| Again that's a generic response: > There should be a lot of systems, beyond databases. I mean, we should have a lot of systems Beyond databases. What does that mean? That could be analog systems, that could be anything not stored in a computer. Nothing to do with identification which would need a database. It's a generic answer to avoid a hypothetical. It's a nonanswer. He said nothing, not everything. You are attributing the reporters question to him. The reporter is posing the hypothetical that they created in the first place by the initial interview. My main point was hypotheticals are always trap (unless among friends!), but that's a great example of an obvious one. The usual shtick is to say nothing, because the journalistic usual shtick is to ask gotcha hypotheticals. |
> "We’re going to have to look at the mosques. We’re going to have to look very, very carefully."
I already do not trust the person who has said that. Does it really matter if he proposed a full-fledged ID system? He still proposed monitoring mosques. He still proposed surveillance based on religious identity.
The correct answer to that question, "should Muslims be subject to special scrutiny" is a simple "no". I don't really get the debate about hypotheticals; this a question that does have a straightforward, right answer. And the implications here in regards to surveillance and ordinary people having stuff to hide -- those implications are all the same regardless of whether or not Trump actually proposed a literal database.
He was open to increased surveillance on Americans based on their religious identity, he didn't immediately shut the idea down.