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- Since that $750 per family is money we don't have, that would be $750 per family plus interest on the debt in perpetuity. Or it could be monetized, in which case it regressively taxes everyone...
- For the record, the supporters of "Google violates its 'Don't be Evil' motto swept the floor with the Google apologists, even with Googleboy Larry Lessig in the audience. See the...
- Slippery slopes are everywhere, so I wouldn't worry about them. These issues about probable cause only apply to the government, as I understand them, but IANAL. Assuming there were something to...
- Apparently I can reply to your comment via e-mail. We'll see if this works. (later) Indeed it does, with a few formatting weirdnesses is all.
- Same here. My response to you hasn't shown up.I guess Disqus doesn't want to get anyone upset.
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1 year ago
As an aside, the concept of privacy is much like intellectual property, the so-called "owner" asserts rights that they do not even possess. In a semi-famous incident "Claiming an invasion of her privacy, Barbra Streisand is suing a California man for disseminating aerial pictures of her Malibu home.". Streisand's privacy "claim" is clearly absurd since it seeks to diminish what a person can freely do in public, but this is also akin to content producers claiming that they have the so-called unilateral "right" to diminish the rights of the public to the use of their content.
What is humorous in an Orwellian newspeak sense is the the assertion, in the privacy policy notices, of corporations on how they "value" your privacy and seek to protect it; yet (a couple of paragraphs down) they admit to giving your personal information away to virtually anyone for any reason they deem appropriate. If you really want to keep your information "confidential" you have to go contact them. If they were really concerned about privacy, they wouldn't give it away - period.
1 year ago
Arguing about whether something is a right or an entitlement is a distinction without a difference, though. You could call the US Bill of Rights "the bill of entitlements", and it would still be both useful and important.
1 year ago
I think "rights" and "entitlements" are distinct, if related, concepts. Here's the way I think about them: Rights are legal claims. The strongest sense of the term is the claim to be free from various forms of government interference.
Entitlements are a subset of rights - legal claims to goods, things like housing, medical care, or satisfactory conditions like privacy. Where many rights, such as free speech, property, etc., are grounded in natural law, entitlements/rights to goods are not.
1 year ago
1 year ago