Exhibitionists for the  State
March 11, 2010
On Monday night, I took two of my children to the  Judge Napolitano/Ron Paul evening at the Ohio State University (a fantastic  evening, by the way). During one of the segments, Napolitano asked a panel of  young folks how they would respond to this common defense of the ever-more  intrusive state:
Judge (paraphrased): What would you say to someone who  says, “What do I care, I have nothing to hide?”
After mulling this over, if ever asked that very same  question, my response is now: I do have stuff to hide. That's why I close  bathroom doors, pull bedroom blinds and wear clothes. And no one (save my wife)  has any business in any area I declare to be private (including my property and  areas where I have contracted with others to keep my private stuff private). The  state and its agents included.
Napolitano’s question is an important one. The “I have  nothing to hide” response is used time and again by folks who I now see as  exhibitionists – exhibitionists for the state. These folks see nothing wrong  with opening their private lives to the state – they have nothing to hide.  
So the very same folks who pull their blinds to keep  the leering eyes of their neighbors out of their bedrooms open those very same  blinds to those very same neighbors when they (their neighbors) act as agents of  the state. And those folks do so as if a state badge transforms their neighbors  into something other than voyeurs – as if the badge makes it all  OK.
But the badge is only a sign that the power of force  is standing behind the one wearing it, and leering. It should be a point of real  concern, not security.
Look, if I left my bathroom door open, you would  certainly think me odd. Wouldn’t you wonder why I want to expose my private  matters to the world? 
I could say, “Since I am not committing a crime, I  have nothing to hide.” 
Would you buy that line? Would you simply shrug off my  actions? Would you feel safer in the presence of someone so open about his  peaceful intentions? Would you?
I wear clothes for a number of reasons, with  protecting my privacy at the top of the list. Yet I am forced to virtual strip  before ogling TSA agents as if I have nothing to hide. But that is the very  reason I dressed to begin with. 
I desire to hide from my neighbors acting as  neighbors, as well as my neighbors acting as agents of the state. I desire to  hide.
There are inane responses to questions regarding state  interventions. But the “I have nothing to hide” response is the most inane of  them all. You have something to hide. We all do. And what we hide is our own  business – it is personal.
The next time some exhibitionist for the state claims  they have nothing to hide, call them on it. And hopefully they will learn a  little lesson.
Jim Fedako [send  him mail] is a  homeschooling father of six who lives in Lewis Center, OH, and maintains a blog:  Anti-Positivist. 
Copyright © 2010 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to  reprint in whole or in part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.  
Gill  Rapoza
Veritas Vos  Liberabit

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