timschochet
Footballguy
Yeah, your definition of freedom may be very different from mine. I don't view freedom as just the prevention of a negative, but as the promotion of a positive. The internet makes all of our lives easier, and that ease contributes greatly to our freedom. As does nearly every new technology.You are going to have to explain to me how the internet and email have provided freedom....perhaps we should go over the definition of "freedom" before we go any further, because I'm not any more free today than I was in 1988Sorry, thought I made this clear earlier. The technology of the internet and emails.bumpWhat "technology" specifically are you referring to?You misquoted me once again.What I wrote is that the same technology that makes it possible for the NSA to do what it is doing ironically serves to give the public more freedom than it has ever had. A society in which the government has access to all private emails is more free than a society in which emails don't exist.Remember, this makes us more free.This line in the article says it all for me.
"In effect, facing the N.S.A.s relentless advance, the companies surrendered."
The new normal!!
(Though I will also accept Politician Spock's theory that ball bearings and bumper cars have also made us more free.)
The best analogy I can give you is the washing machine and dishwasher. In legal terms, married women before the late 1950s were not prohibited from the workplace; they were not forced to be housewives. But in practical terms, the majority of them were, because housework averaged 8 hours a day. Along came the washing machine, dryer, and dishwasher. 8 hours a day turned into 2-3 hours a day. Suddenly women were much more free to pursue other goals. To me, this is just as important a freedom as any that might be written into law. So my point is, you're wrong: you ARE much more free than you were in 1988, even if you won't realize it or acknowledge it.