1 upvotes, 1 direct replies (showing 1)
Exactly. Mass censorship isn't the answer, empowering users by allowing them to blocking individual subs through the native website seems like the American thing to do.
I would goddamn near *kill* to block out /r/funny.
Comment by brentwilliams2 at 07/07/2015 at 01:31 UTC
1 upvotes, 0 direct replies
In regards to censorship, I would have been completely fine if they decided to take some subreddits that are more hateful and restrict them from the /r/all, as well as put them in a bucket that advertisers would avoid in order to not lose them. I think that would have kept free speech and made it more hospitable for a larger swath of users.