Our Shrinking Zones of Privacy
by
Jack Kenny
by Jack Kenny
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Along with,
I am sure, millions of other Americans, I was appalled that anyone
had the tastelessness, the insensitivity and the unmitigated gall
to ask Chelsea Clinton about her father’s notorious affair with
infamous intern Monica Lewinksy. Most of us agreed with the former
first daughter when she said her family’s internal struggle with
that affair is none of the questioner’s business.
Okay, say it
again. A famous person, the offspring of both a former president
and a presidential candidate no less, publicly told a nosy questioner
that some things are none of the public’s business. One sensed America,
embarrassed by the question, breathed a sigh of relief.
It is not that
America is in love with Chelsea Clinton. But we still have some
regard for privacy – or what is left of privacy when politicians
like Chelsea’s parents have done their best to diminish it.
It is ironic
that at a time in our history when we have radically broadened the
legal claims of privacy, we appear to have largely emptied it of
content. The Clintons and others at the apex of power in America
seem to have little regard for our privacy. Their compassion won’t
allow it. They feel too much of our pain. Your health and mine is
their business. Not just your actual health right now (I feel fine,
thank you), but your insurance against future illness is the government’s
business.
Your sex life
is the government’s business. What? You didn’t know that? Why do
you think the new prescription drug benefit in the Medicare program
covers Viagra? Why do you suppose there are federally funded and
state-mandated sex education programs in your children’s schools?
Why do you think homosexual "rights" is a public cause?
What people do in the privacy of their own bedroom is for you to
know about, care about, empathize over. It is for candidates to
talk about in public debates. It is an issue, man. What isn’t?
Who would have
thought a few short decades ago that the right of people to their
own sexual orientation and activity is so private a matter that
it must be adjudicated by the United States Supreme Court, lest
state laws touching the subject remain out of touch with the zeitgeist?
And, of course, abortion, which used to be unsafe, illegal and rare,
is such a privacy issue that it has been in the public crosshairs
continually since the Supreme Court made it a federal constitutional
issue 35 years ago.
Today, homosexuality
is such a private matter that we must know not just a celebrity’s
sexual orientation, but even our neighbor’s if our neighbor feels
the need to assert his "gay pride." It’s such a private
matter that we must change our public laws regarding marriage to
accommodate the "alternative lifestyle."
Abortion became
a "constitutional right," because it is covered by an
undefined but judicially discerned right to privacy. It is so private
that every nominee to the U.S. Supreme Court is asked to publicly
pledge his support to a "woman’s right to choose." And
there must be public support of this private right in the form of
federal funding for it, according to the abortion "rights"
advocates. So if you are privately, personally opposed to abortion,
you still have the obligation to support it publicly with your tax
dollars. Apparently, our government has decided that a public benefit
accrues from the exercise of the "freedom of choice" when
it is exercised in a way approved by those who are pro-abortion.
(I choose to call "pro-choice" by its real name.) There
is a benefit, in other words, to the brutal killing of an average
of 4,000 helpless infants a day in progressive, compassionate America.
Both Sen. Clinton
and Sen. Obama support federal funding for abortion. I would guess
that the former first daughter, out stumping for her mother, does,
too. Would she have an abortion? Well that’s not our business, is
it? Should we pay for it if she were poor and underprivileged and
not the child of the Clintons? Well, that’s the government’s business,
isn’t it?
I can’t imagine
Chelsea Clinton telling the government to mind its own business,
even in a Republican administration. Can you?
April
2, 2008
Manchester, NH, resident Jack Kenny [send
him mail] is a freelance writer.
Copyright
© 2008 LewRockwell.com
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