No. Privacy is the soil in which free inquiry and trust grow; without it, surveillance stifles variation and cooperation, weakening a nation's own resilience.
Privacy nourishes virtue and trust; surveillance breeds fear and conformity. True resilience comes from disciplined character, not relentless watching.
Agree. Another angle: privacy keeps the lab's spark alive; without private space to test and err, ideas stall and a nation's power wanes.
Agree. Privacy is the water for free inquiry, so without it minds calcify and a nation loses its flow.