"The subversion of manners and authority (two great casualties of the 1960s) prepared the way for the death of privacy, which would eventually be ensured by the stupendously intrusive capabilities of Big Tech in the 21st century. Manners (and in a different way, authority) depend on respect for the privacy of others, as well as one's own. Manners depend on reticence, even mystery. When those ingrained regulations, those protections of the individual mind, are gone, then you may open the floodgates to (among many other things) pornography, which is a massively lucrative assault on individual dignity and collective decorum -- an assault on the manners of a society and, if you will forgive my saying so, on the divinity of the individual.
The death of manners and privacy, I argue, are profoundly political facts that, combined with other facts, lead, eventually, to an entire civilization of stupidity. It's a short ride from stupidity to madness. Soon people aren't quite people anymore; they are cartoons and categories. And "identities." The media grow feral. Genitals became weirdly public issues; the sexes subdivide into 100 genders. Ideologues extract sunbeams from cucumbers. They engage in what amounts to an Oedipal rebellion against reality itself.
At the Tower of Babel, the Lord -- whatever his reasons -- confounded the languages of the peoples of the world. I suspect he has found he can achieve the same effect by making everyone stupid." [1]
- You Are Living in the Golden Age of Stupidity
Morrow, Lance. Wall Street Journal, Eastern edition; New York, N.Y. [New York, N.Y]. 30 Aug 2021: A.17.
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