newyorker:

Comment: The Republicans’ Lost Privacy

And that is what makes Romney and Santorum’s criticism of Griswold so  troubling. Over the years the modern Republican Party has reflected both  libertarian and authoritarian tendencies. Both survive, in a way. When  it comes to taxes and regulation, the libertarian side of the party is  ascendant. Even the rhetoric of compassionate conservatism has faded  from view. But with regard to civil liberties, the G.O.P. has embraced  state power with a vengeance. Whether it’s the rights of wartime  detainees, or abortion rights, or the rights of gay people to marry (or  to be free from discrimination), contemporary Republican leaders reflect  clear moral disapproval. (Even Ron Paul, who is often described as a  libertarian, is a fierce opponent of a woman’s right to choose abortion.  And Rick Perry recently announced that he’s against a right to abortion  even in cases of rape or incest.)  Privacy is often described as “the  right to be left alone,” but that’s not a value that seems terribly  important in the G.O.P. right now.

- In today’s Daily Comment, Jeffrey Toobin writes about what makes Romney and Santorum’s criticism of Griswold v. Connecticut so troubling: http://nyr.kr/xxInUe

newyorker:

Comment: The Republicans’ Lost Privacy

And that is what makes Romney and Santorum’s criticism of Griswold so troubling. Over the years the modern Republican Party has reflected both libertarian and authoritarian tendencies. Both survive, in a way. When it comes to taxes and regulation, the libertarian side of the party is ascendant. Even the rhetoric of compassionate conservatism has faded from view. But with regard to civil liberties, the G.O.P. has embraced state power with a vengeance. Whether it’s the rights of wartime detainees, or abortion rights, or the rights of gay people to marry (or to be free from discrimination), contemporary Republican leaders reflect clear moral disapproval. (Even Ron Paul, who is often described as a libertarian, is a fierce opponent of a woman’s right to choose abortion. And Rick Perry recently announced that he’s against a right to abortion even in cases of rape or incest.) Privacy is often described as “the right to be left alone,” but that’s not a value that seems terribly important in the G.O.P. right now.

- In today’s Daily Comment, Jeffrey Toobin writes about what makes Romney and Santorum’s criticism of Griswold v. Connecticut so troubling: http://nyr.kr/xxInUe