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Cruisinginthe80s commented at 2016-04-19 22:12:04 » #1935928
^They still decided to get rid of toddlercon for no reason.
2 Points
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^They still decided to get rid of toddlercon for no reason.
Anonymous commented at 2016-04-19 22:28:31 » #1935934
Cruisinginthe80s, the staff had their reasons to no longer accept it.
gelbooru.com/index.php?page=forum&s=view&id=2390
9 Points
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Cruisinginthe80s, the staff had their reasons to no longer accept it.
gelbooru.com/index.php?page=forum&s=view&id=2390
Anonymous commented at 2016-04-20 04:41:58 » #1936095
Censoring speech is a slippery slope, but it is the internet and people get pretty creepy under the veil of anonymity.
Personally as long as it is not a photo/video of a genuine rape I dont think art should be censored even on the internet. Art is Art.
1 Points
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Censoring speech is a slippery slope, but it is the internet and people get pretty creepy under the veil of anonymity.
Personally as long as it is not a photo/video of a genuine rape I dont think art should be censored even on the internet. Art is Art.
Anonymous commented at 2016-04-20 05:08:19 » #1936104
Nobody's talking about censorship. This is a privately-owned site choosing which images it wants to host, which comments it wants to allow, and which users it wants to ban. It's really no different from a store prohibiting otherwise-legal behaviors like drinking or carrying licensed guns while on the premises. They're open to the public so we're free to visit, but the owners are the ones who set the rules of conduct while we're there. No free speech is under threat in any way. If you don't like the way a particular site operates, you are *entirely* free to find (or create) another site with rules more to your liking.
22 Points
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Nobody's talking about censorship. This is a privately-owned site choosing which images it wants to host, which comments it wants to allow, and which users it wants to ban. It's really no different from a store prohibiting otherwise-legal behaviors like drinking or carrying licensed guns while on the premises. They're open to the public so we're free to visit, but the owners are the ones who set the rules of conduct while we're there. No free speech is under threat in any way. If you don't like the way a particular site operates, you are *entirely* free to find (or create) another site with rules more to your liking.
1