In my youthful naiveté, I equated harm only with
physical wounds, not yet realizing that, to Mill, harm was to the full person
as they could be when provided the opportunity to reach the full breadth of
their humanity. Mill would have strongly
rejected Libertarian doctrine as “a polite indifference to the lives of others.” And Mill, like Socrates, held that we, as
those who have benefited from the securing of our liberty provided through
government, owe a debt of reciprocity to those around us that takes two
forms. First, we owe a debt to others to
conform our actions to the needs of our government for securing the liberties
we enjoy. Second, and here is where Mill differs most from Libertarians, we owe
to society “a disinterested benevolence” in promoting the betterment of the lives of our fellow
citizens, as our own lives have benefited, “but not with the use of whips and scourges.” (That, by the way, is why I credit Mill as
much as B. F. Skinner and behavioral psychology with my preference for positive
incentives in regulation rather than the traditional “whips and scourges.”) And to Mill, when assessing legitimacy of action, government stretched beyond the usual bureaucratic
operations we call government to the coercive behaviors of community majorities
suppressing minority views in conflict with those of the majority.
Ten years later, I plunged feet first into a very
contemporary struggle over the same issues.
I was one of several federal monitors of an information systems research
project involving design of integrated municipal government computer
systems. Part of the effort involved
design of police intelligence systems, and we feds were insisting that the
systems include provisions for wiping out criminal allegations history when a
person was not convicted of any crime. In
addition we insisted, successfully it turned out, on enactment of what became
the first municipal ordinance protecting citizens’ rights to privacy. To east coasters the issue seemed plain, but not
to city officials in a small southwestern city (if you’ve seen Hud or The Last Picture Show, you’ve been there.) Their view was that
retaining the data facilitated legitimate police work, and anyway, “if you’re
not doing anything wrong, you have nothing to hide.” It was a community attitude they were seeking
to enforce, not some foreign tyranny.. My
fellow monitors were sophisticated easterners, while I was not that long away
from life in a town not that far from where the issue had arisen. I felt both sides of it. But I had to agree with Mill; keeping that
data with no specific basis for believing harm would come to others by its
deletion would be an unwarranted invasion of the personal rights of persons to
control of their own information.
Person is an interesting word. Probably originally from the Greek, it meant
the mask worn by an actor in ancient drama, then became the role played by the
actor, then evolved to the “social face” we greet the world with, and nowadays
it seems to loosely mean a whole human being (or even a corporation?). But the essence of it is that social face we
present the world and seek to protect from manipulation by others. Our “person” is the data we provide to the
world about ourselves. The whole concept
of privacy implies that there are data of our lives we prefer to keep out of
sight from those we do not know well so that our internal processes of choice
are not inhibited by the intrusion of others, and it is that instinct that is
at the root of our thirst for liberty.
But we still have that obligation to our society at large that Mill
cites, to participate in maintaining the security of all by conforming our
actions within reasonable bounds. And
that implies certain rights of government to examine our public actions. Mill makes a sharp distinction between public
and private spheres of action. Public
spheres are those in which our actions could cause harm to others or to society
at large. Private spheres are those not likely to cause harm to others. Our bedroom is a private sphere, our email a
public one. When we place a telephone
call, the record that a call has been made, but not its content, is a public
record.
So, the questions a modern Mill would ask might
be, is the data obtained by Prism in the public or private sphere, and is it
reasonably necessary to guard our liberty?
If private, the action of government is illegitimate. If public and within the reasonable bounds of
the trust we have placed in government to guard our liberty, then it is
legitimate. Indications so far are that
the Prism system operates within those bounds.
What we know so far is that a careful distinction has been made between "business records" - that public sphere - and content records requiring a subpoena - the private sphere. The system could be misused to threaten our liberty, but so could a tank
or rocket launcher. It is part of the
responsibility we have entrusted to government to guard against such
misuse. But it is part of our
responsibilities as citizens, and the debt we owe others, to participate in
guarding our liberty by not refusing government a legitimate tool.
1 comment:
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