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75
Lolbertarian Party in Texas Explains Why They're Called Lolbertarians (twitter.com)
posted 4 years ago by WhitePhoenix 4 years ago by WhitePhoenix +76 / -1
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– cccpneveragain 6 points 4 years ago +8 / -2

I thought I was Libertarian for a while. Still not sure I'm not in theory, but I'm not even in the ballpark of their party. They are nothing more than not-totally-socialist liberals.

The thing is I would love to keep all of this de-regulated, but it's clear that just won't work. At the sake of sounding extremely Communist (which is close to the pinnacle of insults to me), I just don't think these mega-corporations can be allowed to keep going. I love capitalism, but when it's nothing but giants that either buy up or crush the competition, you have what we are dealing with today. There's a lot of things I just can't find a small local business to buy from--price and all aside they just don't exist anymore. The bad part is I haven't the slightest idea how to fix it. I think regulation, such as Justice Thomas is suggesting here, is probably the best way. Otherwise, break them up--and watch them rise right back up.

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▲ 2 ▼
– SparkMandrill83 2 points 4 years ago +6 / -4

Those megacorps only exist because of government regulation. Remove those protections, sites like Gab and .win will flourish, while twitter and facebook die off. Its that fucking simple.

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▲ 3 ▼
– Gizortnik 3 points 4 years ago +4 / -1

I'll try to explain that, but people are convinced that the government is the only way to protect them from institutions that the government created.

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– SparkMandrill83 2 points 4 years ago +3 / -1

Its funny because we're all aware of 230 and the protections it gives. Literally from the government. People here just want the quicker solution which is government smash

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▲ 5 ▼
– Gizortnik 5 points 4 years ago +6 / -1

The thing that confuses people about 230 is that it's not a simple negative law. It's not saying "don't do this". It's an exception to a legal framework that promotes civil litigation against commentary.

The law already existed to strictly control speech by supporting expensive civil lawsuits, and then granted immunity if tech firms promised to moderate their comment sections. 230 actually exists to support content moderation, not remove it.

That's why if you remove it, you'd open up social media firms to civil lawsuits.

If you want to promote free speech, you have end 230 and simultaneously remove the underlying laws enabling the right to sue publishers for some of their comments. You get peace from an armed society, and you get more tolerant discourse when you refuse to protect people from attacks and insults.

If you want to free speech, you have to not protect people from it.

230 is written in such a weird and backwards way to how you would think a law would normally work, that it confuses people.

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– cccpneveragain 2 points 4 years ago +3 / -1

That's actually a super good point that I wasn't thinking about. Over-regulation stifing the smaller competitors. If anything just through red tape alone.

My mind was more on "tangible" companies (meaning those that deal in physical goods) when I commented that. Still though, I can see where dropping regulations would make at least some of them better able to compete. It's not perfect, but what we are doing now sucks...so...what can it hurt?

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▲ 1 ▼
– deleted 1 point 4 years ago +1 / -0
▲ 1 ▼
– deleted 1 point 4 years ago +1 / -0

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