Exactly how is your privacy being invaded? Do you imagine the government doesn't already know your name and address and social security number?
Did you know that they have access to any state DMV records, which will tell them what kind of car you drive and who insures it and any mishaps you've had?
They also have access--as anyone does--to your property records. By entering an address OR name, they can find out what kind of house you own, how much you paid, what taxes you pay on it--
Through tax forms, they know how many children you claim, their names, and their Social Security numbers. They know what daycare you send them to if you itemize. They know who you work for and how much you get paid. They know whether you claim gambling losses or donate to charities and if they merely audited you, they could get your bank records easily enough.
This idea that there's some sort of "privacy" being violated is ridiculous. All Acxiom's information is publicly available and none of it was gathered illegally.
I have no problem with anybody complaining about the CAPPS II program. Whenever the government institutes a program that lacks proper oversight, like the TSA lists, there's a chance for serious abuses. But Acxiom is merely doing what any capitalist company does--they took the time to compile the information readily available to anyone and are selling that work to the government.
If there was no Acxiom, the government would merely compile the information itself at greater cost to taxpayers.
Clark lobbied for Acxiom. He didn't lobby for CAPPS II. He also stressed the need to balance privacy concerns with security concerns. I'd much rather have someone concerned about peoples' rights involved in this than someone like, oh say Ashcroft, who thinks people have no rights.
Clark is on record as staunchly opposing the Patriot Act as is and has criticized the Bush administration extensively for violating people's rights including habeus corpus. He's certainly not someone who advocates invading people's privacy and his involvement in Acxiom is a pretty pathetic example if you're trying to indict his character.
This sounds like nothing more than a smear machine at work, taking the most innocuous things and trying to turn them into ammunition to sabotage a campaign--political terrorism if you will.
http://blogs.salon.com/0002556/I'm far more concerned about the billions of dollars that have gone to Halliburton and Bechtel without fair bidding and true accountability and despite Halliburton's previous record of overbilling the government for which they were censured.
And I'm more concerned with the Patriot Act and the TSA list than CAPPS II. For the TSA list, anyone high up in government (like the White House, the CIA, the FBI, the Justice Department), calls TSA and says "put this person on this list" and that person gets on the list, no questions asked, which is how so many anti-Bush people have wound up on the list.
The problem is the government treating every citizen like a suspect and relying on faulty methods to determine who is likely to be a terrorist. The problem is not Acxiom which hasn't given the government much mroe than they could get out of any phone book or their own records.