![]() I’d e-mailed Drudge, “Not Stalking You Coming to Miami,” because I know how feverish he is about the prying press. Then the next morning I go round to his two addresses. You can often hear Drudge at his keyboard even as he’s on air, so I drop him another e-mail with a clever headline like something on the Drudge Report. I call in to the show a few times: 1-866-4-drudge. I think I have a right not to be watched.” What gives you a right? Why are you watching me? People say, well, what do you have to hide, Drudge? What do you have to hide? You know what? The burden should be on them. ![]() And it’s not given serious consideration-when it is a total transformation of our society and our liberties. And now you start feeding that into some kind of database and start linking it up with a Fascist company like Google? This is a serious issue. “I just don’t want to be watched when I’m visiting the Lincoln Memorial, going through Penn Station, or walking down Hollywood Boulevard. At such times, Drudge comes off as a hunted man. ![]() Drudge is on his favorite theme, surveillance cameras everywhere, his belief that Google wants to spy on us and pass it all on to the government. It’s late Sunday night, and I turn on his weekly radio show in the room. I’ve e-mailed the author of the Drudge Report countless times and written letters to him at the two places he owns in Miami to say I’m coming to town and want to talk, but when I check into my hotel there’s no note from him at the desk. My mission is to find Matt Drudge, and I’m failing. Illustration by Darrow Photo: Evan Agostini/Getty Images
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