| From the book: Stress and the Care of the Self Mandala Key Exercise The Roots of the Tree (finding your purpose and passion) The Fruit of the Tree (Changing your life) The Layers of Marriage The Marriage Survey Newsletters |
![]() How to Live Without Losing Your Life |
Other Writings The Balance between Love and Money Understanding the Universal Unconscious The Crisis of Privacy Faith and Voting Is Death a Choice or Fate? Happy People Raising the Minimum Wage |
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America is in a Crisis of Privacy.America is in a crisis of privacy. We are threatened as a nation with a complete loss of our ability to compete as innovators and developers of ideas, products, and intellectual property. Without privacy, our lives become transparent and the drive for social acceptance rises above the drive for self realization making us strive more for appearance and less for competency. Since 9/11 and the birth of "Homeland Security" there has been a commonly accepted need to sacrifice an individual's right to privacy in favor of the ultimate goal of safety and security. This sacrifice has taken the form of a largely disorganized approach to disseminating information to watchdog groups whose lack of communication with each other has led to very few interventions. Warrantless wire-tapping, Internet spidering, and confidential information release demands have done little to enhance our security as a nation and much to increase our individual paranoia. The same concern arises in the corporate sphere as more and more companies share subscriber information or use the information as a starting point for larger marketing schemes. Healthcare information, despite the well-intended HIPPA, has become an almost open source for providers and marketers alike, leaving clients wary of seeking treatment or even of being open with their doctors for fear of where that information will land. The Internet has allowed for a far broader scope of investigation by providers and employers in a person's history then ever before. Gone are the days when a mere move would allow for a fresh start. The World Wide Web has connected us so globally and immediately that a person is now "branded" by their past and history. It is, however, what has happened to the American Culture, which enables all of this new information sharing to have such a powerful effect. The American Culture has become more transparent in the past twenty years, largely due to the rise of popularity of the Internet. From the blogging culture, which touts our private desires and intimate moments as entertainment, to the culture of celebrity which has ceased to be about the glossy media presentation of the lives of those we idolize and become the desperate exposure of the "rich and famous" as being no better in real life then anyone else, our lives are expected to be lived with full exposure. Without a sense of privacy the human mind and soul is incapable of learning its own desires, capabilities, and limitations. In an atmosphere of constant exposure and scrutiny, a kind of paranoia supplants introspection and the question ceases to be "what do I think?" and becomes "what will be thought of me?" This culture of co-dependency traps people in a cycle of trying to please without any concept of what is pleasing to them, or displeasing. Without the room to examine one's thoughts and motivations, the foundation for realizing potential and genius is undermined. Is it any wonder that America is swiftly becoming a provider of services rather than of innovation and invention? Privacy, a room of one's own, a place in which to safely explore our internal landscapes - is a requirement for self-realization. Without it we are capable only of consumption for consumptions sake and not as a means to fuel an effort towards a goal. We need to begin to examine the speed and transparency with which we live our lives. Less transparent lives lead to more productive and innovative ones. Our future depends on the reestablishment of the individual right to privacy, not only in the corporate and public arenas, but in the personal one as well. |
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| ALL RIGHTS RESERVED Cassandra Tribe c.2000-09 For information about permissions for reprint of any of the material on these pages please contact: info@EatNotTheHeart.com |
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