The most unpopular British Prime Minister in living memory, Keir Starmer, has announced plans to introduce compulsory digital ID cards for all British citizens. Claiming that this draconian measure will tackle illegal migration.
This can be demonstrably proven to be false as Tony Blair, former Labour PM and once young globalist leader has been pushing this since he left office in his usual messianic way.
Big Brother Watch has pointed out the dire implications of this;
This means that if we do not urgently build the biggest campaign possible, every one of us will be required to have a digital ID card to go about our daily lives.
Starmer’s Labour government is ignoring the fact that polling conducted by YouGov on behalf of Big Brother Watch shows that a clear majority of the British public (63%) does not trust the government to keep their digital ID data secure. The Prime Minister, who used to be a barrister specialised in human rights, is ignoring the serious concerns about this scheme raised by eight leading UK human rights groups who sent him a joint-letter urging him to reconsider digital ID plans.
Compulsory ID cards in the UK are being presented as a simple solution for dealing with illegal migration and enabling better access to public services. However, this proposal raises profound concerns. This system risks creating a two-tier society, where access to essential services and basic rights could depend on compliance with a potentially flawed and intrusive digital infrastructure.
A Troubling Record: Government Data Failures and Broken Trust
One of the most compelling arguments against a national ID system stems directly from government’s lamentable track record in handling sensitive personal information. Repeated incidents have caused real harm, which raises the critical question: if the government consistently fails to safeguard existing data, how can it be trusted with something as fundamental as data regarding our national identity?
The Post Office Horizon scandal stands as a chilling example of how seriously flawed technology, coupled with institutional arrogance and indifference, can devastate lives. Hundreds of innocent sub-postmasters were wrongly accused, prosecuted, and financially ruined due to a defective computer system. The Post Office and successive governments stubbornly denied problems for years, even as individuals lost homes, livelihoods, and reputations.
This systemic failure vividly illustrated how easily a digitised system, combined with a powerful institution unwilling to admit fault, can lead to profound injustice. A national digital ID system, flawed or mismanaged, carries the terrifying potential to replicate this disaster on an even grander scale, leading to wrongful denials of essential services or false accusations and arrests based solely on system errors, with little recourse for affected individuals.
Beyond the Horizon scandal, numerous other incidents underscore the government's pervasive failure to secure sensitive data. The National Health Service (NHS) has repeatedly suffered significant data breaches. In 2022, NHS Digital inadvertently exposed 1.2 million patient records due to inadequate anonymisation. In 2023, 14,000 HIV patient records were leaked after an NHS trust erroneously published confidential data. Such incidents highlight a critical vulnerability with centralised systems: if highly sensitive health data cannot be secured, the security of an entire national identity system becomes profoundly questionable.
Australia’s “Robodebt” scandal offers another stark cautionary tale. A welfare algorithm falsely accused thousands of citizens of owing money, causing immense psychological distress and financial hardship. Without robust and independent safeguards, a UK digital ID system could easily automate similar injustices, creating a pervasive digital dragnet that unfairly impacts innocent individuals, particularly those already struggling within the welfare system. This highlights how technology, without proper oversight and a human-centred approach, can become a tool of oppression rather than assistance.
The Threat of Mass Surveillance and Expanding State Power
Beyond the inherent risks of data breaches and system errors, compulsory ID cards pose a significant threat of mass surveillance in a country with the most surveillance cameras already. A digital ID system would establish a centralised database containing detailed information on every citizen, effectively creating a “database state” capable of tracking our movements, activities, and indeed, our entire lives in real-time. This represents an immediate threat to our fundamental freedoms and personal privacy.
Thankfully, the UK has a history of rejecting such Orwellian measures. The 2006 ID Cards Act was ultimately repealed in 2010, largely due to widespread public opposition and a deep-seated distrust of the implications of a surveillance state. However, a modern digital ID system is arguably even more intrusive and dangerous especially with the use of AI monitoring systems. It will functions as a digital key that could link our identity to every facet of our online and offline existence, from our travel patterns and financial transactions to our access to public services and even our personal online interactions.
In a world of “climate catastrophe” this ability to control behaviour has potentially chilling effects in a world where human people and behaviours is considered the central threat to our perceived continuance on this planet.
We should also bear in mind that a future UK government, say one with Nigel Farage at its head, could readily exploit a comprehensive digital ID system to suppress dissent and restrict the rights of specific groups. This represents an unacceptable concentration of power in the hands of the state. Thus enabling it to control and potentially oppress the working class and other marginalised communities, undermining the very principles of individual freedom and democracy in our society.
Exclusion and Discrimination: How ID Cards Harm the Vulnerable
A compulsory ID card system would not impact all citizens equally. On the contrary, it would disproportionately affect the most vulnerable and marginalised members of our society. The true measure of how civilised a society is lies in how it treats its most vulnerable. A national ID system risks creating new barriers and entrenching existing forms of discrimination and exacerbate social inequalities rather than alleviate them.
Consider the plight of the elderly, the homeless, refugees, and those with disabilities. Many people within these groups often lack the necessary official documents, the technical literacy, access to the Internet and/or the stable addresses required to obtain and effectively utilise a digital ID. If digital identification becomes mandatory for accessing essential services such as healthcare, housing, or welfare benefits, these individuals could find themselves unjustly locked out and denied the crucial support they desperately need and to which they are entitled.
Finally, a compulsory ID system would fundamentally undermine the rights to anonymity and privacy, which are rights that are absolutely vital for many individuals, including investigative journalists, political activists, and survivors of domestic abuse. The ability to act, speak, and organise without constant identification and monitoring is a cornerstone of a healthy, functioning democracy. It is essential for the personal safety and security of many. If every online interaction, every journey on public transport, and every financial transaction is inextricably linked to a digital ID, it creates a profound chilling effect on free speech, legitimate dissent, and the ability to challenge authority.
Better, Fairer Alternatives to Compulsory ID Cards
Fortunately, more equitable and privacy-respecting approaches to identity management and service access already exist. Instead of a centralised, compulsory national ID system, we can actively explore and implement alternatives that genuinely empower individuals and robustly protect their privacy.
We can also choose to strengthen existing identification systems and focus on enhancing the security and integrity of current documents like passports and driving licences. Simultaneously, we must rigorously enforce existing data protection laws, such as GDPR. This strategy avoids the risks of function creep and the exclusion of vulnerable populations that are so often associated with the introduction of a new, compulsory national ID system.
This is part of the wider agenda by the globalist technocrats who believe the problems of society can be solved by technocratic means. In particular the right to free movement and the right to say as we please. It smacks a lot like solution-problem-solution to me.