| > You have an identity though. You use other things as an ID in the end. Often shoehorned into fulfilling that task and mostly very cumbersome. My exact point, glad we agree. Very cumbersome indeed, and not centralized enough to use for turnkey totalitarianism. (Slow, plodding, inefficient totalitarianism, sure. But see my above post for why that isn’t as much of an existential threat.) > There's nothing about an electronic ID that would make this different from now. It makes no practical difference for oppression. If you don't have an SSN then other things about you are unique enough for identifying you. I'd say that's why it's even vaguely tolerated anyways. False. Electronic ID provides the means to tie together multiple systems that must currently be matched manually, with frequent false positives/negatives. It creates the means to quickly build a system that could “switch off” a person’s ability to function in society, and improves the ability of security services to pool data about individuals from disparate sources with a high level of confidence. Nothing prevents oppression of individuals today, true. It’s a question of scale and accuracy. What we need to defend against is a system where oppression can be quickly, efficiently, and accurately targeted towards large groups. That’s the essence of turnkey totalitarianism. It can’t be built without a centralized ID system that’s applied consistently across other key systems. Current systems do not do this. Myths about the US system: * Every citizen has an SSN * Every citizen uses the same name when dealing with different agencies and private businesses * A person’s SSN always remains the same * Citizens don’t register different addresses when dealing with different agencies and private businesses * Government agencies use SSN as a primary key * Agencies and businesses have a centralized, highly accurate way to determine who is deceased * All citizens have a REAL ID license/ID * All citizens have a license/ID I hope this gives you a sense of how the US approaches ID. It’s extremely messy. Yes this enables things like identity fraud, guarding against this is part of the cost of our safeguards against totalitarianism. A price I’m willing to pay, given the behavior of our political establishment and the recent attitude of my fellow citizens. |
I don't think a totalitarian government cares much about false positives though.
> It creates the means to quickly build a system that could “switch off” a person’s ability to function in society, and improves the ability of security services to pool data about individuals from disparate sources with a high level of confidence.
I also don't think that bunch of different places to turn off someone's ability to participate in a society is a meaningful difference in practice. Even if it takes slightly longer or has false positives like you describe, it still achieves the totalitarian goal.
> A price I’m willing to pay, given the behavior of our political establishment and the recent attitude of my fellow citizens.
I unfortunately struggle to see the results of this sacrifice to be honest.