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Fingerprint Foreboding
I was jolted to read last week that public schools in Taunton are planning to use a fingerprint scan as a way to enable students to pay for lunch. At the cash register, the student will simply tap a finger on an electronic reader, and a pre-stored mathematical formula derived from a fingerprint will bring up the student's account.Some parents, as well as lawyers for the American Civil Liberties Union, raised objections; in some other states, fingerprints-for-lunch have already been banned. The explicit concern is articulated in terms of worries about identity theft, but a more visceral reaction to fingerprints may account for the skepticism.
In my case, that reaction is personal. As a college student nearly half a century ago, I spent summers working for the FBI in Washington. I went each day to what was called the " Ident Building," the mammoth headquarters of the Identification Division, which occupied most of a block in an anonymous corner of Southwest D.C. near the rail yards. In the building's vast open rooms were thousands of file cabinets holding millions of cards, each with ink smudges and classification codes. A swarm of file clerks (of whom, for a time, I was one) buzzed around the drawers like bees around a network of hives.
Biometrics is the science of identification by means of bodily characteristics. In the 19th century, calipers were applied to skulls and other body parts, but such measurements were imprecise and cumbersome. With the 20th century came the science of analyzing the barely perceptible ridges, loops, and spirals of the skin on fingers. Because those patterns in the flesh are unique to each individual, and permanent, they proved to be the perfect aid to the law enforcement project of identifying persons who do not want to be identified.
That was the point of fingerprints, of course. The entire system of collection and classification aimed at criminal prosecution.
Soldiers and sailors were fingerprinted, and so were certain categories of government employees. When I was hired as an FBI summer clerk, I was fingerprinted. Such records could be used to identify accident victims or war dead.
The FBI distinguished between "civil files" and criminal files, but those of us working at "Ident" knew that the enterprise was centrally about the government's campaign to catch bad people and put them away. That is why I remember the day that my own fingers were pressed onto the inkpad and card as one of foreboding.
With my fingerprints in the bureau file, the absolute presumption of innocence to which I was entitled as an American was mitigated. J. Edgar Hoover had a tag on me, and even though I admired him then, I felt the chill of his cold breath on my neck. The ink stain was hard to get off my fingers.
In later years, it became clear, even to those of us who began by admiring him, that J. Edgar Hoover was in pursuit not just of criminals, but of a whole range of people whom he disliked -- "security risks," "subversives," "agitators," "deviants," "black nationalists," "peaceniks." When, a decade after my employment at the FBI, I was arrested at a peace demonstration in Washington, the ritual of being fingerprinted intimidated me more than others.
I knew all about the bureau by then, but the fright was that the bureau knew all about me. My fingerprints were a window into who I was, and my accusers could see into me whether I wanted them to or not.
Imagine if, in addition to fingerprints, J. Edgar Hoover had access to the high-tech biometrics of the iris scan; in addition to wiretaps, the eavesdropping technologies that snatch conversation out of the air; in addition to agent surveillance, the electronic trails of credit cards, cameras on subways, satellite imaging, and EZPasses that register auto traffic through every toll booth.
Privacy, the dictionary says, is the state of being free from unsanctioned intrusion. But that definition seems anachronistic, with ubiquitous intrusion a new fact of life. For security, or mere efficiency, we Americans are sanctioning the end of our right to deny sanction to such invasion. Now, of course, it is not just law enforcers in the mode of J. Edgar Hoover who have the capacity to intrude, but also MasterCard, the credit bureaus, the Google user, the phone company, the e-mail provider, the airport screener -- and the lunch room cashier in the local school. And why shouldn't parents be uneasy?
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15 Comments so far
Show AllA cybertotalitarianism beyond what even George Orwell was capable of imagining is coming our way. Soon the public toilets will monitor our wee for drugs and bad food and will identify us by DNA sample and anyone who isn't towing the line with exactitude will be "re-educated."
Am I a tinfoil hat wearing crackpot to hold these notions? I hope so. Boy do I hope I'm wrong.
www.netbomb.net
What is morally wrong can never be advantageous, even when it enables you to make some gain that you believe to be to your advantage.
Marcus Tullius Cicero bc 106- bc 43
In the late 1930's the Boy Scouts were conducting a program to fingerprint everyone for use in identifying accident victims, etc.
I was printed then, and again when I joined the Army in 1942, and countless other times during my federal foreign service and civil service career. Sorry, I am not an admirer of J.Edgar, but I fail to see the peril -- in itself -- of having a sure way to identify people, living or dead. It is the use -- or misuse -- of the system that poses the peril.
to fligloot : You choose to be fingerprinted ,good because I do not . You say potatoes and I say potaaaatoes.
If you can assure me that the process will NEVER be misused then I will accomodate the printers.
Actually and smugly I live in Canada where we do not have to worry or argue except with you over something so mundane and silly .
As far as identifying the living or dead, she loving wife knows so many anatomically-unique features about me that fingerprints would be ridiculously redundant
Ronald, I live in Canada too and I think all we have to look forward to is what is happening south of the border right now. As I am not a Canadian citizen I have to have a fingerprint and retinal scan every time I go south and as the Canadian government lets the US do what ever it likes they will soon acquieisce and impose the same kind of border practices. (As they have started with the pointless passport scheme this year.)
Canada, like the USA, was never a democracy but any semblance of rights some Canadians (not First Nations, obviously, or anyone suspect, or dark of skin) once had will rapidly disappear as they have done in the US. And if you think the Canadian government wouldn't use data agiant its citizens then two words for you: Maher Arar.
It's the ease with which administrators now turn to finger-printing as a solution to any and all problems that is truly frightening!
Leaving aside whether fingerprints of soldiers will help identify bodies, given modern weaponry, one can make the argument that this could be a useful device in this circumstance. But for children buying lunch! Good grief. How about a card that can ONLY be used for buying cafeteria meals? There'd be no point in stealing that in order to steal someone's identity.
Instead of choosing one solution for all problems, people need to find solutions that are APPROPRIATE to the problem.
Certainly these will be children well conditioned to accept and tolerate submission to authority. The Pavlovian aspect of this seems glaringly obvious.
Tap a finger, have a reward.
The notion of children salivating in line at the electronic reader sends chills down my spine.
I see efforts like this within school systems, whether they work or not, more as a method of instilling compliance in young people... The underlying motivations for the fingerprinting is the purpose and agenda, not the activity itself. The issue is of course, less security, than submissive, compliant behavior not just of the students, but for the parents, administration, school systems, and the state apparatus.
Disgusting, and hopefully, illegal - certainly, immoral.
Incredible what a fear-driven the American people have become, and fear drives irrationality. - I am an American living in Europe, and it's a relief not to have to live with what I read about how the government and society is increasingly applying proven methods of fascist incoctrination, intimidation and control. One would hope that minor outbreaks of rebellion begin soon, increase in duration, and eventually overwhelm the utterly corrupt, desperate system.
[Slouching towards fascism, "...the center cannot hold..."]
I agree that this is part of a broader effort to train Americans into passive obedience to the state, accept intrusion and regulation, purportedly for "security" reasons. If I trusted the government, if I believed that this is, in fact, for my own good with respect to accidents or death or to help track reaol criminals, then it would be almost acceptable. But this is a government that is fascistic, that demonizes and criminalizes dissenters by labeling them as "terrorists" or potential security risks.
This is a government that suppors torture, secret detention centers and the undermining of basic laws that protect individuals from the state. Today it's the "radical Muslims" who are demonized, so that no one has to listen to the reasons for their "radicalism." They are just "terrorists" who "hate us because we are free." Bush has already labeled the "anti-globalization" movement as a threat, and Congress passed the Animal Enterprise Terrorist Bill last year to undermine the animal rights movement to the benefit of agribusiness, big pharma and industries that engage in horrendous abuse of animals for the sake of entertainment. Who will be a "security threat" tomorrow?
Basically, though there's no way to stop it. As long as he's willing to go to the extra trouble, Big Brother can get your fingerprint from a cup in the cafeteria or the flush handle of the commode. This seems to be a monster of our own making.
I felt the same foreboding as a kid when I got my Social Security card.
bren: missed your post. There is such a card just for lunches and it is has been used in the pbulic school here for at least 4 years. Works like a phone card of course - deplete the original allottment, get another.
Can you say police state?
The public school where I work started a program two years ago for clocking in for work using your thumbprint. The explanation to us was that the district was thus protecting itself from future labor disputes and fines by the government because of unpaid overtime. Some days the program doesn't recognize my thumbprint right away and I spend up to 10 minutes, usually twice a day, trying to get it in so I can start or stop work. That is a big waste of time. I still arrive early for work each morning but have to wait until the appropriate time to clock in. Consequently, the district has lost many productive hours of my time while I fool around trying to get my print in. It is extremely frustrating, and, yes, it also feels like an invasion of my privacy.
this love of machine is going nowhere fast
all machines will die or machines will kill all