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We Can Be Secure and Free
by David Keene
As
governor of Virginia, Jim Gilmore vetoed a bill that would have
allowed the commonwealth's many local jurisdictions to install cameras
to help in the apprehension of motorists who pay insufficient attention
to traffic lights. Gilmore stated in his veto message that while
stringing cameras across the commonwealth would undoubtedly generate
revenue and might even arguably marginally improve safety, he believed
the creation of a surveillance state too high a price to pay for
a few bucks and a little additional security. It was a veto message
that could only have been penned by a man sitting in the chair once
occupied by the likes of former Virginia Govs. Thomas Jefferson
and Patrick Henry.
Since
leaving the Virginia governorship, Gilmore has brought the same
steadfast belief in the primacy of individual freedom to everything
he's done. As chairman of the Congressional Commission on Terrorism
and Weapons of Mass Destruction, for example, he spent five years
advising on ways government might better prepare for and respond
to terrorist attacks on the U.S. homeland. He has urged that those
responsible for the protection of our lives and property remember
that they must do so without limiting the freedom unique to this
country. Indeed, Gilmore rejects the notion that those charged with
protecting our security must seek a "balance" between
liberty and security. He argues instead that we should reject such
trade-offs and urges that we all remember that while we can never
achieve perfect security we must resist the temptation to surrender
our freedoms in an attempt to achieve so impossible a goal.
Thus,
when Gilmore suggests that the Department of Homeland Security (DHS)
is starting to get a few things right for a change, one has to listen
if only because he has been as critical as other conservatives of
initiatives like the CAPPS II program, the data mining and profiling
system DHS wants to deploy to force air travelers to "prove"
they are the sort of people who ought to be allowed to fly around
this country. The mistakes made in putting together CAPPS II resulted
in a firestorm of criticism from civil libertarians from the day
of its announcement, and Gilmore believes DHS is going about things
in a far more freedom-friendly way now either because the agency's
leaders have finally gotten their act together or because they want
to avoid such controversy in the future.
Exhibit
one, according to Gilmore, is the way they've gone about putting
together US-VISIT, a program designed to check on and track the
millions of foreigners who visit this country every year. The program,
a version of which is being tested as this is written, is the result
of an RFP, or request for proposals, that tasked the private sector
to come up with a program that would protect privacy and civil liberties
while also enhancing government's ability to screen and track visitors
to this country. Gilmore is advising the Computer Sciences Corp.,
the developer of one of three alternative US-VISIT designs on privacy
issues, and says that when CAPPS II was being put together, privacy
and the protection of civil liberties were at best an afterthought.
With US-VISIT, however, the department is letting everyone who wants
the government's business know that such concerns are up-front preconditions
that must be woven into whatever they develop.
Gilmore
may be right on this one. There is certainly evidence to suggest
that things are getting better at DHS. The agency seems finally
to be focusing on securing U.S. borders after inheriting the Immigration
and Naturalization Service, the very model of a dysfunctional government
agency. In addition to developing US-VISIT to deal with the problem
of those coming into the country legally and deciding simply to
stay on regardless of our laws, DHS recently announced that it is
beefing up security on our southern border to begin the task of
gaining control of a border that has been routinely ignored by millions
of illegals every year.
The
situation hasn't improved much yet, but Secretary Tom Ridge, Undersecretary
Asa Hutchinson and those who work for them seem intent upon securing
our borders, enforcing our immigration laws and even changing the
way we try to encourage or require prospective citizens to buy into
our values before they can claim U.S. citizenship... and doing so
in a manner consistent with maintaining our traditional freedoms.
These are tough jobs and DHS deserves credit for trying to solve
problems that others have simply ignored. Now if they'd just send
the architects of CAPPS II back to the drawing board.
David
Keene, chairman of the American Conservative Union, is a managing
associate with the Carmen Group, a D.C.-based governmental affairs
firm
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