2001 Ron Paul 1:1
Mr. PAUL.
Mr. Speaker, today I introduce the Identity
Theft Prevention Act. This act protects the American people from
government-mandated uniform identifiers which facilitate private crime
as well as the abuse of liberty. The major provision of the Identity
Theft Prevention Act halts the practice of using the Social Security
number as an identifier by requiring the Social Security Administration
to issue all Americans new Social Security numbers within five years
after the enactment of the bill.
These new numbers will be the sole legal property of the recipient and
the Social Security Administration shall be forbidden to divulge
the numbers for any purposes not related to Social Security
Administration. Social Security numbers
issued before implementation of this bill shall no longer be considered
valid federal identifiers. Of course, the Social Security
Administration shall be able to use an individuals original Social
Security number to ensure efficient administration of the Social
Security system.
2001 Ron Paul 1:2
Mr. Speaker, Congress has a moral responsibility to
address this problem as it was Congress which transformed the Social
Security number into a national identifier. Thanks to Congress, today
no American can get a job, open a bank account, get a professional
license, or even get a drivers license without presenting their Social
Security number. So widespread has the use of the Social Security
number become that a member of my staff had to produce a Social
Security number in order to get a fishing
license!
2001 Ron Paul 1:3
One of the most disturbing abuses of the Social Security
number is the congressionally-authorized rule forcing parents to get a
Social Security number for their newborn children in order to claim
them as dependents. Forcing parents to register their children with the
state is more like something out of the nightmares of George Orwell
than the dreams of a free republic which inspired this nations
founders.
2001 Ron Paul 1:4
Congressionally-mandated use of the Social Security
number as an identifier facilitates the horrendous crime of identity
theft. Thanks to the Congressionally-mandated use of the Social
Security number as an uniform identifier, an unscrupulous person may
simply obtain someones Social Security number in order to access that
persons bank accounts, credit cards, and other financial assets. Many
Americans have lost their life savings and had their credit destroyed
as a result of identity theft — yet
the federal government continues to encourage such crimes by mandating
use of the Social Security number as a uniform ID!
2001 Ron Paul 1:5
This act also forbids the federal government from
creating national ID cards or establishing any identifiers for the
purpose of investigating, monitoring, overseeing, or regulating private
transactions between American citizens, as well as repealing those
sections of the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of
1996 that require the Department of Health and Human Services to
establish a uniform standard health identifier. By putting an end to
government-mandated uniform IDs, the
Identity Theft Prevention Act will prevent millions of Americans from
having their liberty, property and privacy violated by
private-and-public sector criminals.
2001 Ron Paul 1:6
In addition to forbidding the federal government from
creating national identifiers, this legislation forbids the federal
government from blackmailing states into adopting uniform standard
identifiers by withholding federal funds. One of the most onerous
practices of Congress is the use of federal funds illegitimately taken
from the American people to bribe states into obeying federal dictates.
2001 Ron Paul 1:7
Mr. Speaker, of all the invasions of privacy proposed in
the past decade, perhaps the most onerous is the attempt to assign
every American a unique health identifier — an identifier which
could be used to create a national database containing the medical
history of all Americans. As an OB/GYN with more than 30 years in
private practice, I know well the importance of preserving the sanctity
of the physician-patient relationship. Oftentimes, effective treatment
depends on a patients ability
to place absolute trust in his or her doctor. What will happen to that
trust when patients know that any and all information given to their
doctor will be placed in a government accessible data base?
2001 Ron Paul 1:8
Many of my colleagues will claim that the federal
government needs these powers to protect against fraud or some other
criminal activities. However, monitoring the transactions of every
American in order to catch those few who are involved in some sort of
illegal activity turns one of the great bulwarks of our liberty, the
presumption of innocence, on its head. The federal government has no
right to treat all Americans as criminals by spying on their
relationship with their doctors, employers,
or bankers. In fact, criminal law enforcement is reserved to the state
and local governments by the Constitutions Tenth Amendment.
2001 Ron Paul 1:9
Other members of Congress will claim that the federal
government needs the power to monitor Americans in order to allow the
government to operate more efficiently. I would remind my colleagues
that in a constitutional republic the people are never asked to
sacrifice their liberties to make the job of government officials a
little bit easier. We are here to protect the freedom of the American
people, not to make privacy invasion more efficient.
2001 Ron Paul 1:10
Mr. Speaker, while I do not question the sincerity of
those members who suggest that Congress can ensure citizens rights are
protected through legislation restricting access to personal
information, the only effective privacy protection is to forbid the
federal government from mandating national identifiers. Legislative
privacy protections are inadequate to protect the liberty of
Americans for several reasons. First, it is simply common sense that
repealing those federal laws that promote
identity theft is more effective in protecting the public than
expanding the power of the federal police force. Federal punishment of
identity thieves provides cold comfort to those who have suffered
financial losses and the destruction of their good reputation as a
result of identity theft.
2001 Ron Paul 1:11
Federal laws are not only ineffective in stopping
private criminals, they have not even stopped unscrupulous government
officials from accessing personal information. Did laws purporting to
restrict the use of personal information stop the well-publicized
violation of privacy by IRS officials or the FBI abuses by the Clinton
and Nixon administrations?
2001 Ron Paul 1:12
Second, the federal government has been creating property
interests in private information for certain state-favored third parties. For example, a little-noticed provision in the Pa- tient Protection Act established a property right for insurance companies to access personal health care information. Congress also authorized private individuals to receive personal information from government databases in the copyright bill passed in 1998.
2001 Ron Paul 1:13
Perhaps the most outrageous example of phony privacy
protection is the Clinton Administrations so-called medical
privacy proposal, which allow medical researchers, certain business
interests, and law enforcement officials access to health care
information, in complete disregard of the Fifth Amendment and the
wishes of individual patients! Obviously, privacy protection laws
have proven greatly inadequate to protect personal information when the
government is the one providing or seeking
the information.
2001 Ron Paul 1:14
The primary reason why any action short of the repeal of
laws authorizing privacy violations is insufficient is because the
federal government lacks constitutional authority to force citizens to
adopt a universal identifier for health care, employment, or any other
reason. Any federal action that oversteps constitutional limitations
violates liberty because it ratifies the principle that the federal
government, not the Constitution, is the ultimate judge of its own
jurisdiction over the people.
The only effective protection of the rights of citizens is for Congress
to follow Thomas Jeffersons advice and bind (the federal government)
down with chains of the Constitution.
2001 Ron Paul 1:15
Mr. Speaker, those members who are unpersuaded by the
moral and constitutional reasons for embracing the Identity Theft
Prevention Act should consider the overwhelming opposition of the
American people toward national identifiers. The overwhelming public
opposition to the various Know-Your-Customer schemes, the attempt
to turn drivers licenses into National ID cards, the Clinton
Administrations Medical Privacy proposal, as well as the numerous
complaints over the ever-growing uses of the
Social Security number show that American people want Congress to stop
invading their privacy. Congress risks provoking a voter backlash if we
fail to halt the growth of the surveillance state.
2001 Ron Paul 1:16
In conclusion, Mr. Speaker, I once again call on my
colleagues to join me in putting an end to the federal governments
unconstitutional use of national identifiers to monitor the actions of
private citizens. National identifiers threaten all Americans by
exposing them to the threat of identity theft by private criminals and
abuse of their liberties by public criminals. In addition, national
identifiers are incompatible with a limited, constitutional government.
I, therefore, hope my colleagues
will join my efforts to protect the freedom of their constituents by
supporting the Identity Theft Prevention Act.
Notes:
2001 Ron Paul 1:3
congressionally-authorized probably should be unhyphenated, congressionally authorized.
2001 Ron Paul 1:4
Congressionally-mandated probably should be unhyphenated, Congressionally mandated in both instances.
2001 Ron Paul 1:5
This act also forbids the federal government from creating as well as repealing those sections is confusing. The act would not forbid repealing those sections. The act would also repeal those sections.
2001 Ron Paul 1:12
Here, the text from Ron Pauls Congressional website is truncated as says, Second, the federal government has been creating property interests in private information for. The text from Congressional Record is displayed.
This chapter appeared in Ron Pauls Congressional website at http://www.house.gov/paul/congrec/congrec2001/cr010301.htm