> I wonder whether they keep samples of our DNA somewhere, now? It must be easy 
> to
> gather from hospitals or when you donate blood, they don't need much...
> 
> Helene, the froggy from Melbourne, who is just as cynical as Tamara when it 
> comes
> to
> privacy in our modern world.
> 
> 
> 
> Tamara wrote:
> >2) I had to apply for a Social Security number, having arrived in US as 
> an adult. But, when my son was born - February of '77 - he was was 
> issued one the day after he was born; it was "normal procedure" by the. 
> And what's a SS number if not an ID number? For that matter, a license 
> plate "tracks you" too.
> 
> 3) But, when I said the government seemed to have all the data on him 
> except spit, when they wanted to check, I forgot the *best part*. 24 
> hrs after he was born, he was both finger- and foot-printed. Took some 
> effort, in case of the fingers (try to uncurl those little claws <g>), 
> but it was done, and the data was going to be kept somewhere. 
> Ostensibly so that, in case of a kidnap, he could be identified - 
> either as an adult some years later, or as a corpse left in a ditch 
> somewhere.
> 
> Nobody asked my  (or his <g>) permission to harvest the data, though I 
> was presented with copies of same for free. I meant to paste them into 
> his baby book, but that was when I meant to make a baby book, and 
> they've disappeared since. From *my* stash. But, from the government's? 
> I doubt it. That organism never disgorges; it only adds (though 
> sometimes, it does mislay stuff).
> 
> Of course, *my* fingerprints are on file, from the time I applied for 
> the citizenship...


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