The Lost Language of Privacy
International New York Times | 14 April 2015
First,
there have been too many cases in which police officers have abused
their authority and then covered it up. Second, it seems probable that
cops would be less likely to abuse their authority if they were being
tracked. Third, human memory is an unreliable faculty. We might be able
to reduce the number of wrongful convictions and acquittals if we have
cameras recording more events.
I’ve
come to this conclusion, but I haven’t come to it happily. And, as the
debate over cop-cams has unfolded, I’ve been surprised by how many
people don’t see the downside to this policy. Most people don’t even
seem to recognize the damage these cameras will do both to
police-civilian relations and to privacy. As the debate has unfolded,
it’s become clear that more and more people have lost even the language
of privacy, and an understanding of why privacy is important.
Let’s start with the basics.
Privacy
is important to the development of full individuals because there has
to be an interior zone within each person that other people don’t see.
There has to be a zone where half-formed thoughts and delicate emotions
can grow and evolve, without being exposed to the harsh glare of public
judgment. There has to be a place where you can be free to develop ideas
and convictions away from the pressure to conform. There has to be a
spot where you are only yourself and can define yourself.
Privacy
is important to families and friendships because there has to be a zone
where you can be fully known. There has to be a private space where you
can share your doubts and secrets and expose your weaknesses with the
expectation that you will still be loved and forgiven and supported.
Privacy
is important for communities because there has to be a space where
people with common affiliations can develop bonds of affection and
trust. There has to be a boundary between us and them. Within that
boundary, you look out for each other; you rally to support each other;
you cut each other some slack; you share fierce common loyalties.
All
these concentric circles of privacy depend on some level of shrouding.
They depend on some level of secrecy and awareness of the distinction
between the inner privileged space and the outer exposed space. They
depend on the understanding that what happens between us stays between
us.
Cop-cams chip away at that. The cameras will undermine communal bonds. Putting a camera on someone is a sign that you don’t trust him, or he doesn’t trust you. When a police officer is wearing a camera, the contact between an officer and a civilian is less likely to be like intimate friendship and more likely to be oppositional and transactional. Putting a camera on an officer means she is less likely to cut you some slack, less likely to not write that ticket, or to bend the regulations a little as a sign of mutual care.Putting a camera on the police officer means that authority resides less in the wisdom and integrity of the officer and more in the videotape. During a trial, if a crime isn’t captured on the tape, it will be presumed to never have happened.
Cop-cams
will insult families. It’s worth pointing out that less than 20 percent
of police calls involve felonies, and less than 1 percent of
police-citizen contacts involve police use of force. Most of the time
cops are mediating disputes, helping those in distress, dealing with the
mentally ill or going into some home where someone is having a
meltdown. When a police officer comes into your home wearing a camera,
he’s trampling on the privacy that makes a home a home. He’s recording
people on what could be the worst day of their lives, and inhibiting
their ability to lean on the officer for care and support.
Cop-cams
insult individual dignity because the embarrassing things recorded by
them will inevitably get swapped around. The videos of the naked crime
victim, the berserk drunk, the screaming maniac will inevitably get
posted online — as they are already. With each leak, culture gets a
little coarser. The rules designed to keep the videos out of public view
will inevitably be eroded and bent.
So,
yes, on balance, cop-cams are a good idea. But, as a journalist, I can
tell you that when I put a notebook or a camera between me and my
subjects, I am creating distance between me and them. Cop-cams strike a
blow for truth, but they strike a blow against relationships. Society
will be more open and transparent, but less humane and trusting.
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