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A 9 page paper which analyzes The Naked Society by Vance Packard and examines privacy issues today in society Bibliography lists 3 additional sources.
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9 pages (~225 words per page)
File: JR7_RAnakes.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
was slowly infiltrating the personal lives of people, making privacy something of an obsolete right. Today that issue seems incredibly valid in light of computers and advanced technology. With that
in mind the following paper examines the importance of Packards book and the recent developments regarding privacy in the United States. The Naked Society by Vance Packard In
Vance Packards work, near the beginning, he essentially lays foundations for understanding where society has gone, stating, "Aldous Huxley commented that the classic cry of Patrick Henry that he wanted
either liberty or death now sounds melodramatic. Instead today, Huxley contended, we are more apt to demand, Give me television and hamburgers but dont bother me with the responsibilities of
liberty" (Packard, ; 11). In many ways this lays down an understanding of how the American public has lost some interest in freedom, in the necessity for liberty in many
respects. People, hooked by consumerism and by media influences and entertainment, are more involved with enjoying themselves than they are with liberty. Many of the things that Packard relates,
as they involve his time period, are incredibly relevant today, and seem to be almost speaking of modern times. For example, he illustrates the need for businesses to attack consumers
in many different ways, invading privacy and pushing their way into our lives. While many people accept it today, the pressures in 1964 are surprisingly the same: "Many phone companies
have no policy against telephone solicitations. They prefer to assume that as long as the phone is used legally it is none of their business. Furthermore telephone soliciting helps push
up their volume of alls. Now, however, they are becoming distressed by the rush to unlisted phone numbers. Some people want an unlisted number for status, but a great many
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