If you're worried about the government hauling your ass off to the gulag for sodomy, you've got bigger problems in your country than privacy issues.
Ah. So it's okay if some random bureaucrat sets up cameras in your house, records every minute of your life, publishes it on the Internet, and then proceeds to send reports of your various activities to everyone you know making it impossible for you to get a job (the government actually did this to a certain extent during the McCarthy era). And it's all A-OK as long as they don't ship you off to a gulag?
If you wanted to pretect their "right" to privacy (a laughable aim, IMO),
Celebrities and politicians deliberately give up their privacy in exchange for fame and public recognition. If they want to do that, it's fine by me.
My idea of a right is a need a human being should never be denied.
Then we're going to have to disband an awful lot of the criminal justice system, because prisons deprive people of all kinds of rights. Most people see that as okay, because the rights of others also need protection.
There is also direct harm related to privacy. For example face veils obscure the face and prevent identification, and are also intimidating.
After all, how many deaths are caused by face veils every year? Except those related to not being able to see, probably zero.
The fact is, we can still make it illegal for JQ Public to watch me in the shower without saying that I have an absolute privacy right from the Government. It's a matter of due process.
What justifiable reason is there that the government should have any more right to this information than JQ Public? It's not like the vast majority of it has any legitimate purpose, and for the small fraction of it that does have a legitimate purpose, we already have court warrants.
Try arguing the merits of privacy besides "everybody wants it."
Is there any real reason for the merit of anything besides "everybody wants it"? I would be delighted if you can construct a noncircular, logical argument that derives any kind of moral statement without referring to "everybody wants it" somewhere.
Now if you consider privacy a right, then a person has a right to object to this kind of 24/7 monitoring.
If the information was stored in my brain and I had control over it (except in case of crimes), I wouldn't have any problem with this. But forcing it on everybody because they might possibly commit a crime is silly- should we also force everyone to wear GPS tags, get special permits to move from point A to B, and so forth? We have a name for that- it's called a "police state". The word "police" is in there for a reason; the whole
idea of a police state is that the entire state needs to be treated as potential criminals and so therefore should be put under police restriction.
You know the majority of people in the world want religion.
Sure. They can have religion; I have no problem with this as long as they don't try and violate other's rights, and I suspect a great many people will agree.
Besides, what the fuck do you know about all people.
It is an instinctual reaction to become nervous or frightened when someone you don't know is watching you, especially in places that are supposed to be considered private.