Hmm.
According to the mainstream media, "all they were going to do" was standardize drivers' license formats, which made it sound like "photo and tamper-proof stuff and maybe a fingerprint."
But.... DNA??!!!
DNA is the "source code" to your body, hence your brain and your endocrine system, hence the biological basis of your perception, cognition, and emotion.
It will not be long before a scan of your DNA will reveal such things as whether you are biased toward anxiety or depression, whether you are susceptible to developing photosensitive epilepsy, and perhaps even your sense of justice.
Sense of justice?, you ask...
Yep. Here's the evidence it's coded in our genes and inherited from our ape ancestors:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/3116678.stm
Summary: Monkeys have a sense of justice. They will protest when they see other monkeys getting greater rewards for performing the same task. As proven in empirical research.
Apparently what we have here is a biological basis for three very politically potent cognitive and behavioral systems:
a) Ambition as commonly understood in free-enterprise societies: dissatisfaction with lesser reward could stimulate competitive behavior intended to increase achievement level in order to obtain equivalent reward or greater.
b) Equalitarianism: belief in equal rewards for equal tasks. Basic sense of social justice regardless of economic system.
c) Tendency toward susceptibility to communism: In the event (a) is continually thwarted on an arbitrary or otherwise unjust basis, dissatisfaction could be channeled toward enforcing (b) via socialistic measures.
And who wouldn't like to know if their prospective employee or business partner scores high on the trait that governs all of these...? And don't you think that companies such as WalMart wouldn't like to hire people who score low on this one...?
Then also, we have genetic markers for right-hemisphere processing of verbal tasks in males (tends to correlate with an "intuitive" decision making style), genetic markers for homosexuality, genetic markers for religiosity (above-average development of right temporal lobe), and the list goes on and on.
Software companies have every right to keep their source code confidential; it's their property, and it's their right to refuse to disclose it to third parties.
Individuals must have the same right with respect to the source code for their bodies: It's *yours,* you got it from your parents, the copyright inheres in the owner, and therefore you have the right to refuse to allow copies to be made (e.g. for use on your driver's license).
The ultimate right to privacy is the integrity of your own body: the powers that be have no right to access your body or obtain a biological sample from you except under a court order equivalent to a search warrant, issued upon good cause of suspecting you in the commission of an appropriately serious crime.
Anyone agree? Anyone disagree? Anyone want to start organizing around this issue?
I'll say this for now: they can have my DNA when they can extract it from my cold dead corpse, and yes this is an issue that's worth rattling the sword of the Second Amendment over.