There are so many things wrong with this proposal I don't even know where to start. I would go to prison rather than hand over my or my childrens' DNA profile. What right does the state have to something that is inherently mine? Ooooh, I'm so cross I can scarcely type.
Just a handful of the many points that should be made.
1. It turns policing from pro-active crime prevention into reactive crime solution. Resources will be diverted into capturing, maintaining and using the database rather than detering crime. Possible even crime will rise but detection rates will too so target boxes are ticked so who cares. This is similar to the problem with traffic policing now. Traffic cops are few and far between because resources have been switched into cameras and fining and so on.
2. Because DNA profiling does not compare genomes and only about 20 fingerprint sections, your "profile" is shared by, on average, 6-10 people. Those 6-10 people are most likely to live somewhere within your geographic area of origin. It constantly amazes me that in courts it is stated by the prosecution and without challenge that the chances of this DNA not being yours are a billion to one. Well, that's true if DNA profiles are distributed randomly around the globe, but they're not. The true odds could be as low as a millionth of that for small communities.
3. How long before this information is used to deny free NHS treatment to "at risk" groups in the interests of "fairness"?
4. Argh, I could go on forever but have lost the will in the face of this creeping fascism.
Just a handful of the many points that should be made.
1. It turns policing from pro-active crime prevention into reactive crime solution. Resources will be diverted into capturing, maintaining and using the database rather than detering crime. Possible even crime will rise but detection rates will too so target boxes are ticked so who cares. This is similar to the problem with traffic policing now. Traffic cops are few and far between because resources have been switched into cameras and fining and so on.
2. Because DNA profiling does not compare genomes and only about 20 fingerprint sections, your "profile" is shared by, on average, 6-10 people. Those 6-10 people are most likely to live somewhere within your geographic area of origin. It constantly amazes me that in courts it is stated by the prosecution and without challenge that the chances of this DNA not being yours are a billion to one. Well, that's true if DNA profiles are distributed randomly around the globe, but they're not. The true odds could be as low as a millionth of that for small communities.
3. How long before this information is used to deny free NHS treatment to "at risk" groups in the interests of "fairness"?
4. Argh, I could go on forever but have lost the will in the face of this creeping fascism.
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