In the house where I grew up, it was our custom to leave the front
door on the latch at night. No one carried keys.
Today doors do not stay unlocked, thus for part of an evening. The 【M1】_________
era of leaving the front door open has gone forever. It has been replaced
of by locks, security chains, electronic alarm systems and tripwires 【M2】_________
hooked up to a police station or private guard firm. Many suburban
families even have sliding glass doors on their patios, with steel bars
elegantly building in so no one can pry the doors open. 【M3】_________
A recent public-service advertisement by an insurance company
featured not actuarial charts or a picture of a child’s bicycle with a 【M4】_________
padlock attached to it.
It is the insurance companies which pay for stolen goods, but who is 【M5】_________
going to pay for that the new atmosphere of distrust and fear is doing to 【M6】_________
our way of life? Who is going to make the psychological payment for the 【M7】_________
transformation of America from the Land of the Free to the Land of the
Lock?
For some reason we are satisfied when we think we are well-
protected; it does not occur us to ask ourselves: Why are we having to 【M8】_________
barricade ourselves for our neighbors and fellow citizens, and when, 【M9】_________
exactly, did this start to take over our lives?
Even a decade ago, most private businesses had a policy of free
access. Thus, today you have to carry some kind of access card to enter 【M10】________
your place of work. Maybe the security guard at the front desk knows
your face and will wave you in most days, but the fact remains that the
business you work for feels threatened enough to keep outsiders away via
these “keys”.
【M1】
thus—even