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Why Social Security Numbers Were Never Meant to Be Used as ID

Why Social Security Numbers Were Never Meant to Be Used as ID

Your Social Security number is now required for everything - bank accounts, credit cards, job applications, and countless other services. But when the system was created, the government explicitly promised this would never happen.

The original Social Security cards from 1936 literally printed the words "NOT FOR IDENTIFICATION PURPOSES" right on them. The Roosevelt administration assured Americans that these numbers would only be used to track retirement benefits and nothing else.

The promise lasted exactly five years. During World War II, the military started using Social Security numbers for convenience because they needed a quick way to identify soldiers. What started as temporary wartime expediency became permanent government policy.

Once the military broke the seal, other agencies quickly followed. The IRS adopted SSNs in the 1960s, banks in the 1970s, and soon every institution wanted to use the same number system because it was easier than creating their own identification methods.

What makes this particularly problematic is that Social Security numbers havezero security features. No photo, no biometrics, no expiration date, no authentication method. They're just nine random digits that were never designed to prove identity.

The system is so insecurethat identity theft exploded once SSNs became universal IDs. Criminals only need your number to open accounts, get loans, and steal your identity because everyone accepts SSNs as proof of who you are.

The government could easily fix this by creating a proper national ID system with actual security features. But they benefit from the surveillance capabilities that universal SSN usage provides - every transaction, job, and account can be tracked back to your number.

What was supposed to be a simple retirement tracking system became the backbone of a national surveillance networkthat monitors every aspect of American life.

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