21 upvotes, 1 direct replies (showing 1)
View submission: The history of the /r/xkcd kerfuffle.
It's not freedom of speech from a legal perspective. It's got nothing to do with the government. Of course. It's about freedom of speech from a censorship perspective.
I'm not being a vulcan (is that a bad thing?). I'm seeing beyond the end of my nose which apparently you associate with being from Vulcan. You can't put in a rule that tells people their sub-reddits must do as they're told by the subjet they're writing about because you'll be fixing a small issue but creating a bigger one.
On planet Vulcan they don't like to do that.
Comment by WickedIcon at 09/02/2014 at 15:16 UTC
-3 upvotes, 1 direct replies
But if you don't do something like that, you end up with stuff like /r/xkcd being used as a vehicle for rape apologia and holocaust denial.