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Sex is nobody's business but your own Posted: 02 Jun 2011 03:48 PM PDT Everyone has secrets -- that is what people realise too late when a surveillance society falls softly into place. Think about your own privacy and secrets. If you or your spouse strayed, would you want to discuss it in private, or have the world discuss it with you -- or have a government official tell you that he will discuss it with your spouse, unless you do as requested? By Naomi Wolf, New Straits Times IT is impossible to hear about sexual or sex-crime scandals nowadays -- whether that involving Dominique Strauss-Kahn or those of former New York governor Eliot Spitzer, Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, or the half-dozen United States congressmen whose careers have ended in the past couple of years -- without considering how they were exposed. What does it mean to live in a society in which surveillance is omnipresent? Like the heat beneath the proverbial boiling frogs, the level of surveillance in Western democracies has been ratcheted up slowly -- but far faster than citizens can respond. Americans do not want it, and they were not consulted when it was enacted by their representatives under the pressure of a government that demanded more power in the wake of the terrorist attacks of Sept 11, 2001. That does not seem to matter. A concerted effort is under way in the US -- and in the United Kingdom -- to "brand" surveillance as positive. New York City subway passengers are now advised that they might experience random searches of their bags. Activists in America are now accustomed to assuming that their emails are being read and their phone calls monitored. Indeed, the telecom companies Verizon and AT&T have established areas on their premises for eavesdropping activity by the National Security Agency. Consensual sex between adults is no one else's business. But now that public figures -- especially those deemed to be "of interest" to intelligence agencies -- are susceptible to being watched three-dimensionally, the chances of being compromised are far higher than they were in the days of the UK's John Profumo affair, which brought down a British politician in the early 1960s. And there is no end to this crash-and-burn surveillance strategy, owing to the nature of the information that is caught in the Internet. Another reason to mourn the normalisation of a surveillance society lies in the link between sexual privacy and other kinds of psychological liberation. That is why closed societies monitor their citizens' sexual lives. The combination of sexuality and privacy has an anarchic, subversive effect on citizens. Connecting with another person in an unscrutinised, uncivilised, unmediated, unobserved way inevitably reminds people that there are aspects of the human soul that cannot and must not be subjected to official control.
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