Redefinitions: Difference between revisions

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'''A basic right to privacy'''  /ə ˈbeɪsɪk raɪt tuː ˈprɪvəsi/ (''n'')
'''A basic right to privacy'''  /ə ˈbeɪsɪk raɪt tuː ˈprɪvəsi/ (''n'')


The compulsion to air personal affronts and grievances before the world, by explaining them at length, on live TV, to the most widely syndicated talk show host on the planet.
The compulsion to air (i) personal affronts and grievances (ii) one’s own desperate need to be left alone, before the world, at length, to the internationally syndicated media conglomerates.
: [https://www.insider.com/meghan-markle-right-to-privacy-oprah-interview-2021-3 Megan Markle tells Oprah she just wants her basic right to privacy] ''Insider.com'' 9 March 2021.
: [https://www.insider.com/meghan-markle-right-to-privacy-oprah-interview-2021-3 Megan Markle tells Oprah she just wants her basic right to privacy] ''Insider.com'' 9 March 2021.
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:[https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/c2071a34-e8a7-11ec-91b1-7bfb0a33d3d9 “Why is privacy so important to you”] Paul Hollywood (yes, him again) tells ''The Times'' T2 Section, less than a fortnight after his hermitry confession, 10 June 2022.
 
'''To invade one’s ~'''
 
To launch legal action in courts half a world away from one’s present domicile over 20-year-old grievances no-one cares about in an effort to “keep one’s name out of the paper” thereby invading the right of millions of Times readers to enjoy their breakfast uninterrupted by one’s entitled boatrace.
 
:''[https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/5e4cb988-02f8-11ee-9bf2-8ca4db35d928 Prince Harry case: duke is first royal to give evidence for 130 years]''}}
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