Prints and DNA
I appreciate your response Mr. LawProfessor. We must agree that there is a big difference between a fingerprint and a DNA sample (or "blueprint") on file. The issue is clearly, How Much Control Is Too Much?
I think I am not alone when I say that the general population would object to that kind of intrusion. However, as I mentioned in my last post, one would not jump straight to DNA mapping, for the citizens would quickly dispell that notion. One would slowly tighten the net... raise the temperature 1 degree at a time so it would not attract attention/objection. I think it is in order to say that I am not saying the government wants to map our DNA and make clones of us or something equally far-fetched. The step towards quietly cataloging all citizens, both criminal, and upstanding, law-abiding people will slowly errode the self evident human rights to freedoms America is known for. It may not be a large step, It may not draw the media's attention, however, it is still a very powerful ability gained by the government.
I agree with you that having a finger print of every person in the country could help convict criminals. I do not believe it would *prevent* crime. However, this gain in something that we all would agree is good, comes at the cost of our right to privacy. If this one right can be violated for the "greater good" where will it stop. The answer is... it won't stop. Slowly and methodically, our freedoms will be erroded, until there is little real difference between other countrys and ours.
I don't think people in general understand that freedom, if it is true freedom, has to allow for sick, twisted, demented minds to operate. It is a shame that everyone can't be good people, but everyone is not and you can't treat everyone like bad people and say that it is protecting our freedoms and liberties as Americans.
If you try to eliminate pain and suffering by stopping crime you have to remove their ability to go against the law. If you remove the ability to commit a crime... then this is not a free country. They should be caught and punished, but you have to give them the opportunity to choose.
If you gain the ability to squelch those independant-thinkers bent on self-gain, pain, and destruction you have taken away everyones rights and freedoms.
The dark side to freedom is that in order to have it, others have the room to do bad things. Personally, I would rather take my chances that a random criminal act happens to me, than have the government breathing down everyones neck some much that no one can take can take a crap without the government knowing what color it is!
It is not that them having my fingerprint would directly impact my life as it is today. It would appear to have little effection on the surface. However, if it is finger prints today, it will be face scanning tomorrow. With technology growing as it is, you will not be able to go anywhere without the government literally able to map out your day.
I am a network administrator and I deal with databases and computers all day long. The ability of tracking people is made very simple by indexing through one unique trait. It may be a finger print, it may be a number derived from your DNA model. The simple truth is: combine databases of every federally owned camera, with banks, airports and DMV's credit card databases, active GPS links, index them all with one unique indentifier, and you can paint a terrifingly accurate representation of *any* persons 24 hour day. Where they went, what they bought (item for item). From this data, you can develop profiles from the patterns in the data. The invasion of privacy will not yield. You will not have privacy.
Before you blow the whistle and file me under "neurotic" or "fanatic" I want you to know, I am not saying they are going to do all this stuff... I am merely saying that they have the *ability* to do this stuff. Once they gain the ability, you can not reverse it. "An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure" not allowing the small violations will help keep the big ones from slipping in.
Looking forward to your response.