|
|
|
|
|
by ClumsyPilot
1730 days ago
|
|
"I'm not sure I see the direct link between privacy and freedom." Have you seen "never talk to the police" video, explaining that not even congress know how many different crimes/laws are on the books? Explaining how easy it is to charge a random person with a crime and get a conviction based on just ill reflection of their character? Can you draw the logical connection between lack of privacy and how easy it makes it to charge random people arbitrarily? How this could be used for political gain, profit or to supress dissent? |
|
I can definitely see how a lack of privacy can be used against you. But I'm just saying it's correlative or causative. i.e you can be fairly transparent with a group, and still be relatively free with that group. The privacy isn't what leads to that freedom, it is trust.
At the government level, that is possibly non-existent. But I think it's important to remember that it's trust (or not needing trust) that is the driver of freedom, not other factors.