again the actual definition to the right to privacy:
In Constitutional Law, the right of people to make personal decisions regarding intimate matters.
In Common law, the right of people to lead their lives in a manner that is reasonably secluded from public scrutiny, whether such scrutiny comes from a neighbor's prying eyes, an investigator's eavesdropping ears, or a news photographer's intrusive camera.
In statutory law, the right of people to be free from unwarranted drug testing and Electronic Surveillance.
Your definitions are noted.
However, you are still failing to deal with the dilemma that I've offered. Necessarily, one of those two propositions are true. Which do you assert to be the case?