the public gradually and most will
|
||
eventually carry cards,' he told a conference on the
|
||
issue in Birmingham.
|
||
|
||
4 On this point, see two recent letters to the press:
|
||
|
||
I have always supported the Tories, and would do so
|
||
again yes, even now. As an anti-federalist
|
||
free-marketeer, there is nowhere else to go. But
|
||
there are limits: I will never, never vote for the
|
||
party that brings in compulsory identity cards. Am
|
||
I alone in this?
|
||
|
||
Barry Chapman, "Letter: Tories trigger an identity crisis",
|
||
The Sunday Times, London, 15th May 1994.
|
||
|
||
Michael Howard has said that he will be calling for
|
||
a study into the possibilities of introducing
|
||
national identity cards (Guardian, October 14). As
|
||
a lifelong Tory supporter and also a Guardian reader
|
||
- an unusual combination I am told - for me this is
|
||
the last straw, my resignation as a local chairman
|
||
has already been submitted.
|
||
|
||
My hope is that you at least will stay true to the
|
||
principle of civil liberty and do all in your power
|
||
to get this iniquitous proposition killed even
|
||
before it gets started.
|
||
|
||
There is not a shred of evidence that a card can
|
||
improve the certainty of identifying perpetrators of
|
||
crimes, but worse than this, it is evidence that
|
||
this government is totally bereft of real solutions
|
||
to the increasing social malaise in Britain, a
|
||
malaise the cause of which it dare not admit. By
|
||
constantly focusing on the well-being of the City
|
||
and almost totally neglecting our primary resource
|
||
ie our people, they are reduced to looking for
|
||
solutions not much better - or effective - than the
|
||
hanging of sheep stealers.
|
||
|
||
Adrian M.B. Bates, "Letter: National ID cards 'the last
|
||
straw'", The Guardian, London and Manchester, 17th October
|
||
1994.
|
||
|
||
I know many other Party members who will resign if Mr Howard's
|
||
proposal is not quickly smothered.
|
||
|
||
5 In a recent poll, only 37 per cent of respondents were
|
||
found to be in favour of identity cards, with 48 per cent
|
||
against. Moreover, the percentage strongly against was found
|
||
to be more than twice the percentage strongly in favour.
|
||
|
||
Source: David Hughes, "ID cards scrapped over fears of
|
||
'revolt'", The Daily Mail, London, 10th September 1994.
|
||
|
||
6 "Tutsi v Hutu: Origins of division", The Economist,
|
||
London, 20th August 1994.
|
||
|
||
7 See Richard Dowden, "Identity card was passport to
|
||
death", The Independent, London, 7th July 1994:
|
||
|
||
A passport to life, or death - the Rwandan identity
|
||
card can be either, writes Richard Dowden. In the
|
||
picture (left) [photograph omitted] you can see that
|
||
the first line of information below the photographs
|
||
denotes ethnicity - Hutu, Tutsi, Twa or naturalised
|
||
Rwandan citizen. When the Hutu militias, the gangs
|
||
of killers, began their genocidal massacres of
|
||
Tutsis in April, they needed only to ask for
|
||
identity cards to decide who lived and who were
|
||
chopped or speared to death. Like Protais Gahigi, a
|
||
38-year-old Tutsi man with five children who were
|
||
all murdered in the church at a Spanish mission at
|
||
Musha in eastern Rwanda. The card was picked up
|
||
recently by Carlos Mavrolean, a cameraman for the
|
||
American Broadcasting Corporation. He said it was
|
||
lying on the floor, not far from the altar. Among
|
||
the splintered pews and scraps of clothing on the
|
||
floor were three unexploded grenades and a discarded
|
||
machete. The blood on the card was still sticky. The
|
||
bottom card was lying outside the customs shed at
|
||
Rusumo, on the border with Tanzania. Mugema, a
|
||
20-year-old Hutu peasant, was one of hundreds of
|
||
thousands of Hutus fleeing the rebel army. It would
|
||
have helped him through the roadblocks set up by his
|
||
fellow Hutus but Mugema was probably one of those
|
||
who threw away his card to try to conceal his ethnic
|
||
identity as the mainly Tutsi rebels closed in,
|
||
fearing they would seek revenge.
|
||
|
||
8 See Alec Russell, "Tutsi victim calls on Hutus to help
|
||
rebuild Rwanda", The Daily Telegraph, London, 2nd August 1994:
|
||
|
||
The new, Tutsi-dominated government has said it will
|
||
abolish the custom of having identity cards
|
||
inscribed with the carrier's tribe. In this most
|
||
intolerant of regions there can be no guarantee that
|
||
this brave new sentiment will survive. But it is at
|
||
least a start.
|
||
|
||
9 Identity Cards and the Threat to Civil Liberties,
|
||
Briefing No. 12, National Council for Civil Liberties (NCCL),
|
||
London, 1989, p.2.
|
||
|
||
10 See James Pringle, "Peasants fall from grace in reformist
|
||
China" The Times, London, 10th August 1994.
|
||
|
||
11 See Fred Broughton, Chairman of the Police Federation:
|
||
|
||
The fears of the civil libertarians are unfounded -
|
||
we live in a democracy and our police are
|
||
accountable and responsible.
|
||
|
||
Source: "Identity card high on Tories' agenda", The
|
||
Independent, London, 10th September 1994.
|
||
|
||
|
||
12 See Sir John Junor, "Cowardice on Crime Front", The Mail
|
||
on Sunday, 18th September 1994:
|
||
|
||
[L]ibertarians... see ID cards as a restriction on
|
||
personal freedom. What bloody nonsense.... The
|
||
French have identity cards and I do not regard them
|
||
as a people less free than we are. Furthermore, no
|
||
one objects to carrying a passport when abroad. Why
|
||
then should anyone object to carrying an ID card
|
||
when travelling at home?
|
||
|
||
|
||
13 This happened in December 1990 to John Atkinson, a
|
||
middle-aged antiques restorer and restauranteur. He was one
|
||
of the defendants in the "Spanner" case, and was given two
|
||
years' probation. See "The Guilty men and their sentences",
|
||
The Times, London, 20th December 1990. For this whole bizarre
|
||
case, see the judgments in R v Brown [1992] 2 All ER 560
|
||
(Court of Appeal), and R v Brown [1993] 2 All ER HL 82 (House
|
||
of Lords). For interesting commentaries on the case at its
|
||
various stages, see Anthony Furlong, Sado-Masochism and the
|
||
Law: Consent versus Paternalism, Legal Notes No.12, the
|
||
Libertarian Alliance, London, 1991; and Anthony Furlong,
|
||
"Reflections on the Case of R v Brown", Free Life (a journal
|
||
of the Libertarian Alliance), London, No.18, May 1993, pp.4-6.
|
||
|
||
14 See "Overburdened", the strongly-worded letter from
|
||
Professor J.P. Duguid, published in The Scotsman, Edinburgh,
|
||
2nd August 1994:
|
||
|
||
Whenever a measure is proposed to strengthen the
|
||
forces of law and order, 'civic rightists' usually
|
||
oppose it on the specious grounds that it will
|
||
enable the authorities to victimise the vulnerable.
|
||
A national system of identity cards is opposed
|
||
because it might help the police to fight crime, the
|
||
welfare services to detect benefit fraud and the
|
||
immigration authorities to combat illegal entry.
|
||
|
||
See also "The drive towards identity cards", the very
|
||
strongly-worded letter from James Tye, Director General of the
|
||
British Safety Council, published in The Times, London, 10th
|
||
August 1994:
|
||
|
||
Sir, For 15 years I have advocated that we should
|
||
have identity cards, complete with photograph
|
||
(report, August 9), medical information and donor
|
||
information. I'm advised by card manufacturers that
|
||
this could all fit on a standard 3in x 2in laminated
|
||
card.
|
||
|
||
At the time the misplaced 'freedom from controls'
|
||
movement was against it and it got nowhere. But when
|
||
confronted the only people who really object are
|
||
criminals who don't want their identity known,
|
||
illegal immigrants or holiday visitors who overstay
|
||
and with whom the police have lost touch, and the
|
||
crooks who stand in for learner drivers and take
|
||
their tests.
|
||
|
||
We should take a lesson from the Americans who use
|
||
their driving licences (which include a photograph)
|
||
for all legitimate occasions, including proving
|
||
their age when entering a bar.
|
||
|
||
Again, in December 1993, I appeared on a radio programme in
|
||
Birmingham to argue against a proposal to put photographs on
|
||
driving licences. My opponent, a prospective Conservative
|
||
candidate called Alan Blumenthal (approximate spelling)
|
||
denounced me as "irresponsible", and called the Libertarian
|
||
Alliance, for which I was speaking, "the Criminal's Friend
|
||
Alliance".
|
||
|
||
15 Hans Momsen, From Weimar to Auschwitz: Essays in German
|
||
History, translated by Philip O'Conner, Polity Press,
|
||
Cambridge, 1991, p.10.
|
||
|
||
16 It is the same with the Jews in the Hungarian part of the
|
||
Habsburg Empire. But theirs is a different story, and I will
|
||
deal with only the German-speaking world, which then included
|
||
the German and Habsburg areas of Poland and what is now the
|
||
Czech Republic.
|
||
|
||
17 In Germany, during 1905-06, 25 per cent of Law and
|
||
Medicine students were Jewish or of Jewish origin: See Sarah
|
||
Gordon, Hitler, Germany and the "Jewish Question", Princeton
|
||
University Press, Princeton, New Jersey, 1984, p.13. In parts
|
||
of the Habsburg Empire, the figure was still higher: See
|
||
Stephen Beller, Vienna and the Jews, 1867-1938, Oxford
|
||
University Press, Oxford, 1989.
|
||
|
||
18 See Marsha L. Rosenblit, The Jews of Vienna:
|
||
Assimilation and Identity, State University of New York Press,
|
||
Albany, New York, 1983. See also Adolf Gaisbauer, Davidstern
|
||
und Doppeladler: Zionismus und Jdischer Nationalismus in
|
||
sterreich, 1882-1918, Blau Verlag, Vienna, 1986.
|
||
|
||
It is worth mentioning that the German Jews thoroughly
|
||
despised the unassimilated, and distanced themselves from East
|
||
European refugees: see the works cited above, passim; and
|
||
Gordon, op. cit., p.10.
|
||
|
||
19 This sounds incredible today, but is true: see Gordon,
|
||
op. cit., p.46.
|
||
|
||
20 Against Dr Momsen's claim above, see a new book by John
|
||
C.G. Rhl, The Kaiser and His Court: Wilhelm II and the
|
||
Government of Germany, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge,
|
||
1994. Reviewing it in The Sunday Telegraph on the 6th
|
||
November 1994, Andrew Roberts Quotes the Kaiser:
|
||
|
||
Jews and mosquitoes are a nuisance that humanity
|
||
must get rid of in some way or other - I believe the
|
||
best would be gas!
|
||
|
||
This, however, is a new revelation. The statement was not
|
||
published at the time to the German people. Indeed, it was
|
||
kept secret from them. The respectable classes would have
|
||
been variously outraged and embarrassed to learn that their
|
||
Head of State held such plainly illiberal views. In 1891, a
|
||
group of German Christians had set up the Association for
|
||
Defence Against Anti-semitism. By 1893, it had grown to
|
||
13,000 members, mostly non-Jewish; and it continued to publish
|
||
its journal without interruption until 1933: see Gordon, op.
|
||
cit., p.28.
|
||
|
||
Again, Paul Michael Rose (Revolutionary Antisemitism in
|
||
Germany, from Kant to Wagner, Princeton University Press,
|
||
Princeton, New Jersey, 1990) traces a continuous strain of
|
||
anti-semitism in German thought that culminates at Auschwitz.
|
||
But, while an accomplished researcher, Dr Rose has employed
|
||
the doubtful methodology of quoting every passing remark in
|
||
the German classics, and almost every crank who ever wrote to
|
||
the newspapers. I can think of "anti-semitic" remarks in the
|
||
works of Hume, Gibbon, Burke, Tom Paine, and H.G. Wells, among
|
||
many others. These prove nothing - not even that the writers
|
||
named were anti-semites. Against Dr Rose, I will quote the
|
||
German philosopher Hermann Cohen, writing in 1916:
|
||
|
||
In Germany equal rights for Jews have deeper roots
|
||
than anywhere else.
|
||
|
||
Source: Karl A. Schleuner, The Twisted Road to Auschwitz:
|
||
Nazi Policy Toward German Jews, Urbana, Michigan, 1970, p.5.
|
||
|
||
Before the 1930s, anti-semitism was in Germany, and perhaps in
|
||
Austria, very much what colour prejudice is in this country -
|
||
the mark of the ill-educated and unenlightened. And if the
|
||
British National Party ever comes near power, I shall be just
|
||
as surprised as many Germans were at Hitler's Jewish policy.
|
||
|
||
|
||
21 Rosenblit, op. cit., and Gaisbauer, op. cit., both
|
||
extensively discuss the Zionist failure before 1918.
|
||
|
||
22 Before deciding on Palestine, the Zionists had considered
|
||
pressing for their Jewish National Home within the Habsburg
|
||
Empire: see Gaisbauer, op. cit., p.298. They did not then
|
||
see Jews as a uniquely threatened minority that could only
|
||
ever be safe in its own state. With the Czechs and Croats,
|
||
they wanted an expansion of the 1867 deal between the Germans
|
||
and Hungarians, to turn the Empire into a federation of
|
||
nationalities, each with its own territory and its own
|
||
representation in a federal assembly.
|
||
|
||
23 Or so many seem to think. A short while ago, I called
|
||
the Board of Deputies in London. I was looking for any small
|
||
Orthodox sects that might object to photography. I explained
|
||
to a gentleman in what I think was the Press Office how useful
|
||
a fact this would be for me. I added helpfully: "After all,
|
||
Jews suffered rather badly in Europe earlier this century from
|
||
having their identities so easily known."
|
||
|
||
The reply: "That's as may be, but look on the other side. We
|
||
all had to carry identity cards in the War; and my son has to
|
||
carry one in Israel...."
|
||
|
||
No luck here - nor any later with an Islamic group in
|
||
Birmingham. No matter this, however: here was the last place
|
||
I ever expected to find myself quoting Santayana:
|
||
|
||
Those who do not remember the past are condemned to
|
||
relive it.
|
||
|
||
Source: The Life of Reason, vol. 1, chapter 12.
|
||
|
||
24 See Appendix One: the British Eugenics Movement.
|
||
|
||
25 Source: Robert N. Proctor, Racial Hygiene: Medicine
|
||
under the Nazis, Harvard University Press, Cambridge,
|
||
Massachusetts, 1988, p. 64. See Proctor in general on German
|
||
medicine before 1945.
|
||
|
||
26 Ibid..
|
||
|
||
27 Ibid., pp.240-48.
|
||
|
||
28 Source: ibid., p.15. See also a book just published:
|
||
Michael Burleigh, Death and Deliverance: "Euthanasia" in
|
||
Germany 1900-1945, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge,
|
||
1994. In 1920, Karl Binding, a Judge, and Alfred Hoche, a
|
||
psychiatrist, published a pamphlet with the title The
|
||
Sanctioning of the Destruction of Lives Unworthy to be Lived.
|
||
They suggested that the cost of preserving such lives was an
|
||
unreasonable burden on the community, and that they ought
|
||
therefore to be terminated.
|
||
|
||
In July 1933, the new National Socialist Government made a law
|
||
"for the Prevention of Hereditarily Diseased Progeny". This
|
||
permitted compulsory sterilisation for congenital mental
|
||
defectives, schizophrenics, manic-depressive psychotics,
|
||
epileptics, severe alcoholics, and various others. "Between
|
||
1933 and May 1945, about 400,000 people were actually
|
||
sterilised - about 1 per cent of the population capable of
|
||
producing children"; source: Burleigh, op. cit., pp.230-31.
|
||
|
||
No one is quite sure how many "defective" adults and children
|
||
were murdered by doctors during this time. In one hospital,
|
||
though, the medical staff had the right to "cut-price dental
|
||
work, which utilised gold recycled from the mouths of their
|
||
victims"; source: ibid., p.350.
|
||
|
||
29 Alweyn Smith and Bobbie Jacobson (ed.s), The Nation's
|
||
Health: A Strategy for the 1990s: a Report from an
|
||
Independent Multidisciplinary Committee Chaired by Professor
|
||
Alweyn Smith, King Edward's Hospital Fund for London, London,
|
||
1988, p.4. This document may be considered a leading summary
|
||
of lifestyle activist views. The Sponsors were:
|
||
|
||
The Health Education Council (to April 1987), The Health
|
||
Education Authority (from April 1987), King Edward's Hospital
|
||
Fund for London, The London School of Hygiene and Tropical
|
||
Medicine, The Scottish Health Education Group.
|
||
|
||
|
||
30 The fraud of "passive smoking" is too large a subject to
|
||
discuss here. My readers will find a radical dissection in
|
||
Antony Flew, Passive Smoking: Scientific Method and Corrupted
|
||
Science, Freedom Organisation for the Right to Enjoy Smoking
|
||
Tobacco (FOREST), London, 1994.
|
||
|
||
For a manifestly absurd claim, see Douglas Model MRCP,
|
||
"Smoker's Face: An Underrated Clinical Sign?", British Medical
|
||
Journal, London, vol. 291 (21-28th December 1985), pp.1760-62.
|
||
|
||
The introductory abstract reads as follows:
|
||
|
||
In a prospective survey of patients attending a
|
||
general medical outpatient clinic roughly half the
|
||
current cigarette smokers who had smoked for 10
|
||
years or more were identified, using defined
|
||
criteria, by their facial features alone. These
|
||
facial features, designated "smoker's face", were
|
||
present in three (8%) of those who had smoked
|
||
cigarettes for 10 years or more in the past and in
|
||
none of the non-smokers. The association of
|
||
smoker's face with current smoking that had
|
||
continued for 10 years or more was significant
|
||
(p<0.001) and remained after the patient's age,
|
||
social class, exposure to sunlight, recent changes
|
||
in weight, and estimated lifetime consumption of
|
||
cigarettes were controlled for. Smoker's face may
|
||
be a helpful indicator in antismoking campaigns.
|
||
|
||
This epidemiological breakthrough was made by looking at a
|
||
sample of 122 people!
|
||
|
||
Here is the best definition I have been able to find of
|
||
"corrupted science":
|
||
|
||
First, corrupt science is science that moves not
|
||
from hypothesis and data to conclusion but from
|
||
mandated or acceptable conclusion to selected data
|
||
to reach the mandated or acceptable conclusion.
|
||
That is to say, it is science that uses selected
|
||
data to reach the 'right' conclusion, a conclusion
|
||
that by the very nature of the data necessarily
|
||
misrepresents reality. Second, corrupt science is
|
||
science that misrepresents not just reality, but its
|
||
own process in arriving at its conclusions. Rather
|
||
than acknowledging the selectivity of its process
|
||
and the official necessity of demonstrating the
|
||
right conclusion, and rather than admitting the
|
||
complexity of the issue and the limits of its
|
||
evidence, it invests both its process and its
|
||
conclusions with a mantle of indubitability. Third,
|
||
and perhaps most importantly, whereas normal science
|
||
deals with dissent on the basis of the quality of
|
||
its evidence and argument and considers ad hominem
|
||
argument as inappropriate in science, corrupt
|
||
science seeks to create formidable institutional
|
||
barriers to dissent through excluding dissenters
|
||
from the process of review and contriving to silence
|
||
dissent not by challenging its quality but by
|
||
questioning its character and motivation.
|
||
|
||
Source: John C. Luik, "Pandora's Box: the dangers of
|
||
politically corrupted science for democratic public policy",
|
||
Bostonia, Boston, Massachusetts, Winter, 1993, pp.50-60;
|
||
source: Petr Skrabanek, The Death of Humane Medicine and the
|
||
Rise of Coercive Healthism, The Social Affairs Unit, London,
|
||
1994, p.135. I lament Dr Skrabanek's recent death. This, his
|
||
last book, is a masterpiece. If all else published by the
|
||
Social Affairs Unit were to be lost, this alone would show the
|
||
value of its contribution to the debate on lifestyle control.
|
||
|
||
31 For an interesting new extension of this campaign, see
|
||
John O'Leary, "Teachers told to quit smoking as part of anti-
|
||
drugs drive", The Times, London, 9th November 1994.
|
||
|
||
32 C. Hall, "Babies 'should not be placed with smokers'",
|
||
The Independent, London, 31st January 1993; source:
|
||
Skrabanek, op. cit., p.124.
|
||
|
||
33 Quoted by D. Ward, "Smoker dies after operation was
|
||
denied until he gave up", The Guardian, London and Manchester,
|
||
17th August 1993; source: Skrabanek, op. cit., p.123. For
|
||
the general details of this and the other cases given below, I
|
||
am indebted to a private memorandum supplied by Mrs Marjorie
|
||
Nicholson of FOREST.
|
||
|
||
34 Keith Ball, "Smoking out priorities", The Guardian,
|
||
London and Manchester, 19th August 1993; source: Skrabanek,
|
||
op. cit., p.123.
|
||
|
||
35 See an article from The Sunday Express, London, 5th
|
||
September 1993; source: Skrabanek, op. cit., p.124 (no title
|
||
given).
|
||
|
||
It should not be inferred from any of these cases that I think
|
||
the National Health Service to be a good thing. I do believe,
|
||
though, that while it continues to exist, those who must pay
|
||
to finance it should not suffer discrimination on the grounds
|
||
of lifestyle.
|
||
|
||
36 See Appendix Two, on the Regulation of Childbirth.
|
||
|
||
37 On these points, Peter Tatchell, a spokesperson for the
|
||
homosexual rights organisation Outrage, has kindly supplied me
|
||
with a Memorandum, which is printed here as Appendix Three.
|
||
|
||
38 See the whole of Skrabanek, op. cit.. It is a rich mine
|
||
of argument and quotation.
|
||
|
||
39 See, for example:
|
||
|
||
The Russian method seems to be paying dividends.
|
||
While many middle-aged men and women appear drab and
|
||
weary, the children and young people seem to be
|
||
healthy, happy, and friendly. 'Forestall illness'
|
||
is the national motto. 'Adopt healthy living
|
||
habits' urges the State. A State which helps by
|
||
restricting vodka sales and rasing the price. There
|
||
is great emphasis on physical exercise
|
||
|
||
Source: "Visit to Russia of British Doctors", Journal of the
|
||
American Medical Association, 1961, 175, p.159; quoted by
|
||
Skrabanek, op. cit., p.154.
|
||
|
||
I saw much the same when I first went to live in
|
||
Czechoslovakia after the 1989 Revolution. Though I have no
|
||
medical training, it seems common sense to me that young
|
||
people will generally look fit and happy. They need only not
|
||
be actually starving, or persistently threatened with death or
|
||
imprisonment. But one learns a lot in 30 years.
|
||
|
||
40 Smith and Jacobson, op. cit., p.105.
|
||
|
||
41 Then again, perhaps not. At the 1988 Conservative Party
|
||
Conference, delegates were handed leaflets published by the
|
||
Conservative Aids Screening Campaign, a group based in
|
||
Newbury, Berkshire. The leaflets claimed:
|
||
|
||
During the Black Death, a red cross was painted on
|
||
the doors of victims. We need only put a cross on
|
||
an identity card to indicate people with Aids.
|
||
|
||
Source: NCCL, op. cit., p.4.
|
||
|
||
42 Ich war so aufgeregt, als ich den Herrn Angeklagten
|
||
und seine Gattin pltzlich nackt in den Wellen am
|
||
Flua spazierengehen sah, daa ich gar nicht auf die
|
||
Idee kam, ich knnte im diskret geduldeten Nacht-
|
||
Luftbad des Freikrperkulturbundes stehen und
|
||
verlangte sofort die Vorzeigung der Kennkarten, was
|
||
die beiden nicht vermochten.
|
||
|
||
Source: Emil Waas, Sehr Geehrter Herr Firma, Deutscher
|
||
Taschenbuchverlag, 1976 - a humorous book reprinting foolish
|
||
letters, printing errors in newspapers and so forth.
|
||
|
||
I am indebted for this to an anonymous German friend of Ted
|
||
Goodman, the Chairman of the Campaign against Censorship, and
|
||
a civil liberties activist within the Labour Party. I wish
|
||
here to thank both for their help.
|
||
|
||
43 Justiz: "Fden gezogen", Der Spiegel, No.20/1988, pp.
|
||
73-78. The article contains a photograph from the National
|
||
Socialist period of prisoners being marched away. It is
|
||
captioned "Candidates for death" - "Lauter Todeskandidaten".
|
||
|
||
This article was sent to me by Mr Goodman's German friend.
|
||
|
||
44 Martin Kettle, "Commentary: Calling card of racism", The
|
||
Guardian, London and Manchester, 15th October 1994. See also
|
||
Francis King's letter published in The Guardian, London and
|
||
Manchester, 31st August 1994.
|
||
|
||
45 K. Cowmeadow, "Letter to the Editor: The identity of the
|
||
criminals", The Sunday Telegraph, London, 14th August 1994.
|
||
|
||
46 Source: Leonard Doyle, "Greece marks out limits of
|
||
tolerance", The Independent on Sunday, London, 22nd May 1994.
|
||
|
||
47 Source: ibid..
|
||
|
||
48 The police, who had now got used to the exhilarating
|
||
new belief that they could get anyone's name and
|
||
address for the asking, went on calling for their
|
||
production with increasing frequency. If you picked
|
||
up a fountain pen in the street and handed it to a
|
||
constable, he would ask to see your identity card in
|
||
order that he might record your name as that of an
|
||
honest citizen. You seldom carried it; and this
|
||
meant that he had to give you a little pencilled
|
||
slip requiring you to produce it at a police station
|
||
within two days.
|
||
|
||
Source: C.H. Rolph, Personal Identity, Michael Joseph,
|
||
London, 1957; quoted in NCCL, op. cit., p.3.
|
||
|
||
49 Source: ibid.; also Nick Cohen, "Identity cards: The
|
||
man who said 'mind your own business'", The Independent on
|
||
Sunday, London, 28th August 1994. The whole case can be found
|
||
in Willcock v Muckle (1951) 49 LGR 584.
|
||
|
||
50 Source: Cohen, op. cit..
|
||
|
||
51 Taken from Policy Fact Sheet K-12: Student Records:
|
||
Privacy at Risk, Computer Professionals for Social
|
||
Responsibility, Seattle, Washington, July 1994; available from
|
||
CPSR, P.O. Box 85481, Seattle, Washington 98145-1481;
|
||
telephone: (206) 365-4528; available on the Internet from
|
||
cpsr-seattle@csli.stanford.edu. To subscribe to CPSR, send e-
|
||
mail to listserv@cpsr.org.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
52 National Education Goals Panel, Publication 93-03;
|
||
source: CPSR, op. cit.. See also Council of Chief State
|
||
Officers, Student Data Handbook for Elementary and Secondary
|
||
Schools; source: CPSR, op. cit..
|
||
|
||
53 Source: ibid..
|
||
|
||
54 Ibid.
|
||
|
||
55 I talk here onwards about a "central database", though it
|
||
need not exist in any single location. On the Internet, I can
|
||
use a programme called Veronica to search every file in
|
||
|
||
"gopherspace" - that is, every file stored at every site that
|
||
is accessible via gopher. These sites are often thousands of
|
||
miles apart, and the administrator of one site will be unaware
|
||
of what is available at other sites. However, when I search
|
||
the Internet through Veronica, I have the impression that I am
|
||
searching a single database. Therefore, the term "central
|
||
database" is to be understood as something distinct from a
|
||
number of unconnected databases.
|
||
|
||
56 Howard, op cit., p.16.
|
||
|
||
57 David Hencke and Richard Norton Taylor, "MI5 hacks its
|
||
way into privacy row", The Guardian, London and Manchester,
|
||
19th October 1994.
|
||
|
||
It is worth saying here that MI5 is desperate to justify its
|
||
continued existence, now that the Cold War is over and the
|
||
insurrection in Ulster may be abating. This search for new
|
||
targets is described in Larry O'Hara's new book, Turning Up
|
||
the Heat: MI5 After the Cold War, Phoenix Press, London,
|
||
1994; available from Phoenix Press, PO 824, London, N1 9DL.
|
||
See especially p.94:
|
||
|
||
Here we have a situation where MI5 is in severe
|
||
identity crisis, seeking to expand its empire in
|
||
order to survive. They push for control of mainland
|
||
anti-IRA/Loyalist operations [from Special Branch],
|
||
but realise that that on its own is hardly likely to
|
||
yield the level of 'terrorist threat' necessary to
|
||
maintain and expand their budgets, as well as,
|
||
crucially, keep in employment valuable specialists
|
||
in the area of 'domestic subversion', whether Left
|
||
Right or Green.
|
||
|
||
It is ironic that Mr O'Hara is a socialist of the Militant
|
||
Tendency. A few changes of terminology, and his book would
|
||
read like something by a "public choice" economist. See, for
|
||
example, Nigel Ashford:
|
||
|
||
The self-interest of bureaucrats is 'size
|
||
maximization' or empire-building, because the
|
||
status, salary, power, and desire for a quiet life
|
||
are increased with the size of the agency or bureau.
|
||
Bureaucrats are in a strong position to obtain their
|
||
goals because of their strategic location, their
|
||
control of information, their low costs of
|
||
organization, and their ability to co-operate with
|
||
interest groups. Bureaucrats are usually monopoly
|
||
suppliers of their services to politicians with
|
||
responsibility for the oversight of bureaucrats
|
||
often represent groups with a high demand for the
|
||
service, so there is an oversupply of the
|
||
service....
|
||
|
||
Source: Nigel Ashford and Stephen Davies (ed.s), A Dictionary
|
||
of Conservative and Libertarian Thought, Routledge, London and
|
||
New York, 1991, article "Public Choice" (by Dr Ashford),
|
||
pp.214-15.
|
||
|
||
58 Ibid., p.13. It must take a lot to impress the architect
|
||
of the massacre at Waco.
|
||
|
||
59 This is not entirely possible at the moment. According
|
||
to Dr Philip Webb, the Managing Director of Cellmark
|
||
Diagnostics, a subsidiary of Zeneca,
|
||
|
||
If we looked at all of a person's DNA we would
|
||
produce a perfect match as everyone's DNA is unique.
|
||
But we only look at a small part so we have to
|
||
produce probability figures, and therefore, we
|
||
cannot say whether something is black or white.
|
||
|
||
Source: Mike Dailly, "Law: Casting doubt on the use of DNA",
|
||
The Herald, Edinburgh, 19th October 1994. Until the methods
|
||
of sampling improve - which they certainly will - there could
|
||
be 2,500 males in the United Kingdom alone with a matching
|
||
profile.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
60 "Money laundering" is defined by Article 1 of the Money
|
||
Laundering Directive 1993 as:
|
||
|
||
[T]he conversion or transfer of property, knowing
|
||
that such property is derived from a serious crime,
|
||
for the purpose of concealing or disguising the
|
||
illicit origin of the property or of assisting any
|
||
person who is involved in committing such an offence
|
||
or offences to evade the legal consequences of his
|
||
action, and
|
||
|
||
the concealment or disguise of the true nature,
|
||
source, location, disposition, movement, rights with
|
||
respect to, or ownership of property, knowing that
|
||
such property is derived form a serious crime.
|
||
|
||
61 Source: Paul Durman, "Bankers face jail over laundering:
|
||
|
||
Institutions will need systems to deal with suspicious
|
||
transactions", The Independent, London, 28th October 1993;
|
||
also Dan Atkinson, "20/20: Liberty lost in the wash", The
|
||
Guardian, London and Manchester, 22nd August 1992.
|
||
|
||
See also Michael Curtis and Christy Sinclair, "Law Times:
|
||
Obliged to act on suspicion", The Times, London, 25th August
|
||
1992:
|
||
|
||
To avoid potential difficulties in proving knowledge
|
||
of the money's origins, the EC directive requires
|
||
the legislation to say this 'may be inferred from
|
||
objective factual circumstances'. But what of the
|
||
defendant who was insufficiently worldly to
|
||
recognise the indicators?
|
||
|
||
62 Reports of suspicious transactions made to the
|
||
National Criminal Intelligence Service have risen
|
||
from 1,981 in 1990 to 11,300 in 1992.
|
||
|
||
Paul Durman, "Bankers face jail over laundering: Institutions
|
||
will need systems to deal with suspicious transactions", The
|
||
Independent, London, 28th October 1993.
|
||
|
||
See also Ian Watson's interview with Ian Watt, who heads the
|
||
Confidential Inquiries Unit at the bank of England:
|
||
|
||
Money Laundering: 'We receive a number of anonymous
|
||
calls and suggestions of malpractice in connection
|
||
to money laundering and all these have to be looked
|
||
at seriously,' he says.... Watt's unit acts as a
|
||
conduit to the NCIS.
|
||
|
||
Ian Watson, "City: The Bank's fraudbuster", The Sunday
|
||
Telegraph, London, 20th June 1993.
|
||
|
||
63 Michael Curtis and Christy Sinclair, "Law Times: Obliged
|
||
to act on suspicion", The Times, London, 25th August 1992.
|
||
|
||
64 Barclay's Bank v Taylor; Trustee Savings bank of Wales
|
||
and Border v Taylor [1989] 1 WLR 1066. Banks are no longer
|
||
under any contractual obligation to inform their customers
|
||
that a production order has been made, or to say what has been
|
||
produced. In R v Southwark Crown Court, ex parte Customs and
|
||
Excise and R v Southwark Crown Court, ex parte Bank of Credit
|
||
and Commerce International SA [1989] 3 WLR 1054, it was held
|
||
by the Divisional Court of the Queen's Bench, and upheld by
|
||
the Court of Appeal, that a Circuit Judge had no authority to
|
||
prevent the handing over of General Noriega's banking details
|
||
by the British to the American authorities. The ambiguous
|
||
protections contained in the 1980s legislation were resolved
|
||
in favour of the authorities, there being a paramount public
|
||
interest in an efficient prosecution of the "war against
|
||
drugs".
|
||
|
||
65 Michael Levi, "The Regulation of Money Laundering: The
|
||
Death of Banking Secrecy in the UK", The British Journal of
|
||
Criminology, vol. 31 (2), 1991, pp.122-23.
|
||
|
||
Things in America may be still worse. According to Mitch
|
||
Radcliffe of Digital Media - available at dmedia@netcom.com,
|
||
President Clinton is considering an executive order to allow
|
||
the Internal Revenue Service to monitor individual bank
|
||
accounts, and automatically collect taxes based on the
|
||
results. This will be presented as saving people the trouble
|
||
of filing their tax returns. Though asked to comment on this
|
||
rumour the White House has apparently not yet done so.
|
||
|
||
For how these various regulations are applied, see Margaret
|
||
Stone, "Money: Is it time to bring back the identity card
|
||
again?", The Daily Mail, London, 25th May 1994:
|
||
|
||
The Government has put building societies and banks
|
||
in the frontline in the fight against drug
|
||
trafficking, and it is now an offence for them not
|
||
to make rigorous identification checks on anyone
|
||
wanting to save or borrow money. Mortgages can be
|
||
used to launder money if crooks take out a big loan
|
||
and then use illegal cash to repay it quickly.
|
||
|
||
See also Liz Dolan, "Why the Halifax wouldn't play with the
|
||
bingo caller", The Times, London, 18th June 1994:
|
||
|
||
Julio Bruno, a Spanish national who has lived and
|
||
worked in Britain since last September, was branded
|
||
a possible money launderer when he tried to open an
|
||
Instant Xtra Plus account at his local branch of the
|
||
Halifax Building Society in Croydon this month.
|
||
|
||
Mr Bruno says that all he wanted was a safe place
|
||
for 1,000 cash and a cheque for 500 from the
|
||
Inland Revenue, but his unwitting ignorance of
|
||
tougher rules on opening accounts set off alarm
|
||
bells with the building society. The cash was from
|
||
his accumulated salary his employer pays all
|
||
employees in cash and his landlord advised him to
|
||
open a building society account because he was
|
||
worried about burglars. 'They gave me the money back
|
||
over the counter,' he said. 'The place was full of
|
||
customers staring at me. I felt really embarrassed
|
||
and insulted. I am sure the other customers thought
|
||
I had tried to pass off counterfeit money, or
|
||
something.'
|
||
|
||
66 See Eric Robbie, "Letter: ID card fears justified by
|
||
police abuse", The Guardian, London and Manchester, 12th
|
||
August 1994:
|
||
|
||
...[O]ne of GCHQ's Cray II's goes through 30 million
|
||
phone conversations every day, hunting for 'trigger'
|
||
words, so that human operatives ('humint') can
|
||
follow up the 'offending' calls in greater detail.
|
||
|
||
67 The Editor of The Sunday Express already has:
|
||
|
||
But why stop with identity cards? In the Aer Lingus
|
||
terminus at London's Heathrow Airport are giant
|
||
pictures of men with shaven heads.
|
||
|
||
Over their right ears are tattooed bar codes. It is
|
||
supposed to be somebody's idea of art. But what a
|
||
splendid way of keeping track of yobs and habitual
|
||
criminals.
|
||
|
||
One zap from a policeman's supermarket-type checkout
|
||
gun and all would be revealed.
|
||
|
||
An invasion of privacy? Absolutely right. And
|
||
about time too.
|
||
|
||
Source: Brian Hitchen, "ID cards for all", The Sunday
|
||
Express, London, 16th October 1994. Mr Hitchen does not seem
|
||
to be a pet owner. At my local vet, there is an advertisement
|
||
for a microprocessor that can be fitted in the ear of my dog,
|
||
so that I can have her traced if she ever goes missing.
|
||
|
||
There are also experiments, here and in the United States,
|
||
with the electronic monitoring of prisoners serving out their
|
||
sentences at home. See Michael Cavadino and Michael Dignan,
|
||
The Penal System: An Introduction, Sage Publications, London,
|
||
1992, pp.178-79.
|
||
|
||
68 Source: Picture This: CCTV to Get a Two Million Pound
|
||
Boost, Home office News Release 197/94, 18th October 1994.
|
||
|
||
69 The monitoring of journeys is at the moment being tried:
|
||
|
||
In the London Borough of Harrow, passengers with
|
||
passes now get on to busses and touch cards with
|
||
their photograph against a grey box instead of
|
||
showing them to the driver. The eventual idea is to
|
||
introduce this throughout the capital so that the
|
||
authorities will know which journeys have been made
|
||
and each of the new privatised companies will get
|
||
the right amount of money. London Regional
|
||
Transport say that all the information it has on
|
||
passengers is carefully separated by officials
|
||
should not work out who is travelling where. 'Only
|
||
one or two' people have objected.
|
||
|
||
Matthew Engel, "Second Front: Licence to snoop", The
|
||
Guardian, London and Manchester, 22nd August 1994.
|
||
|
||
See also Luke Blair, "Smart cards call to track vehicles", The
|
||
Evening Standard, London, 12th August 1994:
|
||
|
||
MPs today called for vehicles to carry electronic ID
|
||
cards, enabling police to monitor the movement of
|
||
all 30 million motorists in Britain....
|
||
|
||
An electronic 'tag', fixed by law to all vehicles,
|
||
would give the police a cheap but effective new tool
|
||
in the fight against crime, they said.
|
||
|
||
70 From O'Brien's speech in Room 101:
|
||
|
||
But always - do not forget this, Winston - always
|
||
there will be the intoxication of power, constantly
|
||
increasing and constantly growing subtler. Always,
|
||
at every moment, there will be the thrill of
|
||
victory, the sensation of trampling on an enemy who
|
||
is helpless. If you want a picture of the future,
|
||
imagine a boot stamping on a human face - for ever.
|
||
|
||
George Orwell, 1984 (1949), Penguin Books, Harmondsworth,
|
||
Middlesex, 1973, p.215.
|
||
|
||
71 He was sent to a mental hospital. Perhaps he belonged
|
||
there.
|
||
|
||
72 Take this, for example:
|
||
|
||
Once upon a time, there was a workman who made a cup
|
||
of unbreakable glass. He got himself an audience
|
||
with the Emperor, and pretending to had over his
|
||
invention, he allowed it to fall to the marble
|
||
floor. The Emperor was astonished: the man picked
|
||
up the unbroken cup - it was only dented as if it
|
||
had been of bronze - and knocked it back into shape
|
||
with a little hammer. He thought he had his fortune
|
||
made. But the Emperor asked: 'Does anyone else
|
||
know how to make such glass?' When told it was
|
||
still a secret process, he had the man's head cut
|
||
off, remarking that such a process, if generally
|
||
known, would lower the price of gold, since it
|
||
would no longer be used for making cups of the best
|
||
quality.
|
||
|
||
Petronius, Cena Trimalchionis, 51 (translated by SIG). This
|
||
story is also told somewhere in Dio Cassius and in Pliny the
|
||
Elder, though I forget exactly where. The Emperor may have
|
||
been Tiberius.
|
||
|
||
For the same reason, though on less solid grounds, laws were
|
||
persistently made against the alchemical transmutation of
|
||
metals.
|
||
|
||
See also Suetonius, Uita Uespasiani, 18:
|
||
|
||
An engineer offered to haul some huge columns up to
|
||
the Capitol at a moderate expense by a simple
|
||
mechanical contrivance, but Vespasian declined his
|
||
services: 'I must always ensure,' he said, 'that
|
||
the working classes earn enough money to buy
|
||
themselves food.' Nevertheless, he paid the
|
||
engineer a very handsome fee.
|
||
|
||
Translated by Robert Graves in The Twelve Caesars,
|
||
"Vespasian", Penguin Books, Harmondsworth, Middlesex, 1957,
|
||
p.283.
|
||
|
||
Think also of the English Luddites, with their machine-
|
||
smashing riots in the early nineteenth century; and the fears
|
||
repeatedly voiced since then that automation will lead to mass
|
||
unemployment. Even I sometimes feel a twinge of worry that
|
||
computers will one day be able to correct defects of grammar
|
||
and construction, thereby eliminating what little advantages I
|
||
have in this area.
|
||
|
||
73 Since I have been paraphrasing J.S. Mill, I ought to
|
||
quote him at least once:
|
||
|
||
Among the works of man, which human life is rightly
|
||
employed in perfecting and beautifying, the first in
|
||
importance surely is man himself. Supposing it were
|
||
possible to get houses built, corn grown, battles
|
||
fought, causes tried, and even churches erected and
|
||
prayers said, by machinery - by automatons in human
|
||
form - it would be a considerable loss to exchange
|
||
for these automatons even the men and women who at
|
||
present inhabit the more civilized parts of the
|
||
world, and who assuredly are but starved specimens
|
||
of what nature can and will produce. Human nature
|
||
is not a machine to be built after a model, and set
|
||
to do exactly the work prescribed for it, but a
|
||
tree, which requires to grow and develop itself on
|
||
all sides, according to the tendency of the inward
|
||
forces which make it a living thing.
|
||
|
||
John Stuart Mill, Essay On Liberty (1859), "Everyman" edition,
|
||
J.M. Dent & Sons, London, 1972, chapter three, "Of
|
||
Individuality, as One of the Elements of Well-being", p.117.
|
||
This work is also available as an e-text from
|
||
gopher://gopher.panix.com/misc/reference library/classics of
|
||
literature.
|
||
|
||
74 Roy Hattersley, "How Britain can solve its identity
|
||
crisis", The Daily Mail, London, 10th August 1994. Mr
|
||
Hattersley's libertarian credentials rest, no doubt, on his
|
||
principled stand in defence of Salman Rushdie.
|
||
|
||
75 Ibid..
|
||
|
||
76 Quoted in Matthew Engel, "Second Front: Licence to
|
||
snoop", The Guardian, London and Manchester, 22nd August 1994.
|
||
|
||
See also Mr Darracott's letter of clarification, "What's on
|
||
the cards for freedom", published in The Guardian, London and
|
||
Manchester, 24th August 1994.
|
||
|
||
77 Geoffrey Robertson, Freedom, the Individual and the Law
|
||
(sixth edition), Penguin Books, London, 1989, pp.106-07.
|
||
|
||
78 Raymond Wacks, "The Poverty of Privacy", The Law
|
||
Quarterly Review, vol. 96, January 1980, p.88.
|
||
|
||
79 Ibid..
|
||
|
||
80 See Appendix Four, on Privacy in the United States.
|
||
|
||
81 For a discussion of privacy from a European perspective,
|
||
see Charles D. Raab and Colin J. Bennet, "Protecting Privacy
|
||
across Borders: European Policies and Perspectives", Public
|
||
Administration, vol. 72, Spring 1994, pp.95-112.
|
||
|
||
82 Dr Edgar Whitley, "Too many errors on the cards", Letters
|
||
to the Editor, The Daily Telegraph, London, 12th August 1994.
|
||
The National Audit Office report mentioned was reported in
|
||
ibid., 22nd December 1993.
|
||
|
||
To speak from my own experience, my Medical Card had on it for
|
||
years the wrong date of birth. I passed my driving test in
|
||
1984, and only this year did I notice that the surname on my
|
||
Driving Licence - a word of four letters - was misspelled.
|
||
Aware that I had been breaking the law for ten years, I wrote
|
||
off to the DVLA in Cardiff with some trepidation. Back came a
|
||
new Driving Licence with my name corrected, and not even a
|
||
reprimand. I might just as easily have had the name changed
|
||
to John Major.
|
||
|
||
83 Source: Andrew Adonis, "I am just a number", The
|
||
Financial Times, London, 13th July 1994.
|
||
|
||
84 Ibid..
|
||
|
||
85 For a funny - and, for this country, perfectly credible -
|
||
account of how an identity card scheme might work in practice,
|
||
see Keith Waterhouse, "It's all on the cards", The Daily Mail,
|
||
London, 15th August 1994:
|
||
|
||
The identity card programme is set back six months
|
||
because of problems at the spanking new 50 million
|
||
National identity Card Office (NICO) in
|
||
Leicester, where the roof leaks, the central heating
|
||
is jammed at 120 degrees Fahrenheit, there are
|
||
mushrooms growing through the floor tiles and the
|
||
computer is not programmed to handle names of more
|
||
than seven letters. The chairman of ICS, or
|
||
Identity Card Services, the private agency hired to
|
||
issue the cards, defends his 250,000 a year salary
|
||
on the grounds that he could be earning a great deal
|
||
more if he were running one of the water
|
||
companies....
|
||
|
||
Customers wishing to pay by cheque at the Niceprice
|
||
supermarket discover that Sharon and Tracy wish to
|
||
see their identity cards as well as their bank
|
||
cards.
|
||
|
||
A Mrs Jones of Nottingham, entitled to apply for her
|
||
identity card by post by reason of being visually
|
||
challenged, receives 2,547 cards, most of them in
|
||
the name of Smith....
|
||
|
||
A poor old lady is found wandering in the snow in
|
||
Epping Forest, afraid to go home because she has
|
||
lost her identity card. She thinks she could get
|
||
into awful trouble without it. She's right, too.
|
||
|
||
Far from passport rules being relaxed as we get
|
||
deeper and deeper into Europe, immigration officials
|
||
now demand to see identity cards as well as
|
||
passports, so that they can compare the pictures. If
|
||
you have a moustache in one document and not in the
|
||
other, you have a problem.
|
||
|
||
There are huge pedestrian traffic jams in Oxford
|
||
Street when police carry out a spot check on people
|
||
they suspect may not be carrying their identity
|
||
cards - that is to say, everybody. Asked who
|
||
authorised them to cause disruption on this scale,
|
||
an inspector replies: 'Is this your identity card,
|
||
sir? You do realise that folding it in two is an
|
||
offence?'
|
||
|
||
The Vomiting Parrot public house in Wolverhampton
|
||
displays a notice reading: 'The management reserve's
|
||
the right to refuse service to any customer's not
|
||
carrying their identity card's'.
|
||
|
||
A Post Office in Acton refuses to accept a
|
||
pensioner's identity card as proof of his identity,
|
||
and insists on his producing his bus pass....
|
||
|
||
A racket is exposed in a Sunday tabloid: up to 100
|
||
social security claimants in Birmingham have been
|
||
regularly drawing benefits from a short-sighted
|
||
clerk on the same 'identity card', which is in fact
|
||
the nine of clubs with a photograph of a dog pasted
|
||
on it....
|
||
|
||
The Brixton Identity Card riots rage over a hot
|
||
weekend consequent upon a black being arrested for
|
||
insulting remarks made to a police officer after
|
||
being asked to produce his identity card for the
|
||
ninth time within the space of two hours.
|
||
|
||
86 Source: Richard Ford, "ministers facing a minefield",
|
||
The Times, London, 14th October 1994.
|
||
|
||
87 The figure of five per cent was estimated by the
|
||
Australian Government in 1988, when it was considering an
|
||
identity card scheme. See Simon Davies, "Please may I see
|
||
your identity card, Sir", The Daily Telegraph, London, 13th
|
||
October 1994.
|
||
|
||
88 Source: "Hacker hunt after smear campaign", Computer
|
||
Weekly, London, 20th October 1994.
|
||
|
||
According to the Audit Commission, hacking and other computer
|
||
fraud is endemic. There are almost no controls on access to
|
||
sensitive data, and few intrusions are noticed until after
|
||
harm has been suffered: see the Audit Commision, Opportunity
|
||
Makes a Thief - An Analysis of Computer Abuse, Her Majesty's
|
||
Stationery Office, London, 1994.
|
||
|
||
89 It should not be supposed here that I am indifferent to
|
||
the sexual abuse of very young persons. I use the case as an
|
||
illustration: if the police could not read these files, they
|
||
almost certainly cannot read anything else.
|
||
|
||
For a long discussion of public key encryption in general, see
|
||
the Pgp User's Guide, supplied in two files with any version
|
||
of Phil Zimmerman's PGP software, which is available from
|
||
various sites outside the United States, including
|
||
ftp://src.doc.ic.ac.uk/computing/security/software/PGP,
|
||
ftp://ftp.demon.co.uk/pub/pgp, and
|
||
ftp://nic.funet.fi/pub/unix/security/crypt.
|
||
|
||
90 See, for example, Stewart A. Baker, "Don't Worry Be
|
||
Happy: Why Clipper Is Good For You", published on-line by
|
||
Wired, 26th May 1994; available from
|
||
gopher://gopher.wired.com/Clipper Archive. Mr Baker is the
|
||
senior legal counsel to the National Security Agency in
|
||
America; and it says much for his employers's concern about
|
||
PGP that he has written a fairly long attack on it for
|
||
publication in an opposition magazine. He says of the
|
||
arguments in its favour:
|
||
|
||
This sort of reasoning is the long-delayed revenge
|
||
of people who couldn't go to Woodstock because they
|
||
had too much trig homework. It reflects a wide - and
|
||
kind of endearing - streak of romantic high-tech
|
||
anarchism that crops up throughout the computer
|
||
world.
|
||
|
||
Also, there is a huge literature on the Clipper initiative.
|
||
See the archive held at
|
||
ftp://toad.com:/pub/cypherpunks/clipper/.
|
||
|
||
91 The programme can be obtained, I believe, from
|
||
ftp://ftp.netcom.com/pub/qwerty.
|
||
|
||
92 See on this point the Editor's Introduction to John
|
||
Locke, Two Treatises of Government: A Critical Edition and
|
||
Apparatus Criticus, Peter Laslett (ed.), Cambridge University
|
||
Press, Cambridge, 1960, pp.6-7:
|
||
|
||
[Locke's] statement in his will shows that he was
|
||
put out because [the Two Treatises] had been mangled
|
||
by the printer, and implies that he was anxious to
|
||
leave behind him an authoritative text. There is
|
||
evidence to prove that he went to great pains to
|
||
ensure that we should read him on politics in the
|
||
exact words which he used.... Our modern reprints
|
||
of Lock on Government represent a debasement of a
|
||
form of his book which he himself excoriated, and
|
||
tried his best to obliterate.
|
||
|
||
The author lived most of his life amongst books. He
|
||
was well informed about printing and publishing, and
|
||
the firm of Awnsham and John Churchill, one of the
|
||
great houses of his day, came to be a part of his
|
||
life. Yet he could write in June 1704:
|
||
|
||
"Books seem to me pestilent things, and infect all
|
||
that trade in them... with something very perverse
|
||
and brutal. Printers, binders, sellers, and others
|
||
that make a trade and gain out of them have
|
||
universally so odd a turn and corruption of mind,
|
||
that they have a way of dealing peculiar to
|
||
themselves, and not conformed to the good of
|
||
society, and that general fairness that cements
|
||
mankind."
|
||
|
||
93 Roy Hattersley, "How Britain can solve its identity
|
||
crisis", The Daily Mail, 10th August 1994.
|
||
|
||
94 Alan Travis, "Conservative Conference: Howard revives
|
||
idea of identity cards", The Guardian, London and Manchester,
|
||
10th October 1994.
|
||
|
||
95 Source: Lynn Cochrane, "New licence fuels identity card
|
||
row", The Scotsman, Glasgow, 10th August 1994.
|
||
|
||
96 Douglas Cousins, "Letter: A sense of identity", The
|
||
Herald, Edinburgh, 15th August 1994.
|
||
|
||
97 Jeff Rooker MP, "Letter: Identifying every citizen's
|
||
rights", The Guardian, London and Manchester, 1st September
|
||
1994.
|
||
|
||
98 Roy Hattersley, "How Britain can solve its identity
|
||
crisis", The Daily Mail, 10th August 1994.
|
||
|
||
99 Charles Reiss, "Cabinet clash over ID cards hits Howard",
|
||
The Evening Standard, London, 11th October 1994.
|
||
|
||
100 Except perhaps the Editor of The Sunday Express. His
|
||
tattooed bar codes might be useful to ensure that
|
||
|
||
dole scroungers would find it impossible to dip
|
||
their sticky fingers into the welfare pot.
|
||
|
||
Brian Hitchen, "ID cards for all", The Sunday Express, London,
|
||
16th October 1994.
|
||
|
||
101 See Dan Atkinson, "20/20: Liberty lost in the wash", The
|
||
Guardian, London and Manchester, 22nd August 1992:
|
||
|
||
Lest anyone think the problem must be so vast as to
|
||
justify these extraordinary measures, why not ask
|
||
the Bank of England how much money is laundered in
|
||
Britain each year? The answer is that the Bank and
|
||
the Treasury don't know. There are no reliable
|
||
figures with which to judge the scale of the
|
||
problem. There is, in fact, no way of knowing if
|
||
money-laundering is much of a problem in the first
|
||
place.
|
||
|
||
102 I am borrowing here from Macaulay's attack on the young
|
||
Gladstone:
|
||
|
||
He first resolves on his conclusion. He then makes
|
||
a major of most comprehensive dimensions, and having
|
||
satisfied himself that it contains his conclusion,
|
||
never troubles himself about what else it may
|
||
contain: and as soon as we examine it we find that
|
||
it contains an infinite number of conclusions, every
|
||
one of which is a monstrous absurdity.
|
||
|
||
Thomas Babbington Macaulay, "Gladstone on Church and State"
|
||
(April 1839), Critical and Historical Essays, J.M. Dent &
|
||
Sons, London, 1907, vol. 2, p.248.
|
||
|
||
103 This is said to have been the case in National Socialist
|
||
Germany:
|
||
|
||
NO FREEDOM HERE
|
||
German Householders Under New Search Threat
|
||
|
||
One of the German householder's last links with
|
||
freedom have just been severed. Under an order
|
||
issued by the German Ministry of the Interior - the
|
||
German Home Office - every householder must deliver
|
||
a duplicate of the keys of his home to the local
|
||
police authorities.
|
||
|
||
He is given a receipt, the set is numbered,
|
||
labelled, and carefully docketed.
|
||
|
||
The reason? Spread of 'underground' propaganda
|
||
aimed at the Nazi regime.
|
||
|
||
Activities of the German Freedom Party and the
|
||
secret radio stations have stirred the police to
|
||
action.
|
||
|
||
Armed with the keys of every home, the police can
|
||
enter without formality, and conduct a cellar-to-
|
||
attic search.
|
||
|
||
Source: Reynold's Illustrated News, 18th April 1937; quoted
|
||
by Moses Jackson, "Letters to the Editor", Free Life, the
|
||
Libertarian Alliance, London, No.21, November 1994.
|
||
|
||
104 Simon Davies, "Please may I see your identity card, Sir?"
|
||
The Daily Telegraph, London, 13th October 1994.
|
||
|
||
105 Parts of this catalogue have been published in Free Life,
|
||
the Libertarian Alliance, London, No.21, November 1994. The
|
||
books on alternative identity include:
|
||
|
||
Counterfeit I.D. Made Easy: by Jack Luger. (1990, 5+
|
||
x 8+, 131 pp, illustrated, soft cover, ISBN
|
||
0-915179-90-3, Order Number: 61111, $14.95)
|
||
|
||
A complete guide to making your own ID! Using common
|
||
tools and readily-available materials, you can make
|
||
photo ID cards, drivers licenses, birth
|
||
certificates, and much more. Includes illustrations
|
||
of forgery techniques and tips on using the ID you
|
||
create. There's no secret to making great looking ID
|
||
- not with Counterfeit I.D. Made Easy!
|
||
|
||
How to Get ID in Canada: Third Edition, by Ronald
|
||
George Eriksen 2 and Mr Completely. (1990, 5+ x 8+,
|
||
81 pp, illustrated, soft cover, ISBN 1-55950-033-6,
|
||
Order Number: 61109, $9.95)
|
||
|
||
There are many books available on how to get I.D. in
|
||
the United States. Now, you can get documented north
|
||
of the border, with How to Get ID In Canada. Learn
|
||
how to get these pieces of I.D.: * Birth
|
||
Certificates * Drivers License * Social Insurance
|
||
Card * Passport * Secondary I.D. * And much more,
|
||
including tips on using mail drops and staying free.
|
||
|
||
Reborn in the U.S.A.: Personal Privacy Through a New
|
||
Identity Second Edition, by Trent Sands. (1991, 5+ x
|
||
8+, 121 pp, soft cover, ISBN 1-55950-057-3, Order
|
||
Number: 61115, $14.95)
|
||
|
||
A complete guide to building a new identity in the
|
||
United States from the ground up. Covers birth
|
||
certificates, social security card, drivers license,
|
||
passport, credit cards, and much more. Learn how to
|
||
thoroughly document your new identity without
|
||
revealing any information about your former life.
|
||
|
||
Reborn Overseas: Identity Building in Europe,
|
||
Australia and New Zealand, by Trent Sands. (1991, 5+
|
||
x 8+, 110 pp, illustrated, soft cover, ISBN
|
||
1-55950-061-1, Order Number: 61127, $14.95)
|
||
|
||
The formation of the European Common Market has
|
||
created a paper-tripping paradise. With an identity
|
||
in any one nation, you can live, work and travel in
|
||
all 12. This book shows how get all the documents
|
||
necessary to build a complete paper identity without
|
||
leaving the United States. You'll also learn how to
|
||
fake education, employment and credit references.
|
||
Sold for informational purposes only!
|
||
|
||
Reborn with Credit: by Trent Sands. (1992, 5+ x 8+,
|
||
87 pp, soft cover, ISBN 1-55950-090-5, Order Number:
|
||
61131, $10.00)
|
||
|
||
Trent Sands takes you inside the credit machine to
|
||
show you how credit applications are processed and
|
||
graded, how credit bureaus get their information,
|
||
how credit decisions are made. The master of
|
||
identity then takes you step-by-step through
|
||
procedures for cleaning bad credit, establishing a
|
||
blank credit file, and building a credit rating that
|
||
will make tens of thousands of dollars available to
|
||
you in a matter of months.
|
||
|
||
106 Source: Alan Travis, "Conservatives at Bournemouth:
|
||
'Rubbish' cries greet Howard's ID card plan", The Guardian,
|
||
London and Manchester, 14th October 1994.
|
||
|
||
107 Source: "National identity card high on Tories' agenda",
|
||
The Independent, London, 10th September 1994.
|
||
|
||
108 Source: Christopher Elliott, "ID cards 'will not reduce
|
||
crime" The Guardian, London and Manchester, 15th October 1994.
|
||
|
||
109 Source: Alan Travis, "This way leads to Howard's end",
|
||
The Guardian, London and Manchester, 24th September 1994.
|
||
|
||
110 Dick Coyles, a former Chairman, addressing the 1994
|
||
Conference of the Police Federation; source: Alan Travis,
|
||
"This way leads to Howard's end", The Guardian, London and
|
||
Manchester, 24th September 1994.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
APPENDIX ONE:
|
||
THE BRITISH EUGENICS MOVEMENT
|
||
|
||
The word "eugenics" was coined by Sir Francis Galton, a
|
||
relative of Charles Darwin, in 1884. He defined it as "the
|
||
study of those agencies under social control which may improve
|
||
or impair the racial qualities of future generations, either
|
||
physically or mentally".1 His articles on "Hereditary Talent
|
||
and Character", in Macmillan's Magazine in 1865, and his book,
|
||
Hereditary Genius of 1869, had raised the possibility of
|
||
producing a higher race by selective breeding. The corollary
|
||
of this was the selective elimination of unhealthy strains.
|
||
His theories gained a certain credibility from Darwinism, but
|
||
had little influence before the end of the century. Between
|
||
then and the Great War, however, they achieved a remarkable
|
||
dominance.
|
||
|
||
They seemed both to explain and to offer a solution to the
|
||
problem of British relative decline, worries about which, even
|
||
then, were common. The British Race, Galton's followers
|
||
asserted, was decaying. Mendel's genetic theories had just
|
||
been rediscovered. They were held up by the polemicists as
|
||
strict scientific proof for what even with the frequent
|
||
invoking of Darwin's name had never been regarded as a
|
||
coherent body of thought. They pointed to the slums, and
|
||
showed how those living in them were multiplying faster than
|
||
the middle classes. The pool of "bad recessive genes", they
|
||
feared, was increasing uncontrollably. A.J. Balfour, the
|
||
Conservative Prime Minister of the day, shared this belief.
|
||
He feared that the opening up of careers to the more able of
|
||
the working classes was contributing to the racial decay.
|
||
They were promoted and then bred more slowly than those who
|
||
were left behind.2
|
||
|
||
This belief was more than shared by the socialists. Sidney
|
||
Webb, whose memory is still revered at every Labour Party
|
||
gathering, warned that unless there were some "sharp turn",
|
||
the country would gradually be given over to the faster
|
||
breeding Irish and Jewish immigrants - and even to the
|
||
Chinese. What had at all costs to be avoided was "race
|
||
deterioration, if not race suicide".3
|
||
|
||
But the chief objects of fear were the "feeble-minded". The
|
||
campaign against them was launched in 1903 by one Dr Robert
|
||
Reid Rentoul. His Proposed Sterilisation of Certain Mental
|
||
and Physical Degenerates: An Appeal to Asylum Managers and
|
||
Others, and his Race Culture; or, Race Suicide (A Plea for the
|
||
Unborn), were read by thousands. He predicted a rapid descent
|
||
into universal degeneracy unless a vast programme of
|
||
compulsory sterilisation were adopted. Lepers, epileptics,
|
||
cancer patients, idiots, imbeciles, cretins, lunatics,
|
||
homosexuals, tramps, vagrants, habitual criminals, backward,
|
||
dull and weak-minded children - all must go under the knife.4
|
||
|
||
Not everyone was so extreme: moderate opinion preferred
|
||
compulsory segregation in special homes. This was the
|
||
conclusion reached by the Royal Commission on the Care and
|
||
Control of Feeble-Minded Patients, reporting in 1908. The
|
||
Commissioners accepted the definition given them by the Royal
|
||
College of Physicians - that the feeble-minded were those "who
|
||
might be capable of earning a living under favourable
|
||
circumstances" but were "incapable from mental defect existing
|
||
from birth or from an early age (a); of competing on equal
|
||
terms with their normal fellows; or (b) of managing themselves
|
||
or their affairs with ordinary prudence".5 They accepted that
|
||
feeble-mindedness might in large degree be an hereditary
|
||
failing. They recommended committal to "institutions where
|
||
they will be employed and detained".6 Committal was to be
|
||
ordered by a Judge or Magistrate, on medical advice.
|
||
|
||
But despite this promising start, the Mental Deficiency Act
|
||
1913, which followed from the 1908 Report, was the high point
|
||
of the eugenics movement in this country. Its more
|
||
objectionable sections were never brought fully into effect;
|
||
and they were largely discarded in the Mental Health Act 1959.
|
||
|
||
The Mental Health Act 1983 has gone still further, even
|
||
allowing Virginia Bottomley to close many of the mental health
|
||
institutions set up earlier this century under eugenic
|
||
influence.
|
||
|
||
|
||
NOTES
|
||
|
||
1. Source: Sir Leon Radzinowicz and Roger Hood, A History of
|
||
English Criminal Law and its Administration from 1750, Stevens
|
||
& Sons, London, 1977, vol. 5, p.29.
|
||
|
||
2. The Times, London, 18th August 1905; source: Radzinowicz
|
||
and Hood, op. cit., p.32.
|
||
|
||
3. The Decline of the Birth Rate, Fabian Tract 131 (1907),
|
||
pp.16-17; source: Radzinowicz and Hood, op. cit., p.32.
|
||
|
||
4. Source: Radzinowicz and Hood, op. cit., pp.326-7. I have
|
||
not read these works, but the latter contains the following:
|
||
"[N]ormally, the adult man produces on another man an
|
||
absolutely repulsive effect from the sexual point of view"
|
||
(p.182); source: Richard Davenport-Hines, Sex, Death and
|
||
Punishment: Attitudes to Sex and Sexuality in Britain Since
|
||
the Renaissance, William Collins Sons & Co, London, 1990,
|
||
p.107.
|
||
|
||
5. Source: Radzinowicz and Hood, op. cit., pp.326-7.
|
||
|
||
6. Source: ibid..
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
APPENDIX TWO:
|
||
THE REGULATION OF CHILDBIRTH
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
A leading British doctor believes that people in
|
||
Western nations should have to pass a parenting test
|
||
and gain a reproduction 'licence' before being
|
||
allowed to have children.
|
||
|
||
In a book published later this month, Professor Sir
|
||
Roy Calne argues that couples should have to satisfy
|
||
a licensing authority that they would make suitable
|
||
parents. Each couple that received approval would
|
||
be allowed no more than two children. People who
|
||
opt for larger families should face higher taxes and
|
||
other financial penalties....
|
||
|
||
'Everyone endorses the idea of a driving licence, a
|
||
recognition that you have certain necessary skills
|
||
for driving a car. Bringing a child into the world
|
||
is far more important, and I put forward the
|
||
licensing of this activity as a serious suggestion
|
||
for consideration', he told The Observer.
|
||
|
||
Source: Judy Jones, "Top doctor urges legal controls on
|
||
parenthood", The Observer, London, 7th August 1994.
|
||
|
||
Sir Roy does not mention stricter means of enforcement, or
|
||
smoking. But see Skrabanek, op. cit., pp.158-59:
|
||
|
||
According to The Christian Science Monitor, 'at
|
||
least 50 women have been charged with crimes for
|
||
their behaviour during pregnancy.'1 The
|
||
criminalisation of motherhood was discussed by
|
||
Ernest Drucker, professor of epidemiology and social
|
||
medicine at Montefiore Medical Centre in the Bronx,
|
||
where about a quarter of all women who give birth
|
||
use drugs.2 About half of the newborn babies who
|
||
test positive for drugs are removed from their
|
||
mothers and placed in foster care. Drucker
|
||
illustrated this practice in a case of a poor
|
||
Puerto-Rican woman, whose baby was taken away from
|
||
her after birth. When she returned to the hospital
|
||
and took her baby away with her, her action was
|
||
described as 'kidnap'....
|
||
|
||
A Wyoming woman was jailed for 'pre-natal abuse'
|
||
because the nursing staff detected alcohol on her
|
||
breath. A Nevada woman who drank some beer the day
|
||
before she went into labour lost custody of her
|
||
child.3
|
||
|
||
In several US states, obstetric interventions can be
|
||
made compulsory by court order.4
|
||
|
||
|
||
NOTES
|
||
|
||
1. R.L. Ley, "US targets maternal drug abuse as cost
|
||
problems escalate", The Christian Science Monitor, 22nd May,
|
||
1990; quoted in Thomas Szasz, Our Right to Drugs, Praeger, New
|
||
York, 1992.
|
||
|
||
2. Ernest Drucker, "Children of war. The criminalization of
|
||
motherhood", International Journal on Drug Policy, 1989, 1(4),
|
||
pp.10-12.
|
||
|
||
3. P. Pringle, "A nihilism for the nineties sweeps America",
|
||
The Guardian, London and Manchester, 6th June 1990.
|
||
|
||
4. V.E.B. Kolder, J. Gallagher and M.T. Parsons, "Court
|
||
ordered obstetrical interventions", New England Journal of
|
||
Medicine, 1987, 316, pp.1192-96.
|
||
|
||
|
||
APPENDIX THREE:
|
||
MEMORANDUM OF PETER TATCHELL
|
||
|
||
|
||
While the current plans for ID cards are relatively
|
||
harmless, the big danger is that once introduced
|
||
they could be open to abuse for far more sinister
|
||
and malevolent purposes.
|
||
|
||
A universal ID card system is the first step towards
|
||
a total surveillance society in which the personal
|
||
details and behaviour of individuals can be
|
||
monitored by anyone who, either legally or
|
||
illegally, has access to the system.
|
||
|
||
Lesbian, gay and bisexual people still suffer much
|
||
discrimination. ID cards have the potential to make
|
||
discrimination easier, particularly if they become
|
||
required as a standard proof of identity or become
|
||
used as a means of verifying cheques and credit
|
||
cards.
|
||
|
||
The system could, in theory, be open to future
|
||
abuses such as monitoring people buying gay
|
||
magazines and videos or going to gay nightclubs and
|
||
cinemas. This possibility that commercial
|
||
transactions could, through ID cards, expose people
|
||
as gay might deter those who are closeted or under
|
||
the age of consent from activities which are lawful
|
||
and/or harmless.
|
||
|
||
There is no guarantee that in addition to storing
|
||
routine personal details ID cards would not
|
||
eventually include more information, added either
|
||
officially or covertly.
|
||
|
||
Once the system is in place, if a more authoritarian
|
||
government ever came to power there would be nothing
|
||
to stop it adding particulars about a persons's
|
||
sexual orientation, HIV status, political
|
||
affiliations, racial background and so on.
|
||
|
||
Instead of liberating us, the new information
|
||
technology could become a means of social
|
||
surveillance and control.
|
||
|
||
Peter Tatchell
|
||
London, November 1994.
|
||
|
||
I wish to thank Mr Tatchell for having taken the time and
|
||
trouble to provide me with this Memorandum. Its publishing
|
||
should not be taken as an endorsement by Mr Tatchell or by
|
||
Outrage of all else in this pamphlet. Certainly, as a
|
||
socialist and a former Labour candidate, he would wish to
|
||
distance himself from my belief that markets and minimal
|
||
government - and the refusal of positive legal rights for
|
||
minority groups - are good things.
|
||
|
||
Mr Tatchell can be contacted via Outrage at 5 Peter Street,
|
||
London, W1V 3RR, telephone and fax: 071 439 2381.
|
||
|
||
|
||
APPENDIX FOUR:
|
||
PRIVACY IN THE UNITED STATES
|
||
|
||
|
||
The Supreme Court was persuaded in Stanley v Georgia 394 US
|
||
557 (1969) to strike down a State law against the possession
|
||
of obscene material. Its judgment was based not on a
|
||
balancing of the First Amendment right to freedom of speech
|
||
against the claim that harm may result from the circulation of
|
||
certain kinds of literature, but on the Appellant's right to
|
||
privacy. It was held that "in the privacy of his home an
|
||
individual had the right to enjoy the materials of his
|
||
choice".
|
||
|
||
The property rights of others always being respected, no
|
||
libertarian would dispute this. In a purely libertarian
|
||
world, indeed, there would be no specific liberties. The
|
||
rights to speech and association and the like would simply
|
||
derive from a general liberty - within the obvious limits - to
|
||
do as one pleased with one's own. But this general liberty is
|
||
nowadays so little recognised in the United States - and, for
|
||
that matter, in the rest of the comparatively free world -
|
||
that its upholding in one instance may have been more to
|
||
restrict than to defend the right to freedom of speech and the
|
||
press.
|
||
|
||
Whereas, in a libertarian world, the specific right would
|
||
derive from the general one, in America, a limited form of the
|
||
general right should derive from the specific one guaranteed
|
||
in the Constitution. To decide otherwise, as the Supreme
|
||
Court seems here to have done, has been to allow the
|
||
authorities largely to nullify the right supposedly upheld.
|
||
|
||
One is free to read erotic or seditious books in one's own
|
||
home, but not necessarily to read them anywhere else. Nor,
|
||
certainly, is there a right to buy, sell or exchange such
|
||
books if the Justice Department and the U.S. Post Office - a
|
||
state monopoly - are in any way involved. The usual procedure
|
||
is to go through various big city magazines, replying to the
|
||
personal and business advertisements that offer literature and
|
||
other items. The replies are invariably sent from small,
|
||
conservative towns in the mid-west. The goods having arrived,
|
||
a complaint is lodged, and the advertisers are prosecuted for
|
||
having used the mails for an obscene purpose. Since trials
|
||
are held in those places where the complaints are lodged,
|
||
convictions are all but certain. If a Defendant is acquitted,
|
||
it will usually be only at a great personal and financial
|
||
cost.1
|
||
|
||
In Stanley v Georgia, Rather than decide the scope of the
|
||
First Amendment, for or against the right to publish obscene
|
||
literature, the Supreme Court grandly announced that an
|
||
American's home was his castle. It did nothing to protect
|
||
that castle from being laid seige to by the Justice Department
|
||
and Post Office.
|
||
|
||
|
||
NOTES
|
||
|
||
1. See Richard E. Geis, "Beware the Secret Sex Police", The
|
||
Main Catalog, Loompanics Unlimited, Port Townsend, Washington,
|
||
1989, pp.47-51.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|