This study examines the role of privacy in American political thought specifically the rise implementation and consequences of the conservative social policies of the Reagan-Bush era as they relate to the question of privacy. In particular the work focuses on some of the high-profile social issues of that period: the War on Drugs so-called family values abortion sexuality and discrimination. Sadofsky concludes that privacy-invasive public policies such as were initiated in the Reagan-Bush years are expensive defy the Constitution and actually cause dysfunctional social behavior. He also suggests that social behavior in the 1960s did much to create a wave of intolerance in the 1980s and that progressivism requires a return to the morality of tolerance.
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